وبلاگ بلیان

God Star

معرفی کتاب «God Star» نوشتهٔ Dwardu Cardona، منتشرشده توسط نشر Tellwell Talent در سال 2019. این کتاب در 518 صفحه، فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است. «God Star» در دستهٔ بدون دسته‌بندی قرار دارد.

God Star: If you areuncomfortable with the equally implausible literal creationist or the modern mythologyversion of what happened in the ancient times, then these 518 pages will showyou that the sky earlier man remembers was entirely different from the one thatnow stretches above us.This is firmly supported through ancient texts,artwork, and symbology from all over the world which deal with the astronomicallore of our forebears. As if with a single voice, these sources proclaim thatthe present planet we know as Saturn once shone as an earlier sun in Earth’sprimordial sky.This claim receives credence through the factthat astronomers now view the planet Saturn as the remnant of what had oncebeen a brown dwarf star. It also goes a long way in explaining why Saturn wasconsidered the “ruler of the planets”, and why the god of that planet is found atthe head of every ancient pantheon on earth. Ra, Brahma, Kronos, Moloch, andShamash are some of the more familiar names for the supreme god Saturn. It alsoexplains a plethora of perplexing other information including why the originalname for Rome was Saturnia, and why Italy was called the land of Saturn.Astronomically, it is then deduced that Earthused to be the satellite of this proto-Saturnian sun. It is further deducedthat this mini-system invaded the present Solar System causing the “great catastrophe”,and that this transpired during the age of man.As incongruous with prevailing thinking as thisscenario appears, it is lent further credibility by the hard sciences throughthe unmistakable signs encountered here on Earth and also by what is constantlybeing discovered out in space. In fact, the likelihood that such an interlopingplanetary system might have been captured by the Sun is even now acknowledgedby a new class of trailblazing astronomers.Thus, apart from the mytho-historical record, thetheory presented within this book includes evidence from geology, paleontology,astrophysics, and plasma cosmology. It also serves to elucidate variousdilemmas that presently encumber these and other disciplines.What might be seen by some as of greaterimportance, the reconstruction of the primeval events that took place beneaththe proto-Saturnian sun goes a long way in disclosing the origins of religion,including the very concept of deity.While, for the sake of scholarship, the bookincludes the odd technical tract, it is nevertheless written in a manner thatwill be readily understood by the intelligent layperson. In fact, it almostreads like a detective novel None None None None None None None None None None None None None None None None None Chapter 2 Ancient Astronomical Lore Sacred Images from the Sky Cosmic Debris Calendars Venus Sunspots The Eternal Planet Guest Stars The Suriya Siddhanta The Almagest The Heliocentric System The Well at Syene Inclination to the South The Precession of the Equinoxes The Crime of Anaxagoras Shadow Through Space The Metonic Cycle A Matter of Gravity The Rotation & Revolution of Planets Planetary Conjunctions The periodicity of Comets Number of Worlds Life on Other Planets The Babylonian Precedence The Zodiac The Astronomical Diaries Chapter 3 The Sun Star The Most Prominent of the Planets Stella Solaris (Mul) Lu-Bat Sag-Uš The Light of the Gods Ningirsu The True Sun The Saturnian Sun First Interlude Chapter 4 The Sun of Night The Egyptian Night Sun The Babylonian Exemplar Nocturnal Deities The God of Saturday Night Chapter 5 Dead Suns Dark Stars Potted Stars Failed Stars Proto-Stars Red Dwarf Star Miniature Sun Failed Model Brown Dwarfs Second Interlude Chapter 6 Primordial Satellite Starlight: Star Bright Janus An or Anu Ouranos Varuna Saturnus Stella Proxima The Dogon Mystery The Star of Nine Moons Third Interlude Chapter 7 Planetary Shuffle The Unstable Solar System The Titius-Bode Law Retroactive Calculations Former Orbits The Shifting Earth The Habitable Zone Chapter 8 The Solitary Deity The One Alone Ptah-Seker-Asar Prajapati Four from the primitive World Fourth Interlude Chapter 9 The Immobile God The Sabbath Star The God of the Jews The Trouble with Amos The Stable One The God of Jerusalem The House of Shulman The Mesopotamian Evidence The Egyptian Explicitness Shining in the Lightland Reigning Em Hetep Immovable fixed The Never-Setting Planet Chapter 10 The Polar Station A Choice of Models El--Eloah--Elohim The Left Hand of God The Sacred Quarter The Story of Anu Unas and the Circumpolar Stars The Egyptian Creed of Resurrection The Guardian of the Pole Dhuruva The Genie of the Pivot The European Evidence The Sun of the Centre and Other Echoes Sinterklaas