Wares on the wall
Wares on the wall
Dead wood II
Dead wood I
Tourbillon
African Habitat
A patch of colours
Wall
Guarding the Inivtation
Song of a Fish
Flawed man
Doll
Perkwunia / Oak
The Stream
An afternoon in the Park
Poems of Finland
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A Beach scene
Louis Leaky
Sunlight
Washington
AFRICAN HOMINID FOSSILS
Homo sapiens
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^^
Winter
RIVER
Gorbachev and Reagan
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According to popular wisdom, the solstice was the object of an absurd superstition. Ancient people are supposed to have seen the sun rising and setting ever further to the north or south and to have concluded that without a good deal of prayer, procession and blood sacrifice, it would either get stuck in the same place -- with disastrous consequences for agriculture -- or, worse, continue in the same direction until it disappeared for ever. This would mean that there was once a civilization that was capable of building enormous, astronomically aligned stone temples and yet was otherwise to impervious to experience that it had to renew its knowledge to the universe every six months. The solstice may have been a time of ritual celebration or mourning, and it was also an obvious and useful reality. More accurate bearings can be taken during the solstice than at other times of the year, and since the sun rises and sets at almost exactly the same point for ever a week (within a range of 0.04, a day of cloud and mist is less likely to spoil the operation.
The purpose of these measurements was both scientific and religious. The paths of heavenly bodies revealed the workings of the universe and designs of the gods. The Celts’ trading partners, the Etruscans, used solstice measurements to align their towns on the cardinal points. In this way, the whole town became a template of the upper world. ‘Superstition’ lay in the fact that the town’s skyscape, too, was divided into quadrants for the interpretation of celestial signs (stars, bolts and lightning and flocks of birds): north-east -- the approximate trajectory of the Heraklean Way and the Summer solstice drawn -- was the most auspicious quadrant; south-east was less auspicious, south-east was unlucky, and north-west extremely ominous. Since north lay to the ‘sinister’ left, and since the sun’s light does in the west, the system had a certain psychological logic. ~Page 12/13
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