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Re: Christ in Egypt: Horus at the Age of 12 and 30

Posted: Wed Aug 24, 2011 10:48 am
by Interbane
So astrotheology provides the skeletal template, and the detailed stories are embroidered on this framework.
A skeleton works, but the connective tissue is every bit as important, and holds it all together for the long journey across millennia. The connective tissue being the story that is grafted onto observations.

I think the reason for the amount of astrotheology in the bible is due simply to the evolutionary algorithm applying to them as memes. When competing with other memes in the pool that is the source material for religious stories, astrotheological concepts have an ace up their sleeve. The phenomena up in the sky on which the stories are based continue without pause. Certain people making certain observations over the centuries would present opportunities for the astrotheological concepts to be reinforced. In much the same way they're thought up in the first place, people observing the stars would keep the memes strong across the centuries. Or strengthen them via modification. Or recombination with other memes. Passion invoking memes, like the story of Jesus.

I have a question Robert. Do you think there is some influence the stars have upon Earth objectively? If so, is your hypothesis the result of the evidence building up then pointing in that direction? Or did you make the hypothesis through emotion, then hope to support it through reason? That's a backdoor for bias with a front of reason.

Re: Christ in Egypt: Horus at the Age of 12 and 30

Posted: Wed Aug 24, 2011 1:06 pm
by Robert Tulip
Interbane wrote:I have a question Robert. Do you think there is some influence the stars have upon Earth objectively? If so, is your hypothesis the result of the evidence building up then pointing in that direction? Or did you make the hypothesis through emotion, then hope to support it through reason? That's a backdoor for bias with a front of reason.
Thanks Interbane. This is a question that I have pondered for many years. Just to start objectively, no I do not think the stars have influence on the earth. They are too far away. But perhaps you meant stars in the astrological sense of planets. Working out what influence the sun and moon and planets have on the earth is a far more complex question. Apart from the generally known influences such as the sun as the source of light and life, and the moon as the cause of the tides, the question of deep weak regular influence is something that has barely been studied in a systematic scientific way.

One example of such influence is that Jupiter and Saturn drive the 400,000 year cycle of earth's orbital eccentricity, which is a main driver of ice ages. This is a very subtle and weak but regular product of the shape of the solar system. The constancy of this weak effect nonetheless has massive effects on the earth over geological time frames.

The influence of the zodiac is more complex again. The popular idea of astrology as driven by stellar emanations from constellations is bunk. But, the earth does have a stable regular annual cycle driven by the solstices and equinoxes, the four turning points of the tropical zodiac. So any zodiacal cycles are purely a function of the orbit of the earth around the sun, of which the constellations are only markers.

From analogy with fluid dynamics, it seems to me plausible that these four turning points in the year produce a natural cycle of twelve months, although this remains unproven. Scientifically, the months are viewed as artifacts produced by rough equation between lunar and solar cycles. If there are natural months driven by the tropical zodiac, they are sub-statistical, as we have not yet devised any tests of sufficient sensitivity to show consistent ordering of terrestrial cycles into months or sun signs. My view is that such tests would require large scale epidemiological population studies, as the signal to noise ratio here is rather like trying to listen to a local radio transmitter on the other side of the planet.

Looking at the precession of the equinox, the slow movement of the stars against the seasons, there are two big scientific questions for astrotheology. The first is how the ancient seers used this observation, and the second is whether it has any dynamic physical reality.

There is a range of evidence of ancient knowledge of precession across the Mediterranean world. My hypothesis is that precession was actually an organising principle for secret mystery groups who were ultimately responsible for the stellar myths that found their way into the Bible. At the time of Christ, this implies that the movement of the spring equinox into Pisces was seen as a marker of a new age. The logical assumption that the microcosm reflects the macrocosm, just as drops of water move according to the shape provided by the banks of a river, meant that the ancients looked for terrestrial reflection of this observed change in the sky. The Biblical story of Jesus was the eventual result of this effort to see our planet as at one with the cosmos. The story of the zodiacal ages forms a 'logos in the stars', an enframing narrative for human cosmology, with Jesus celebrated as the marker of the moment of celestial harmony when the seasons matched the stars.