Fifth Interlude Chapter 11 Testing the Model The Demands of a Theory Internal consistency The Lithospheric Bulge The Nature of Tidal Forces The Astronomical Dilemma Chapter 12 In the Beginning Being and not Being Tohu wa Bohu Chaos Tao The nebular Cloud Mot Nu The Waters of Chaos The Whirl of Creation Chapter 13 The Age of Darkness Darkness and the Deep The Amerind Traditions Kon Tiki Viracocha The Endless Sea Something Called Nothing The Long Night of Rumia Chapter 14 The Dawn of Creation The Primordial Glow Creatures of the Dark Photosynthesis The Required Temperature The Plasmasphere Sixth Interlude Chapter 15 The Timeless Era The Father of Years Chronos Aion Kala The Slow-Moving Planet Dionysus Quetzalcoatl Unveiled Time Zero Chapter 16 The Interloping System Out in Space Extra-Solar Planets The Revised History of the Solar System A Matter of Nomenclature The Runaway Planet Lone Travelers Through Space The Absent Sun The Distant Sun Seventh Interlude Chapter 17 Life Beneath a Brown Dwarf Star Tight Orbit Phase Lock Atmospheric Amplitude The Cradle of Life Stationary Star Long-Lived Sun The Search for Dwarf Star Planets Chapter 18 A World with One Season The Nature of Seasons The God of Seasons Photoperiodism The Sub-Tropical Arctic The Canadian High arctic From Pole to Pole and in Between The Cretaceous Climate Tree Rings The Axial Tilt Hypothesis Clues from Other Planets The Boreal Cradle The Caretaker of the World Chapter 19 Polar Wandering The Coral Data The Ice Cap Model The Toppling Globe Heoid Highs The Paleomagnetic Evidence The Martian Archetype Last Interlude Chapter 20 The Axial Coupling The Problem Bold Endeavors The Lesson of Shoemaker-Levy 9 The Transitory System Cosmic Jets Herbig-Haro Objects Chapter 21 The Axis Mundi The Ruach Sanchoniathon's Cosmogony Boreas Ehecatl Shu Hurakon The One-Legged God The Phallic Post The Sky Pillar The Fiery Axis Cook's Support Suhr's Lunar Shadow The Pole of the Ecliptic The Whirling Ray from Above Chapter 22 Cosmic Genesis The Nature of the Beast The Arctic Depression Free-Floating Sub-Brown Dwarfs The Accretion Disk Model Planetary Ejections Astral Ejections Objective Earth Epilogue Scaling Up and Down An Alternative conception End of Act One Index A to Z **The Most Complete Re-Telling Of History In Print--And Possibly The Most Provocative...** *From Rear Cover:* If controversial subjects are not your cup of tea, read no further and put this book down right now because what this work has to offer is revolutionary in the extreme. God Star sets out to show that the sky which ancient man remembers was entirely different from the one that now stretches above us. This is demonstrated through ancient texts from all over the world which deal with the astronomical lore of our forefathers. As if with a single voice, these texts proclaim that the present planet we know as Saturn once shone as a sun in Earth's primordial sky. This claim receives credence through the fact that astronomers now view the planet Saturn as the remnant of what had once been a brown dwarf star. It also goes a long way in explaining why Saturn was considered the "ruler of the planets in mythology,"* and why the god of that planet is found at the head of every ancient pantheon on earth. Astronomically, it is then deduced that Earth used to be the satellite of this proto-Saturnian sun, which mini-system then invaded the present Solar System, and that this transpired during the age of man. As bizarre as this scenario appears, it is lent credibility by the hard sciences through the unmistakable signs encountered here on Earth, as also by what is constantly being discovered out in space. In fact, the likelihood that such an interloping planetary system might have been captured by the Sun is even now acknowledged by a new class of trailblazing astronomers. Thus, apart from the mytho-historical record, the theory presented within the pages of this book includes evidence from geology, paleontology, astronphysics, and plasma cosmology. It also serves to elucidate various dilemmas that presently encumber these and other disciplines. What might be seen by some as of greater importance, the reconstruction of the primeval events that took place beneath the proto-Saturnian sun goes a long way in disclosing the origins of religion, including the very concept of deity. While, for the sake of scholarship, the book includes the odd technical tract, it is nevertheless written in a manner that will be readily understood by the intelligent layperson. In fact, it reads almost like a detective novel. [ * *Astronomy (January 2006 Special Issue), p. 60.