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What is saturn?
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<blockquote data-quote="iamonarch" data-source="post: 191065" data-attributes="member: 12234"><p>--Dude...Saturn is a planet.</p><p>--...</p><p>--But really, though, yes, Saturn is associated with the Kabba in Mecca, the black cube, and at least in the sense of late medieval theology/philosophy one of the "spheres" of the afterlife (an idea that was heavily influenced by ancient astronomy, yes, but more formally developed after, of all things, the publication of Dante's "Divine Comedy")--not hell, though.</p><p>--What Saturn really is, though--besides a gas giant orbiting our central star--is a conduit through which primordial or foundation aetheric, or perhaps a better word would be "psychic" or even "spiritual," energy is allowed to manifest, thereby obtaining the capacity to interact with the material plane of reality...</p><p>--Nay mean?</p><p>--In all seriousness, the associations that Saturn has garnered over the millennia are probably in part due to some element of its actual nature, which considering its associations would be something akin to what I said up above. Let me explain:</p><p>--All of the planets came to viewed in specific ways by different cultures throughout time, and while those views vary they also share similarities. Further, those views also include in many instances elements that science has come to realize are actually present, i.e. Saturn's association with the cube and the discovery of the hexagon on its southern pole, Mar's association with war and the discovery that its soil is primarily iron, which just so happens to be the mineral that not only characterized the most brutal era of human history (the Iron Age) but is also present in blood, etc.</p><p>--Is it a coincidence, then, that these different cultures had the similar ideas about the planets <em>and</em> that the planets happened to actually be something like what those ideas suggested, even before anyone could've actually known?</p><p>--One must conclude (barring extraterrestrials or something equally improbable) that the planets generate some type of force--be it magnetic, harmonic, psychic, etc.--that allowed humans to discern their nature to some extent, which isn't that preposterous considering what we know about magnetic fields. Even quantum particles are only predictable because of their "wave like behavior," which suggests that perhaps some type of undulating movement--and therefore transference of energy, i.e. information--characterizes reality at its most fundamental level.</p><p>--...In short (and I know how this sounds) the planets are like giant radio towers that project, well, emotions in a sense, but more like fundamental concepts of existence...Here's an example:</p><p>--Mars is made of iron...Iron was used in war to spill the blood of man...Warfare increased whenever Mars was visible in the sky, both with man's willful acknowledgment and perhaps without...and Man came to associate Mars with war...and Mars just so happens to be, well, what they thought it was--red, iron, unforgiving and eternally in a rage of storms that can strip a man of flesh in mere seconds...So did Mars inform Man of its nature? Or did Man inform Mars? Perhaps it is that without Mars man would not know warfare, which is to say perhaps without the Gods mankind would not be what it is...</p><p>--And so Saturn...is everything they say it is...and at the same time...</p><p>--Saturn is a planet.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="iamonarch, post: 191065, member: 12234"] --Dude...Saturn is a planet. --... --But really, though, yes, Saturn is associated with the Kabba in Mecca, the black cube, and at least in the sense of late medieval theology/philosophy one of the "spheres" of the afterlife (an idea that was heavily influenced by ancient astronomy, yes, but more formally developed after, of all things, the publication of Dante's "Divine Comedy")--not hell, though. --What Saturn really is, though--besides a gas giant orbiting our central star--is a conduit through which primordial or foundation aetheric, or perhaps a better word would be "psychic" or even "spiritual," energy is allowed to manifest, thereby obtaining the capacity to interact with the material plane of reality... --Nay mean? --In all seriousness, the associations that Saturn has garnered over the millennia are probably in part due to some element of its actual nature, which considering its associations would be something akin to what I said up above. Let me explain: --All of the planets came to viewed in specific ways by different cultures throughout time, and while those views vary they also share similarities. Further, those views also include in many instances elements that science has come to realize are actually present, i.e. Saturn's association with the cube and the discovery of the hexagon on its southern pole, Mar's association with war and the discovery that its soil is primarily iron, which just so happens to be the mineral that not only characterized the most brutal era of human history (the Iron Age) but is also present in blood, etc. --Is it a coincidence, then, that these different cultures had the similar ideas about the planets [I]and[/I] that the planets happened to actually be something like what those ideas suggested, even before anyone could've actually known? --One must conclude (barring extraterrestrials or something equally improbable) that the planets generate some type of force--be it magnetic, harmonic, psychic, etc.--that allowed humans to discern their nature to some extent, which isn't that preposterous considering what we know about magnetic fields. Even quantum particles are only predictable because of their "wave like behavior," which suggests that perhaps some type of undulating movement--and therefore transference of energy, i.e. information--characterizes reality at its most fundamental level. --...In short (and I know how this sounds) the planets are like giant radio towers that project, well, emotions in a sense, but more like fundamental concepts of existence...Here's an example: --Mars is made of iron...Iron was used in war to spill the blood of man...Warfare increased whenever Mars was visible in the sky, both with man's willful acknowledgment and perhaps without...and Man came to associate Mars with war...and Mars just so happens to be, well, what they thought it was--red, iron, unforgiving and eternally in a rage of storms that can strip a man of flesh in mere seconds...So did Mars inform Man of its nature? Or did Man inform Mars? Perhaps it is that without Mars man would not know warfare, which is to say perhaps without the Gods mankind would not be what it is... --And so Saturn...is everything they say it is...and at the same time... --Saturn is a planet. [/QUOTE]
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