Divinity originates/arises from itself. Everything else is created.
Geographically speaking much closer than you might think.
The Garden of Eden is located in the center of the Earth, north of Egypt, west of the Nile, right next to the sea of Atil.
Proof of either the Earth or Mars rotating (and don't use the RLG).
The atmospheres of Jupiter and Mars are rotating (for those who think that Mars has no atmosphere, let them access the original photographs from the Viking mission, 1976).
From my persective , nothing has gone past a certain altitude and space is not "physical" neither are the planets, legit we can only see them as lights and yet everyone pretends they know what they are.
You cannot go to the meeting of the American Astronomical Society and let them know that planets are lights. You must first take care to debunk the official line (expanding universe, heliocentrism, geology of the Earth, newtonian mechanics, nuclear energy). Then, and only then, you are entitled to offer the real deal concerning astrophysics.
"Winter Solstice 2020: The 'Great
Conjunction' of
Jupiter and
Saturn on
December Solstice -
December 21. The 'Great
Conjunction' of
Jupiter and
Saturn will be the closest since
1623, which is 13 years after Galileo built his
first telescope and discovered four new 'stars' orbiting the
Jupiter. "
However, no conjunction could have taken place in 1623 AD.
And Galileo could not have seen his neighbor's cat using that telescope:
http://www.scitechantiques.com/Galileo-Telescope-Anomalies-optics/
MARCH 20, 1662 AD
Each and every controversy/contradiction of science, religion, history could have been well settled on the date of March 20, 1662.
There were to be no more future discussions/debates on vacuum vs. ether, theory of evolution vs. creationism, spherical earth vs. flat surface of the earth, heliocentricity vs. geocentricity: each and every dispute should have been resolved in totality on that very date.
March 20, 1662, represents by far the most important astronomical date in the history of scientific observations, of science in general, of astrophysics, of religion.
Because on that very date, right on the day of the
vernal equinox, a total solar eclipse occurred.
And yet, in the official chronology of history, with the exception of a very obscure reference, NONE of the famous astronomers of the day could have cared less about this remarkable celestial phenomenon.
The Jesuits in India/China, F. Verbiest, J. Schall von Bell, even the young N. Flamsteed fail to notice/record this most important of all the total solar eclipses.
It is only in a very brief mention by Domenico Cassini, that this solar eclipse is even recorded at all.
New tables of the sun, based on his observations at San Petronio in 1662: these observations are published in the Catalogue général des livres imprimés de la Bibliothèque Nationale, XXIV (Paris, 1905), cols. 678–682, or in the Table générale des maturès continuesdans l’Histoire et dans les Mémoires de l’Académic Royaledes Sciences, I–III (Paris, 1729–1734).
D. Cassini, Ephemerides nouisssimae motuum coelestium:
Ephemerides nouisssimae motuum coelestium marchioni... | Malvasia, Cornelio (pg. 28, 29, 34, 35)
What should have been by far the most important astronomical event of the millenium, of all time, a chance to settle once and for all the Gregorian calendar reform controversy, the raging debate on heliocentricity vs. geocentricity, aroused no interest at all from the scientific community at that point in time.
And yet, the registered date, for the official chronology of history, for the total solar eclipse which occurred in early 1662, March 20 (right on the vernal equinox)
cannot be true.
https://web.archive.org/web/2018041...ear.physik.uni-bremen.de/download/GREGCAL.pdf
The Gregorian calendar was developed in the later part of the 16th century,
mainly by Aloysius Lilius and Christophorus Clavius. It was named after
Pope Gregory XIII who decreed its implementation in 1582. By that time
the Julian calendar had run out of step with the astronomical data in two
ways. In its solar part, it had accumulated an error of ten days; the true
average vernal equinox fell on March 11 rather than March 21 as the calendar
assumed. This was corrected by omitting the ten calendar days October 5
through October 14, 1582.
