SCIENCE IN ANCIENT ARTWORK AND SCIENCE TODAY


The Pyramids of Teotihuacan in Motion
By
Charles William Johnson

Table of Contents


  • Preface
  • Teotihuacan: Orbits and Cycles
  • The Pyramids of Teotihuacan in Motion
  • Teotihuacan: the Basic Design (A Point)
  • Bibliography


  • The Pyramids of Teotihuacan in Motion

    Extract

     

    The subject of ancient reckoning of time and space can only be inferred from the logic of numbers, with very few exceptions of data in the historical record. Many historically significant numbers exist in the historical record of different ancient cultures. But, the method for computing those numerical results remains a theme of speculation. Many of the ancient Babylonian clay tablets that exist reflect specific mathematical and geometrical problems, much like a school textbook of today. However, notebooks of the scientists who computed the astronomical meandering of the bodies in our solar system have yet to be found.

    Our analyses of the historically significant numbers coming out of the ancient reckoning systems are based on speculation about the logic of numbers; how the numbers might relate to one another through elementary mathematical methods. Numbers that appear in the ancient maya system are compared to the numbers that appear in the ancient kemi system. Such a comparison allows us to visualize the significance of intermediary numbers. The ancient day-counts of 260, 360, 364, and 365 days are taken into consideration in this light, along with other day-counts relating, for example, to the cycles of other planetary bodies in our solar system. In this manner, one is almost able to distinguish the possibility that the 365c day-count came about before the 260c day-count. Scholars believe the 260c day-count to be the older calendrical system, but the math of the numbers suggests otherwise.

    In this manner, strange appearing numbers in the historical record, such as 756, 819, 151840, 1366560, among many others, suddenly reveal unsuspecting interrelationships. For example, the k'awil count, identified as the 819c day-count, appears to mediate computations between the 360c and the 364c day-counts. Further, one begins to distinguish the possible use of the mediatio/duplatio method of computation, whereby the ancients may have not only doubled numbers, but also trebled them. In this manner, one arrives at a table of squares and cubes of the whole numbers. Numbers that at first glance appear to be unrelated are thus revealed to lie on the same number series representing a multiple of one another. The maya long count is a more obvious case in representing a doubling of its terms (36, 72, 144, 288, 576, 1152 and 2304).

    In the book The Pyramids of Teotihuacan, we examine the internal structure and placement of the pyramids at the Teotihuacan site in Mexico. From one perspective, it is possible to imagine the ancients counting orbits and cycles of the planetary bodies in a symbolic fashion on the pyramids. We review just such a possibility, along with another perspective, where we consider how the layout of the pyramids at Teotihuacan may have been conceived through movement. By repeating the pattern of the layout (and we should remember that the ancients were versed in repeat patterns in their artwork), one can obtain the sense of movement through space, much like a planetary orbit would trace out a line or spiral line in abstract.

    The idea is considered, then, that the pyramidal structures at Teotihuacan reflect the paths of planetary bodies and may even symbolically represent such movement. Furthermore, we have discerned one pyramidal structure to be possibly one aspect of the basic design. For as we reflect the image of Teotihuacan upon itself, one particular pyramidal structure becomes significant. The ancients most undoubtedly employed the idea of multiple centers, and we have examined one of those possible centers in this book.

    johnson@earthmatrix.com

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    E a r t h / m a t r i X
    SCIENCE IN ANCIENT ARTWORK
    The Pyramids of Teotihuacan in Motion
    By Charles William Johnson

    Published by: Earth/matriX P.O. Box 231126 New Orleans, Louisiana 70183-1126 USA
    Branch: Earth/matriX-México Jorge Luna /Director - Mexico, Apartado Postal 70-257, Ciudad Universitaria, México, D.F., 04510, México
    August, 1999.
    ISBN 1-58616-187-3

    Copyrighted © 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, and 1999 by Charles William Johnson. All rights reserved. Reproduction prohibited. Printed in the United States of America. Published simultaneously in Mexico. This publication, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form of photographic, electrostatic, mechanical, or any other method, for any use or purpose, including information storage or retrieval, without written permission from the author, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review.




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