Hello Osmar,
Thank you for the update. So, now that we have a better understanding of
the concept of degrees relating to the "planets", what can be said about the
message that the author is trying to convey/conceal in f67v2?
Regards,
Dana Scott
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, January 08, 2004 6:53
AM
Subject: Re: VMs: Re: Man in the
Moon
Happy New Year you all,
In medieval astrology there
were two systems used to draw a chart, one with the Sun in the center
(Sidereal) and another with the Earth in the center.
The seven
elements used were called "planets": Moon, Sun, Mercury, Venus, Mars,
Jupiter and Saturn. Plus a few stars.
Considering the Earth in the
center of a chart, in f67v2, the square could mean 90 degrees apart, not
necessarily exactly 90 degrees, because an orb is allowed,
depending on the system one uses. Triangle is 120 degrees. Cross considers
four planets, one 180 degrees and two 90
degrees.
OsmarJardim
------------------------------------------------------- -----Original
Message----- From: Robert Teague <rteague@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: vms-list@xxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Wed, 7
Jan 2004 18:52:53 -0800 Subject: VMs: Re: Man in the Moon
Dana Scott
wrote:
> Can someone shed some light on what is being explained in
f67v2 with the high and low moon and sun and the > surrounding
geometric (square, triangle, cross, angle) depictions of astronomical
faces?
I read in the list archives where someone suggested they
might be planetary conjunctions, so I've been running Starry Night
looking for them.
I have candidates for the NW, NE and SE segments,
but am still doing research.
> BTW, where is the Earth in all of
these drawings?
I think the object in the middle is a city. The Sun and
Moon are setting/rising over trees, and the Author of OFMM saw the
events
depicted.
Robert ______________________________________________________________________ To
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