Papal Bull, Gregory XIII, 1582:
Therefore we took care not only that the vernal equinox returns on its former date, of which it has already deviated approximately ten days since the Nicene Council, and so that the fourteenth day of the Paschal moon is given its rightful place, from which it is now distant four days and more, but also that there is founded a methodical and rational system which ensures, in the future, that the equinox and the fourteenth day of the moon do not move from their appropriate positions.
According to the official chronology and astronomy, the direction of Earth's rotation axis executes a slow precession with a period of approximately 26,000 years.
Therefore, in the year 325 e.n., official date for the Council of Nicaea, the winter solstice MUST HAVE FALLEN on December 21 or December 22; in the year 968 e.n., on December 16; and in the year 1582, on December 11.
We are told that the motivation for the Gregorian reform was that the Julian calendar assumes that the time between vernal equinoxes is 365.25 days, when in fact it is about 11 minutes less. The accumulated error between these values was about 10 days (starting from the Council of Nicaea) when the reform was made, resulting in the equinox occurring on March 11 and moving steadily earlier in the calendar, also by the 16th century AD the winter solstice fell around December 11.
Domenico Cassini, in the official chronology of history, agrees wholeheartedly with the Gregorian calendar reform, and even defends it vigorously.
But it was Cassini who installed the most accurate observatory at San Petronio, and made ample use of it to monitor the accuracy of the new calendar. Cassini’s observations allowed exact calculations of future equinoxes on the Gregorian calendar to be made in advance.
Time and the French Revolution
If the date of the total solar eclipse of the spring in the year 1662 AD really had fallen on March 20, the very day of the vernal equinox, then it would have constituted a perfect, total astronomical verification of the Gregorian calendar reform; also a valid proof that the chronology of history, from Hipparchus to Ptolemy and from Exiguus to Clavius, based on the axial precession of the Earth, was correct (thus resolving once and for all the heliocentricity vs. geocentricity debate).
Same observations can be applied for the March 20, 1643 AD, total solar eclipse.
New radical chronology of history:
March, 20, 1643: first ever solar/lunar eclipses occur (Adam and Eve leave the garden of Eden).
March 20, 1662: first ever cosmic cataclysm
The Bundahishn (the most fantastic treatise in pre-Flood cosmology and astronomy) tells that at a certain time in the past,
the Earth had 24 hour a day light, coming from two Suns (the visible Sun and our present Moon) and that there were no solar or lunar eclipses.
Aborigines of the New World: “the Sun and the moon had equal light in the past."
"At the other end of the world the Japanese asserted the same: the Nihongi Chronicle says that in the past "the radiance of the moon was next to that of the sun in splendor."
Traditions of many peoples maintain that the Moon lost a large part of its light and became much dimmer than it had been in earlier ages.
The memory of a world without a moon lives in oral tradition among the Indians. The Indians of the Bogota highlands in the eastern Cordilleras of Colombia relate some of their tribal reminiscences to the time before there was a moon. "In the earliest times, when the moon was not yet in the heavens," say the tribesmen of Chibchas.
Traditions of diverse peoples offer corroborative testimony to the effect that in a very early age, but still in the memory of mankind, no moon accompanied the Earth. "
"The evil spirit [Ahriman] went toward the luminaries." "He stood upon one-third of the inside of the sky, and he sprang, like a snake, out of the sky down to the earth."
It was the day of the vernal equinox. "He rushed in at noon," and "the sky was shattered and frightened." "Like a fly, he rushed out upon the whole creation, and he injured the world and made it dark at midday as though it were in dark night. And noxious creatures were diffused by him over the earth, biting and venomous, such as the snake, scorpion, frog, and lizard, so that not so much as the point of a needle remained free from noxious creatures."
There is another work on the Bundahis which gives a different opinion as to the vernal equinox date:
Iran Chamber Society: Old Iranian Calendars
A. Olrik, in the classic work Ragnarok, says that the account given by the Eskimos is as follows: a darkening of the sun and of the moon precedes the end of a world age.