As to whether precession has dynamic effects, again this is a scientific question. As with the influence of the gas giants, precession is a main driver of ice ages over a 21,000 year period. The warm point was about 11,000 years ago at the dawn of the Holocene, and the cold point was in 1296 AD, when the December solstice crossed the orbital perihelion. In evolutionary terms, it can be asked if this regular cycle of the planetary spin wobble structures long term genetic cycles, given that there have been some 200,000 cycles of precession since the dawn of life. We simply do not know if it is possible that some organisms have evolved to flourish at the warm part of the precession cycle and others at the cold part.

Moving beyond this purely scientific material, I admit my first interest in this broad topic arose when I formed the intuitive hypothesis that the current physical shift of the equinox from the Age of Pisces to the Age of Aquarius matches to the astrological symbolism of these signs, ie that the planetary zeitgeist is gradually shifting on a millennial time scale from a culture reflecting the symbolism of Pisces (compassionate mystical belief) to a culture reflecting the symbolism of Aquarius (innovative humanitarian knowledge). It is somewhat ironic that I look to these folk traditions to describe a change which celebrates the rise of scientific reason and the centrality of knowledge.

My interest in these large scale cyclic patterns leads to a critique of one main deep feature of the scientific world view, namely its assumption of the secularisation thesis, Weber and Durkheim's prediction of the withering away of religion and spirituality. My view is that the foundations of religion have to be shifted from belief to knowledge. This change matches to the march of time seen in the stars, and opens the way to abundant lines of scientific research. I see this fundamental paradigm shift required at the level of mythic identity as the basis for addressing practical global problems of climate, energy, stability and poverty.

Re: Christ in Egypt: Horus at the Age of 12 and 30

Posted: Thu Aug 25, 2011 10:14 am
by tat tvam asi
Robert Tulip wrote:There is a range of evidence of ancient knowledge of precession across the Mediterranean world. My hypothesis is that precession was actually an organising principle for secret mystery groups who were ultimately responsible for the stellar myths that found their way into the Bible.
I don't know what context you have in mind when you keep objecting to the church fathers quoted as saying that Christianity is nothing new or strange, or that it was around since antiquity. To really understand what they were getting at you need only understand your own paragraph above. It's the ancient astrotheological religion that has been around since antiquity. It changes and adapts over time as it has evolved into newer religions resulting in Christianity, which, is nothing new or strange with that in mind.

Now of course it is new with respect to it's older versions being oriented to ages long past. None of the earlier renditions were oriented to the particular age of Pisces. And of course none of the earlier renditions were created to celebrated the end and beginning of the new Great Year cycle. This rendition is new of the old astrotheological religion was more meaningful than any previous religion simply because it ushered in the beginning of the new great cycle. Talking about Therapeutan brotherhood networks who basically emulate the old Egyptian astrotheological priesthood brings this whole thing into perspective. This was the time of the Kali Yuga or Iron age according to Greek thought, as we know. It was similar to the annual winter solstice were the days stop getting shorter and turn around into ascension again. The Great Year conception clearly places the age of Pisces as the turning point in time where a long period of descent turns over into a long period ascent ahead. Another annual anology being the life cycle going into the spring equinox. Organic life's descending ends and the ascent into growth begins. At least that is how a learned member of any astrotheological brotherhood who was privy to either the Vedic Yuga's or the Greek Golden through Iron age conception would have viewed the coming of the age of Pisces according to the Great Year.

Whether they were correct or not is another issue. As you were saying, there's nothing concrete in science yet to corroborate the Vedic Yuga's as a valid rendering of society's descent and ascent. It would be interesting to run experients and see what happens though. I agree with Robert Buvual in that there appears to be an ancient Egyptian brotherhood that manipulated men and events according to the celestial time table they devised. And that brotherhood existed right on down to the beginning of the common era in the form of these Therapeuts, Essenes, and other designations. The old Osirian cult eventually becomes the cult of Serapis which evolves into the cult Christainity, with very little difference recognized bewteen Serapis and Christ early on. Egypto-Greek hybridization becoming Egypto-Greco-Jewish hybridization in time.

