the 13th Zodiac: Correcting Map of Time and Space
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12,68 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
The map is not the territory. For 2,500 years, we have been using the wrong map. The twelve-sign zodiac is one of the most enduring systems in human history. It is also astronomically incorrect. When the Babylonians codified the zodiac around 500 BCE, they made a deliberate mathematical choice: they divided the sky into twelve equal segments to match their twelve-month calendar. In doing so, they excluded a constellation that was visibly present on the ecliptic. That constellation is Ophiuchus, the Serpent-Bearer. he 13th Zodiac: Correcting the Map of Time and Space is not an astrology book. It is an investigation into the intersection of astronomy, history, and the systems we use to organize reality. Tony Beede dismantles the administrative convenience of the twelve-sign system and presents the iron facts of the actual sky. In this book, you will discover: -The Astronomical Reality: Why the Sun spends 18 days each year passing through Ophiuchus, and why the current zodiac dates are off by nearly a full sign due to the precession of the equinoxes. -The Historical Suppression: How the Babylonians, Greeks, and Romans prioritized mathematical symmetry over astronomical accuracy, and why the modern astrological industry maintains that illusion. -The Mythology of the Serpent-Bearer: The cross-cultural archetype of Ophiuchus-from the Egyptian Imhotep to the Greek Asclepius-and its enduring connection to healing, knowledge, and the bridge between life and death. -The 13-Month Calendar: How the correction of the zodiac aligns with a more rational, mathematically elegant way to measure time: thirteen months of twenty-eight days. -The Coherosance Framework: How the recovery of the thirteenth element connects to deeper mathematical patterns found in the genetic code and the geometry of the regular polyhedra. We build systems to make sense of a complex world. But when we mistake the map for the territory-when we treat the administrative convenience of twelve as if it were a natural fact-we lose our ability to see what is actually there. >The map is now corrected. The territory has not changed. It has been waiting, patiently, for us to look.
The map is not the territory. For 2,500 years, we have been using the wrong map. The twelve-sign zodiac is one of the most enduring systems in human history. It is also astronomically incorrect. When the Babylonians codified the zodiac around 500 BCE, they made a deliberate mathematical choice: they divided the sky into twelve equal segments to match their twelve-month calendar. In doing so, they excluded a constellation that was visibly present on the ecliptic. That constellation is Ophiuchus, the Serpent-Bearer. he 13th Zodiac: Correcting the Map of Time and Space is not an astrology book. It is an investigation into the intersection of astronomy, history, and the systems we use to organize reality. Tony Beede dismantles the administrative convenience of the twelve-sign system and presents the iron facts of the actual sky. In this book, you will discover: -The Astronomical Reality: Why the Sun spends 18 days each year passing through Ophiuchus, and why the current zodiac dates are off by nearly a full sign due to the precession of the equinoxes. -The Historical Suppression: How the Babylonians, Greeks, and Romans prioritized mathematical symmetry over astronomical accuracy, and why the modern astrological industry maintains that illusion. -The Mythology of the Serpent-Bearer: The cross-cultural archetype of Ophiuchus-from the Egyptian Imhotep to the Greek Asclepius-and its enduring connection to healing, knowledge, and the bridge between life and death. -The 13-Month Calendar: How the correction of the zodiac aligns with a more rational, mathematically elegant way to measure time: thirteen months of twenty-eight days. -The Coherosance Framework: How the recovery of the thirteenth element connects to deeper mathematical patterns found in the genetic code and the geometry of the regular polyhedra. We build systems to make sense of a complex world. But when we mistake the map for the territory-when we treat the administrative convenience of twelve as if it were a natural fact-we lose our ability to see what is actually there. >The map is now corrected. The territory has not changed. It has been waiting, patiently, for us to look.
AmazonPagina's: 111, Paperback, Independently published
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