(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: It is not my ideas.
All Americans use strong linguistic cliché: “Holy shit” and “Holy crap”. Ask them if they worship to shit.
My explanation you know. What is yours?
I did. They said no. Which must mean that the idea that they worship shit because shit is connected to moon must be yours.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: What is third eye? Do you believe that people might have third eye?
Eye is another very common allegory for moon. Look at the Jesus ichty sign. It is eye. Egyptians, Slavs, Hindus, Masonry. Everybody refer to some sky related eye. What is it? Can you show the eye in the sky?
You know what an eye is. You know what three is. Infer from that what a third eye would mean.
And once again, its not an allegory for moon. Jesus fish is not an eye. And the idea of third eye is prevalent in different cultures because it is an allegory for extra-ordinary perception not possible by two eyes. There is no eye in the sky.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Alright. So Hinduism is somebody’s fancy?
Then try to fancy some story, which will not be based on stuff you see around. Use your flight of fancy. Sure, you will not develop a sentence without using real objects in you story. Thus, even if ancient artist was developing the fancy story it was based on real objects he saw around.
Every religion is somebody's fantasy. And they use stuff they see around them to make those fantasies all the time. The thing you seem ignorant of is that moon is not the only thing they see. Which is why saying things like "all religions are ultimately about the moon" is just stupid.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Nope. I told you before. Association with full moon is the association with moon itself. As moon has two different shapes any association connects object both to new and full moon.
In Islamic traditions wolves are associated with new moon. Search google for this words and you will see that: wolf crescent moon
And I told you before - you are wrong. For the resons already explained.
And a novel written by a muslim does not count as evidence for "wolves are associated with new moon in Islamic tradition".
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Probably we talk about different kinds of test.
For example to join Mensa society the minimum accepted score on the Stanford-Binet is 132, while for the Cattell it is 148.
Mine is for Stanford-Binet and yours must be for Cattell test.
Despite of this, 145 and 160 are two completely different levels. If you have 145 it is good result. But if you really have 160 you are one of tens persons from all humanity.
But as I see how you solve simple logic tests you don’t have such high results. So don’t cheat.
Also your following text about MQ, from psychological point of view, roars that you are cheating
Couse when people are cheating they don’t fill comfortable and start to tell bullshit, which is not connected to the main story.
Watch “Lie to me” to understand it.
The one I gave was through an invite sent to me to join Mensa.
However, having higher IQ does not mean you get better at finding convoluted pseudo-logical connections between arbitrary objects. It means that you understand that anything can be "connected" to anything else in whatever way you want it to be connected and a higher IQ gives you an understanding where such connections are meaningful and where they aren't. Such understanding seems beyond your capacity.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Why do you think they did not know? They were not stupid to see how moon is moving around the sky and understand that trajectory of moon and sun are crossed. And they were deifying the moon, which has the power to cover the sun.
Moon is an object associated with night and darkness. If sun was getting dark, first what they were thinking that night-god is taking it over.
What is the reason to deify an object, which is disappearing while being covered by some other dark object? Can you explain?
As a matter of fact, they did not know. Which is why their explanation of eclipses included an immortal beheaded demon whose head caused the solar eclipse and whose body caused the lunar eclipse. They were not deifying the entity that caused the eclipse, they were demonizing it. Try understanding their explanation before coming up with your ridiculous notions.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: There are no references in RigVeda to 12 periods days or Vedic geometry or astrology. The answer is much simpler than strange “seven hundred twenty sectors of imaginary circle joined in pairs together”
720 is 360 days joined with 360 nights – one year period.
12 – lunar months during one year.
Remember the quest:
“Formed with twelve spokes, by length of time, unweakened, rolls round the heaven this wheel of during Order “
The wheel of order which is rolling round the heaven is specific object they were seeing in the sky. It is moon without any doubt.
Except, Vedic calendar doesn't follow the Gregorian model of 12 months and ~360 days. Further, this is a prayer to Agni (fire) in the sky, which is undoubtedly the sun.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: I said it means moon. Crescent is not moon. It is its geometrical shape. Do you understand the difference?
Do you? You are the one who said "His symbol is कौमुदी kaumudī - crescent.". And now you are backtracking. Try and remember that unlike verbal conversations, here I can show you where you lied.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: So what? Both guys were herds. Both connected to horned animals. Sheep horns has crescent shape.
SHeeP = SHiP. As I said before, ship due to its shape comes into many god related stories.
But both were not herds. Krishna was an actual cowherd whereas with Jesus, the reference was metaphorical. And there is no ship reference here with Jesus.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Wiki states: Vasudeva Krishna in a decorated helmet
Quote were you have found it states the helmet has no crescent or horns.
Again posting a picture. Please explaine what kind of decoration has helmet of Vasudeva Krishna.