* ] If controversial subjects are not your cup of tea, read no further and put this book down right now because what this work has to offer is revolutionary in the extreme.God Star sets out to show that the sky that ancient man remembers was entirely different from the one that now stretches above us.This is demonstrated through ancient texts from all over the world which deal with the astronomical lore of our forebears. As if with a single voice, these texts proclaim that the present planet we know as Saturn once shone as a sun in Earth's primordial sky. This claim receives credence through the fact that astronomers now view the planet Saturn as the remnant of what had once been a brown dwarf star. It also goes a long way in explaining why Saturn was considered the "ruler of the planets in mythology,"* and why the god of that planet is found at the head of every ancient pantheon on earth.Astronomically, it is then deduced that Earth used to be the satellite of this proto-Saturnian sun, which mini-system then invaded the present Solar System, and that this transpired during the age of man.As bizarre as this scenario appears, it is lent credibility by the hard sciences through the unmistakable signs encountered here on Earth and also by what is constantly being discovered out in space. In fact, the likelihood that such an interloping planetary system might have been captured by the Sun is even now acknowledged by a new class of trailblazing astronomers.Thus, apart from the mytho-historical record, the theory presented within the pages of this book includes evidence from geology, palaeontology, astrophysics, and plasma cosmology. It also serves to elucidate various dilemmas that presently encumber these and other disciplines.What might be seen by some as of greater importance, the reconstruction of the primeval events that took place beneath the proto-Saturnian sun, goes a long way in disclosing the origins of religion, including the very concept of deity.While, for the sake of scholarship, the book includes the odd technical tract, it is nevertheless written in a manner that will be readily understood by the intelligent layperson. In fact, it almost reads like a detective novel.* Astronomy (January 2006 Special Issue), p. 60 If controversial subjects are not your cup of tea, read no further and put this book down right now because what this work has to offer is revolutionary in the extreme. God Star sets out to show that the sky that ancient man remembers was entirely different from the one that now stretches above us. This is demonstrated through ancient texts from all over the world which deal with the astronomical lore of our forebears. As if with a single voice, these texts proclaim that the present planet we know as Saturn once shone as a sun in Earth's primordial sky. This claim receives credence through the fact that astronomers now view the planet Saturn as the remnant of what had once been a brown dwarf star. It also goes a long way in explaining why Saturn was considered the "ruler of the planets in mythology,"\* and why the god of that planet is found at the head of every ancient pantheon on earth. Astronomically, it is then deduced that Earth used to be the satellite of this proto-Saturnian sun, which mini-system then invaded the present Solar System, and that this transpired during the age of man. As bizarre as this scenario appears, it is lent credibility by the hard sciences through the unmistakable signs encountered here on Earth and also by what is constantly being discovered out in space. In fact, the likelihood that such an interloping planetary system might have been captured by the Sun is even now acknowledged by a new class of trailblazing astronomers. Thus, apart from the mytho-historical record, the theory presented within the pages of this book includes evidence from geology, palaeontology, astrophysics, and plasma cosmology. It also serves to elucidate various dilemmas that presently encumber these and other disciplines. What might be seen by some as of greater importance, the reconstruction of the primeval events that took place beneath the proto-Saturnian sun, goes a long way in disclosing the origins of religion, including the very concept of deity. While, for the sake of scholarship, the book includes the odd technical tract, it is nevertheless written in a manner that will be readily understood by the intelligent layperson. In fact, it almost reads like a detective novel. 00 God Star Covers 0-God Star Title Page & TOC God Star Chapter 01 reduce God Star Chapter 02 opt reduce God Star Chapter 03 God Star Chapter 04 Binder1.pdf God Star Chapter 05 God Star Chapter 06 God Star Chapter 07 God Star Chapter 08 God Star Chapter 09 God Star Chapter 10 God Star Chapter 11 God Star Chapter 12 God Star Chapter 13 God Star Chapter 14 God Star Chapter 15 God Star Chapter 16 God Star Chapter 17 God Star Chapter 18 God Star Chapter 19 God Star Chapter 20 God Star Chapter 21 God Star Chapter 22 God Star Epilogue God Star Index
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