Quote:
Originally Posted by JimTKirk
This entire dataset seems to be cherry picking... Why not something that includes a revolt instead of Galileo finding moons around Jupiter? How about tying in the rise and fall of the Roman Empire or the Greeks or even Galileo's first use of a telescope? Also, hasn't it been 40 years not 20 years since 1968? Edit: I guess what I'm saying is the Paris uprising, storming of the Bastille and the Sorbonne events are all type of physical upheavals but the finding of the moons by Galileo is not. It just appears to tie the Jupiter/Saturn/Neptune (maybe Uranus) cycles into the hodge-podge of data.
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Yes, as I said, these historic events are just cherry-picked because they are 179 years apart. However, they illustrate how we can use the SSB as a timeline. Setting out detailed events on a timeline would illustrate those which occurred at the same relative point, and enable analysis of order within the hodge-podge. The SSB structure illustrated on
my attached picture presents a major solar system cycle, permanently valid with ongoing slow phase change. It is interesting to consider how this periodic rhythm may relate to events on earth, and in relation to the longer age cycle I discussed at
Astronomical History . The picture I presented occurs precisely twelve times in each age and 144 times in each great year.
Regarding Galileo and the French Revolution, the connection I would draw is that both were the signal for massive upheaval in cultural directions. Galileo exploded the idea of perfect heavenly spheres and the Jacobins exploded the idea of divine right of kings. Similarly, May 68 envisaged an equivalent scale of change in human consciousness. I am just hanging these events as pegs which may be considered as initial events in successive defined geocosmic periods, as a starting point for a cosmic theory of history, using the 179 year SSB cycle as a framework.