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Time Machines & Experiments
Time Machine in Brompton Cemetery?
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<blockquote data-quote="complicatedcrustation" data-source="post: 23467" data-attributes="member: 440"><p><strong>Re: Time Machine in Brompton Cemetery?</strong></p><p></p><p>Perhaps a bit off topic but more in tune with the conversation about the methods that we used to create and construct the Great Pyramids... </p><p>I was tossing this idea around with a few people and they liked it. Perhaps the stones were moved with the power of sound. Chanting and drumming as well as the playing of reed/brass instruments in unison with a crowd of say 100 people can be pretty damn loud (i.e. monkey chant Bali / Throat singing Tibet) and if each of those stones has a resonant harmonic frequency than there is no reason that a crowd of priests could make one of them jump up and down along a smooth plain that they could bounce the sound off of. Easy example to touch on a more concrete example, making a glass rattle on the table to a certain note is damn easy... I have seen very large things moved with sound (mostly pieces of the ceiling at rock concerts and other dangerous things in clubs fall over) </p><p>This seems like an idea that could satisfy the science and the spiritual at once. </p><p>There are many, many songs and chants that are considered to be the cornerstone of Egyptian spirituality whose true sounds are lost forever.The Greeks were known to say that the ancient language that they chanted in </p><p>was something that they could never imitate as hard as they tried although the written language was something that they could master. It was praised as a very powerful and moving sound which has perhaps been lost forever.</p><p> </p><p>Any thoughts?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="complicatedcrustation, post: 23467, member: 440"] [b]Re: Time Machine in Brompton Cemetery?[/b] Perhaps a bit off topic but more in tune with the conversation about the methods that we used to create and construct the Great Pyramids... I was tossing this idea around with a few people and they liked it. Perhaps the stones were moved with the power of sound. Chanting and drumming as well as the playing of reed/brass instruments in unison with a crowd of say 100 people can be pretty damn loud (i.e. monkey chant Bali / Throat singing Tibet) and if each of those stones has a resonant harmonic frequency than there is no reason that a crowd of priests could make one of them jump up and down along a smooth plain that they could bounce the sound off of. Easy example to touch on a more concrete example, making a glass rattle on the table to a certain note is damn easy... I have seen very large things moved with sound (mostly pieces of the ceiling at rock concerts and other dangerous things in clubs fall over) This seems like an idea that could satisfy the science and the spiritual at once. There are many, many songs and chants that are considered to be the cornerstone of Egyptian spirituality whose true sounds are lost forever.The Greeks were known to say that the ancient language that they chanted in was something that they could never imitate as hard as they tried although the written language was something that they could master. It was praised as a very powerful and moving sound which has perhaps been lost forever. Any thoughts? [/QUOTE]
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