The same place where it says "decorated helmet". If the representation had been of crescent or horns, the the description would've read "Vasudeva Krishna in a helmet decorated with horns and crescent". It doesn't, and no it isn't.
As for what that decoration actually signifies - try doing a bit of objective research into ancient Hindu art without your moon-glasses on. As long as you are seeing moon in everything, you won't figure out what those decorations are and any answer would result in you repeating "but that is connected to moon as well".
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Yeah. Sikhs magicly fallen down from the sky on territory of India
Nope - they fell down from Guru Nanak.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Let me point you attention on Sikhism main attributes:
There are 5 items associated with Sikhism:
kēs (uncut hair), kaṅghā (small wooden comb), kaṛā (circular steel or iron bracelet), kirpān (sword/dagger), and kacchera (special undergarment).
None of which are connected to moon.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: kēs is hair which grows all life long. Beard and mustache counted as kēs also. kēs is covered by turban with accented crescent or ball like shape.
HaiR = HaRe
BeaRD = BiRD
MuSTache = MeSyaC
Please, keep going. Kesh means hair and those are not the only hair on body.
Ass hair = Ass = full moon (colloq.) = Moon.
Pubic hair = Penis = LUNd (sl. hindi) = LUNa =Moon.
Chest hair = Chest = breasts = two moons.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Obviously, every hair on your body is an allegory for moon.
kaṅghā – Crescent shaped comb.
KaNGha = KiNG
Nope. It just means comb. Not crescent shaped.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: kaṛā (circular steel or iron bracelet) कड़ा – silver color round braslet.
Translation of word kaṛā gives good example of forecasting power of presented theory.
कड़ा – stiff, rigid, hard and Spartan.
Interesting, what is so special about Spartans. Google images give answer.
Spartans had V shape on their shields and crescent shape toupee.
Another example of your theory's miserable failure despite misrepresenting facts.
Kara - hard and tough.
Sikhs are to be hard and tough.
Symbolized by the iron or steel bracelet. No relation to Sparta or the moon in any way.
As for Sparta, the letter is not V, its a lambda Λ. Which stands for Laconia. Not moon. Also, the shape of their helmets and toupees are called Phrygian - not crescent and thus, once again, no moon.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: kirpān – crescent shaped sword.
No, it just means a short dagger.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: kacchera – V shaped trousers.
Again - it means underpants. V shape is unnecessary.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: And their sign is Khanda, which has completely crescent shape when wore.
Not moon religion? Aha.
That's not a Khanda. This is.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khanda_%28Sikh_symbol%29
And there is not crescent in there.
Not moon religion. Aha.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Then prove it. Show the difference between turban shape and crescent shape imaged.
You already did. You distorted the crescent shape and still couldn't make the turban shape fit in it.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Listen to yourself: “Ritual cockfight is not connected to religion”
IT IS RITUAL! Ritual means related to religion. Moreover, it happens during religion festivals.
No, it doesn't. A lot of other rituals are practiced within the religious festivals without having any significance within the religion itself. Firecrackers are ritual within Diwali without any religious significance and water-fights are ritual within Holi without any religious significance.
(October 7, 2013 at 4:27 pm)Monolens Wrote: Ok. I believe you understand the connection, but you have to defend your first point.
There is an example from Wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_bull
The Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh depicts the killing by Gilgamesh and Enkidu of the Bull of Heaven, Gugalana, first husband of Ereshkigal, as an act of defiance of the gods. From the earliest times, the bull was lunar in Mesopotamia (its horns representing the crescent moon).[1]
1. Jules Cashford, The Moon: Myth and Image 2003, begins the section "Bull and cow" pp 102ff with the simple observation: “Other animals become epiphanies of the Moon because they look like the moon.... the sharp horns of a bull or cow were seen to match the pointed curve of the waxing and waning crescents so exactly that the powers of the one were attributed to the other, each gaining the other's potency as well as their own.”
Once again, you read only the parts which seem to support your nonsensical notions and completely ignore the wealth of evidence against it.
Nobody said that the bull cannot be conceivably associated with the moon. It can, and maybe in some religions, it is. But your contention goes much beyond that. You are contending that each and every appearance of the bull in any religion is the result of its association with the moon. And the very article you linked to, proves you wrong.
In the very first paragraph: "The bull, whether lunar as in Mesopotamia or solar as in India, is the subject of various other cultural and religious incarnations, "
Solar, as in associated with the sun, not moon.
Also: "The bull was seen in the constellation Taurus by the Chalcolithic and had marked the new year at springtide by the Bronze Age". Again - appearance of the bull without any association with the moon.
Specific to the subject of this part of the thread - there is no sacred bull associated with Artemis - the goddess of moon - as indicated by the hellenistic and roman sections of the article.
You are the one who has to defend your point because you are making the claim that all bull appearances in all religions are allegories for moon and now, your own article proves you wrong.