Re: Collaboration Between Artist and AudienceThe Wicker Man wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 4:48 am
I guess we don't know that we are so wrapped up in something that is part of our destiny until it is revealed to us. In the case of the #57 anomalies it really had to be laid on thick for us to grasp that it was anything more than randomness. Now I wonder if the April 8th eclipse is the start of the next chapter in the ongoing story or just another Red Herring. There have been a lot of those smelly little fishes, lol. We don't have long to wait!
https://discussmormonism.com/viewtopic. ... 7#p2858127
The color of this eclipse feels dark, like bad things are lurking upon the horizon which hopefully, will be offset by good stuff that is brewing but greatly delayed.High Spy wrote: ↑Sat Mar 30, 2024 2:15 pmGunnar wrote: ↑Sat Mar 30, 2024 12:26 pm
I can acknowledge that some people in the distant past knew and practiced skills and techniques that we no longer know how or need to do, and they certainly knew details about their own contemporary reality that are now forever lost to history, but I don't believe they possessed basic, essential and comprehensive knowledge about hardly anything significant that was far superior in either quality or quantity to what is currently available to any of us with both the capacity and motivation to diligently and honestly seek and understand it. Nevertheless, it is undoubtedly true that the wisest and most knowledgeable of our primitive ancestors make many (maybe even most) of us living today seem like fools and ignoramuses by comparison to them in many ways.
In other words, though there were undoubtedly wise people in the past, I don't believe any ancient knowledge is inherently superior to presently available knowledge, just because it is ancient. The greatest of ancient wisdom is great only if it has withstood the test of time.Using color to describe eclipses reminds me of the phrase “Pass with Flying Colors”.https://www.wired.com/story/world-first-computer-eclipse-fortune/ wrote:
… ancient astronomers used the device to predict the colour of eclipses – which may have been seen as omens. "We are not quite sure how to interpret this, to be fair," said Edmunds. "But it could hark back to suggestions that the colour of an eclipse was some sort of omen or signal. Certain colours might be better for what's coming than other colours."