Pages

Monday, May 17, 2010

Observe Oil On Water

With the premises that we have previously put forward, we wish to revisit the ancient concepts of cosmology and verify whether they are logical or merely fairy tales.
In order to properly comprehend the ancient myths related to cosmology and cosmogony, we have first to set our mind to higher-dimensional frameworks. It is the golden key required to open the secret of ancient creation myths.

Heavens and earth are the basic notions that frequently quoted in the ancient myth. Most people narrowly interpret these notions as the skies and the planet earth. What the ancients meant with these notions were much broader. They mean as the relativity of a pairing. The heavens might represent something higher, active, the provider; while the earth something lower, passive, the receiver.



The most ancient concept of cosmology can be traced far back in history to the era before Flood. Enmenduranki, a wise king who reigned in the city of Siphar in Babylon gave us a very technical clue on the fundamental concept of cosmology. To comprehend cosmology correctly, he merely asked his people a simple thing … to observe oil on water. 

 The anthropologists lightly interpret this message as a lesson about ancient medicine ingredients. However, far from that, it is the golden key that we have searched for so long to open the secret of the universe. What the king wanted us to observe was the oil and water interface. He did not mean the regular oil and water, but the higher dimensional one. In the four-dimensional framework, for example, the interface would be three-dimensional. His clear message was that our three-dimensional space is nothing but the interface that splits the four-dimensional spacetime in two. In ancient language, the two halves of the spacetime are called heavens and the interface earth.

Genesis also used this kind of cosmology description. It describes the heavens by using the notion of water above and water below and the earth firmament. The term of the firmament in the Genesis is the translation of "raqia," the Hebrew word whose root means the gold leaf that is hammered very thin. This notion of raqia is thus concordance with Enmenduranki’s oil and water’s interface which is very thin indeed. The Qur'an refers to this interface: barzakh. In our modern time, the physicists introduce the concept of "brane" but still in the development proses. The thickness of such firmament (space) is 10-33 cm. No goldsmith in the world can hammer a piece of gold so thin, not even in Moses time.

We may wonder how can such ancient societies were capable of delivering messages with such a high technicality which modern people could not understand.

References:
1.      Sitchin, Zecharia:" When Time Began," Avon Books, p84, New York, 1993
2.      Friedman, R.E.:" Commentary on the Torah," Harper, San Fransisco, 2001
3.      Randall, Lisa:" Warped Passage," Harper Perennial, New York, 2005


Share/Bookmark

No comments:

Post a Comment