13 OCT 2013 by ideonexus

 History of the Weekdays

By the third century the seven-day week had become common in private life throughout the Roman Empire. Each day was dedicated to one of the seven planets. Those seven, according to the current astronomy, included the sun and the moon, but not the earth. The order in which planets governed the days of the week was: sun, moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn. This order was not that of their then supposed distance from the earth, which was the "normal" order in which Dante, for exampl...
Folksonomies: history astronomy ritual
Folksonomies: history astronomy ritual
  1  notes

From astronomy and astrology to religion, complete with superstitions.

19 APR 2013 by ideonexus

 Greeks and Romans Lacked the Virtue of Doubt

The Greek and Roman antiquarians, and even their literati and philosophers, are chargeable with a total neglect of that spirit of doubt which subjects to a rigorous investigation both sacts, and the proofs that establish them. In reading their accounts of the history of events or of manners, of the productions and phenomena of nature, or of the works and processes of the arts, we are astonished at the composure with which they relate the most palpable absurdities, and the most fulsome and dis...
Folksonomies: history doubt
Folksonomies: history doubt
  1  notes

...and as a result, their writing reveals an incredible gullibility.

16 MAR 2013 by ideonexus

 Zero is Freedom

It is also clear that beginning with Plato's pupil Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) and the latter's practical philosophy, the geocentric concept of the celestial system was, after 200 B.C., becoming more and more formally adopted by the "world's" flat-minded power-structure "authorities," despite contradic¬ tory complexities. The difficultly explained geocentric cosmic systems' plan¬ etary behaviors and Sun motion was not considered by the authorities to be an objection since, as they rationalized i...
Folksonomies: history mathematics zero
Folksonomies: history mathematics zero
  1  notes

The emptiness allowed for freedom of calculations that would usurp the authoritarian powers.