And with respect to Dwill's constant opposition to the MP, even if we were to consider an historical Jesus as some Gnostic type or what-have-you, it's still going to somehow trace back into this Therapeutan brotherhood network with a pre-existing church hierarchy structure. What if there was a Jew who went off to Egypt and returned as the story goes? Did he go to the Jewish communities in Alexandria? That's where are the Jews were. Perhaps even relatives to stay with. Did he return with knowledge gained from the Egyptian Jewish community? Did he gather a following based around what he learned from there? Would that explain why the Christian church structure models that of the Therapeuts? Would he have been subject to the ancient astrotheological religion while there? Would that explain Paul's journey's to all of these places which were part of the pre-existing brotherhood spread about the Empire with his cosmic Christ preaching? Perhaps trying to swing people over to his rendition of what had been Therapeutan Hellenizing? As I see it, Murdocks scholarship in CiE applies to the evemerist and mythicist alike. We're all guessing here. No one has anything concrete or absolute to say that such a historical figure did or did not certainly exist in the early first century. She's provided a means to show that it's entirely possible for the myth to have been based on a fiction from the beginning. But that shouldn't stop evemerists from diving into this research she's provided because it's also completely relevant to the evemerist search to locate the "real Jesus" of possible history.

The Alexandrian hypothesis should in no way be brushed aside by those who have concluded against mythicism in my opinion. There's no reason to cast aside investigating the astrotheological content of Christianity either, just because someone may differ with the mythicist critique of Christianity. The evemerist should be investigating astrotheology to try and hammer down who in the hell this proposed historical figure was and just what in the hell he was teaching. Why is the astrotheological allegory of the loaves and fishes given in each of the four gospels? If it boils down to a real man then obviously this had something to do with that proposed real mans ministry. It reveals the astrotheological content of that proposed ministry. I just find it odd that just because certain evemerist care differ with mythicism that they would prefer to toss aside all of this revelant material which is essentially critical when trying to locate the or a Jesus of history...

Re: Christ in Egypt: Horus at the Age of 12 and 30

Posted: Fri Aug 26, 2011 8:46 am
by Robert Tulip
tat tvam asi wrote:
Robert Tulip wrote:There is a range of evidence of ancient knowledge of precession across the Mediterranean world. My hypothesis is that precession was actually an organising principle for secret mystery groups who were ultimately responsible for the stellar myths that found their way into the Bible.
I don't know what context you have in mind when you keep objecting to the church fathers quoted as saying that Christianity is nothing new or strange, or that it was around since antiquity. To really understand what they were getting at you need only understand your own paragraph above. It's the ancient astrotheological religion that has been around since antiquity. It changes and adapts over time as it has evolved into newer religions resulting in Christianity, which, is nothing new or strange with that in mind.
Tat, I don’t believe I have ever objected to this quote from the church fathers, indeed I have drawn attention to Murdock’s mention of it. However, what I do question is the inference drawn from this quote that there was indeed nothing new in Christianity. We see this inference in Murdock’s repeated statement in Christ in Egypt that Christianity is “nothing but a rehash” of older mythology. This brings to mind frying up last night’s cold cooked potatoes and carrots to recombine existing ingredients with nothing new added, except maybe some salt and pepper and oil. A ‘rehash’ is quite different from an evolutionary adaptation. If Christianity is nothing but a rehash, we have nothing but a purely negative and cynical reading of Christianity.

This claim that there is nothing new in Christianity had a specific context in Augustine, in his recognition that earlier thinkers such as Plato were Christians before Christ, recognizing the eternal logos as the rational organizing principle of reality. I don’t believe that Augustine would have therefore held that just because Plato apprehended the Logos that the incarnation of Christ brought nothing new into the world, considering his view that Christ made the logos manifest, the word made flesh.

The newness of Christianity, as a universal faith appropriate to a new age, represents an evolutionary mutation of older isolated religions, reviving them in altered form for a common era. Greeks would not accept Egyptian gods with animal heads, or the Jewish idea that the Jews alone were God’s chosen race, and the cult of Serapis lacked the Jewish sense of eschatology. The syncretic combination of these disparate faiths in Christianity updated the old beliefs by bringing them together in a universal believable claim. The fact that this vision got taken over by crass political schemers is not grounds to dismiss it as a rehash.

