Thank you for your input Quincunx.
Diana I wonder what role astrology plays in these channelings, for example I wonder if the location of Louisville and the time during which the Ra contact took place had to do with the ideas that they wrote down. I think astrology is a loose term often confused as fortune telling. For example it is known that the moons position in the sky shapes the tides of the ocean and it is a scientific fact but people don't recognize that as astrology, and it isn't necessarily astronomy, so what is it? I don't think the term gravity really matches it.
You can read a book from 80 years ago and see how language gradually changes, but the text of the Ra material does not seem outdated at all. It seems so ahead of its time.
I do not think it is a coincidence that the area around western Kentucky and south Illinois is called "Little Egypt" a lot of places are named after Egyptian places partly because of how the Mississippi river is said to resemble the Nile.
It's also pretty unique that looking online at the register of historic places in Louisville, it is one of the oldest American cities and is also the final resting place of Zachary Taylor a president from the mid 1800s who was only in office for one year.
Diana I wonder what role astrology plays in these channelings, for example I wonder if the location of Louisville and the time during which the Ra contact took place had to do with the ideas that they wrote down. I think astrology is a loose term often confused as fortune telling. For example it is known that the moons position in the sky shapes the tides of the ocean and it is a scientific fact but people don't recognize that as astrology, and it isn't necessarily astronomy, so what is it? I don't think the term gravity really matches it.
You can read a book from 80 years ago and see how language gradually changes, but the text of the Ra material does not seem outdated at all. It seems so ahead of its time.
I do not think it is a coincidence that the area around western Kentucky and south Illinois is called "Little Egypt" a lot of places are named after Egyptian places partly because of how the Mississippi river is said to resemble the Nile.
It's also pretty unique that looking online at the register of historic places in Louisville, it is one of the oldest American cities and is also the final resting place of Zachary Taylor a president from the mid 1800s who was only in office for one year.