I find Murdock brilliant in her exposition, but it really is worth analyzing why she gets ignored. My view is that she has got so used to presenting a contrarian position that she finds few people able and willing to engage in constructive dialogue. This leads to a tone in her writing that people can easily read as rather bombastic, as in this ‘rehash’ claim. It is important to give Christianity credit for its positive achievements, while also developing a robust critique, in order to be able to engage with the theological community who naturally react defensively to a perceived assertion that Christianity contains nothing of value. So it is better in my view to stress the evolutionary continuity between Christianity and myth than to assert that Christianity brought nothing new.
Now of course it is new with respect to it's older versions being oriented to ages long past. None of the earlier renditions were oriented to the particular age of Pisces. And of course none of the earlier renditions were created to celebrated the end and beginning of the new Great Year cycle. This rendition is new of the old astrotheological religion was more meaningful than any previous religion simply because it ushered in the beginning of the new great cycle.
Yes, this is part of the newness, but as I have just said, there is also the use of myth from various sources, combining older separate doctrines into a unique synthesis. I think your cosmological point here is essential, but it is not the whole story, which also has to look at the social and political levels in their own terms.
Talking about Therapeutan brotherhood networks who basically emulate the old Egyptian astrotheological priesthood brings this whole thing into perspective. This was the time of the Kali Yuga or Iron age according to Greek thought, as we know. It was similar to the annual winter solstice were the days stop getting shorter and turn around into ascension again. The Great Year conception clearly places the age of Pisces as the turning point in time where a long period of descent turns over into a long period ascent ahead. Another annual anology being the life cycle going into the spring equinox. Organic life's descending ends and the ascent into growth begins. At least that is how a learned member of any astrotheological brotherhood who was privy to either the Vedic Yuga's or the Greek Golden through Iron age conception would have viewed the coming of the age of Pisces according to the Great Year.
And this Yuga motif is also found in Daniel, with his statue of gold, silver, bronze, iron and clay. We can also see it in the astral motifs of revelation, especially the foundations of the holy city as the twelve ages of the Great Year. As I just mentioned in reply to DWill on another thread, this cosmology of precession provides an organizing principle for the Christian doctrine of fall and redemption. In the chapter of Christ in Egypt discussed in this thread, we see the motif of Christ and Horus at age twelve as pointing to both the year and the great year, as temporal cycles with twelve natural divisions.

Whether they were correct or not is another issue. As you were saying, there's nothing concrete in science yet to corroborate the Vedic Yugas as a valid rendering of society's descent and ascent. It would be interesting to run experiments and see what happens though.
I have previously noted that the natural cycle of ice ages is caused by precession and maps quite precisely to the mythic cosmology. I discussed this at some length in the booktalk thread on Milankovitch Cycle in Myth. The physical and temporal scale of this claim means that it would be rather difficult to devise experiments for it; what is needed is rather a logical deductive analysis to illustrate that this hypothesis is the most plausible explanation of the available facts.
I agree with Robert Bauval in that there appears to be an ancient Egyptian brotherhood that manipulated men and events according to the celestial time table they devised. And that brotherhood existed right on down to the beginning of the common era in the form of these Therapeuts, Essenes, and other designations. The old Osirian cult eventually becomes the cult of Serapis which evolves into the cult of Christianity, with very little difference recognized between Serapis and Christ early on. Egypto-Greek hybridization becoming Egypto-Greco-Jewish hybridization in time.
Each o fthese evolutionary steps is a response to a material change in habitat, congruent with the generally observed evolution of myth as reflecting political realities. We are seeing a similar evolution occurring today, with the formerly isolated western doctrine of Christianity adapting to new global realities.
And with respect to Dwill's constant opposition to the MP, even if we were to consider an historical Jesus as some Gnostic type or what-have-you, it's still going to somehow trace back into this Therapeutan brotherhood network with a pre-existing church hierarchy structure. What if there was a Jew who went off to Egypt and returned as the story goes? Did he go to the Jewish communities in Alexandria? That's where are the Jews were. Perhaps even relatives to stay with. Did he return with knowledge gained from the Egyptian Jewish community? Did he gather a following based around what he learned from there? Would that explain why the Christian church structure models that of the Therapeuts? Would he have been subject to the ancient astrotheological religion while there? Would that explain Paul's journey's to all of these places which were part of the pre-existing brotherhood spread about the Empire with his cosmic Christ preaching? Perhaps trying to swing people over to his rendition of what had been Therapeutan Hellenizing? As I see it, Murdock’s scholarship in CiE applies to the evemerist and mythicist alike. We're all guessing here. No one has anything concrete or absolute to say that such a historical figure did or did not certainly exist in the early first century. She's provided a means to show that it's entirely possible for the myth to have been based on a fiction from the beginning. But that shouldn't stop evemerists from diving into this research she's provided because it's also completely relevant to the evemerist search to locate the "real Jesus" of possible history.
I don’t think DWill has opposed the mythicist position, it is rather that he has questioned astrotheology as an explanation. It is one thing to say that conventional biblical narratives are false and mythical, it is quite another to explain this problem by reference to an overarching astral hypothesis. Of course my view is that astrotheology provides a compelling scientific explanation, but the burden of proof here remains with astrotheology to provide a convincing hypothesis.

Part of the problem is that the astronomy is not easy for people to grasp. We see even the so-called Conference on Precession and Ancient Knowledge dominated by the ludicrous fantasy of Walter Cruttenden of a binary star. To have any credibility, it is essential to ground argument in established knowledge. If people want to advance an astrotheological argument as scientific, they have to do the research into how astrotheology is grounded in and compatible with established physical knowledge.

The question of how a hypothetical Jesus figure may have contributed to the rise of the Jesus myth is just speculation. Carl Jung, in his Answer to Job, points out that whatever the historical reality, the myth of Christ as the eternal logos is the primary focus of faith. This is a theme that can be expanded to show that the Christ of faith is astrotheological, because astrotheology keys into the inherent rationality of astronomy, regardless of any speculation about a literal founder figure. It is more than coincidence that Jesus just happened to supposedly live at the precise moment of the observed turning point of the cosmic ages.

My view is that the turmoil following the destruction of Jerusalem by Rome in 70 AD produced an overwhelming requirement for a common new belief, and the Jesus story emerged to fill the hole. The diverse messianic narratives swirling around had to be united into a common story. If there was one man at the origin of the story, he was more a secret theoretical cosmologist than a public religious and political leader. A public leader would have been noticed and mentioned by Josephus and Philo.

The Alexandrian hypothesis should in no way be brushed aside by those who have concluded against mythicism in my opinion. There's no reason to cast aside investigating the astrotheological content of Christianity either, just because someone may differ with the mythicist critique of Christianity. The evemerist should be investigating astrotheology to try and hammer down who in the hell this proposed historical figure was and just what in the hell he was teaching. Why is the astrotheological allegory of the loaves and fishes given in each of the four gospels? If it boils down to a real man then obviously this had something to do with that proposed real mans ministry. It reveals the astrotheological content of that proposed ministry. I just find it odd that just because certain evemerist care differ with mythicism that they would prefer to toss aside all of this revelant material which is essentially critical when trying to locate the or a Jesus of history...
These are really critical and central observations Tat, and well posed. The overall problem is to examine the rival hypotheses to assess how well they explain the facts, on the balance of probabilities. Once the astrotheological explanation is understood, which is a big hurdle for most, we can see there really is no other sensible explanation for the loaves and fishes miracle. Again, this miracle points to a cosmic visionary at its origin, not a political leader. It is someone for whom the idea in Peter that ‘a thousand years is as a day to the Lord’ formed the entire framework for time.

The issue with evemerism is that people put their faith in Jesus, and hang on to any straw that can sustain this faith. The Jesus of the Gospels has been comprehensively demolished by science, with the virgin birth, the physical resurrection and all the other miracles now objects of mockery as literal belief. People desperately cling to the idea that even if Jesus did not rise from the dead, at least he inspired the gospels. So the question emerges, are the stories from a man made God (evemerism) or from a God made man (mythicism)?

The internal difficulties of the man made God hypothesis have been laid bare by Murdock in various books, and also by writers such as Earl Doherty. It is absurd why the literal historical Christ does not emerge clearly for more than a century after he lived. This is simply too long a period to be credible. It leaves the ‘God made man’ hypothesis as the primary contender. And we see that this idea of a primary rational eternal logos has a perfect fit with the big story of precession, providing a persuasive empirical explanation of how the Christ myth emerged.