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#21
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The journey back in history to the construction of the original
scaffolding for contemporary timekeeping is a privilege as it demonstrates just how sharp these ancient astronomers were and particularly one astronomer who would have come up with the solution we still use today in keeping days fixed within the annual cycle of equinoxes and solstices. The annual return of Sirius is a plain line of sight observation insofar as the Earth moves around the Sun,certain stars are periodically going to be lost behind the Sun,it has no stellar circumpolar characteristics whatsoever,again,it is strictly a consequence of the orbital motion of the Earth free and clear of daily rotation.The greatest difficulty observers have presently with interpretative astronomy is that they are so accustomed to working off a rotating celestial sphere that the orbital motion of the Earth is more or less anonymous however any online orrery tends to ease the transition from Ra/Dec observing to a more productive use of the orbital motion of the Earth in relation to all other objects in the solar system whether the moving planets or the central Sun - http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/Solar/action?sys=-Si To participate in the type of astronomy which links cause and effect between planetary dynamics and terrestrial sciences requires that the astronomer recognize separate motions whereas for centuries we have people bundling daily and orbital motions together using timekeeping averages and creating a truly awful and meaningless homocentric wreck,anyone who reads Sky and Telescope will be struck at all the homocentric references to the planets based on individual horizons,sunrise/sunset and the fixed ideology of above/below whereas even the geocentric astronomers had dispensed with above/below and treated the motions of the planets within the context of a celestial arena. This is a particularly delicate time in astronomy,the new guys working off computers and civil timekeeping couldn't care less about astronomy even if they pay lip service to it while the older generation,comprising most of what is left of sci.astro.amateur,either choose not to adapt to a better approach to the celestial arena or simply can't for various reasons. So,the original structure is an orbital line of sight observation,if the Egyptians could distinguish an annual orbital feature from a daily feature then so can everyone else - "..on account of the precession of the rising of Sirius by one day in the course of 4 years... it shall be, that the year of 360 days and the 5 days added to their end, so one day be from this day after every 4 years added to the 5 epagomenae before the New Year, whereby all men shall learn, that what was a little defective in the order as regards the seasons and the year, as also the opinions which are contained in the rules of the learned on the heavenly orbits, are now corrected and improved .." Canopus Decree These men were speaking in terms of orbits so it is time for comtemporaries to escape that rotating celestial sphere even if it provides the convenience of making predictions to the positions and motions of objects or astronomical events such as eclipses,transits and so on.Nothing is going to be lost,all that happens is that those who use celestial sphere observing for identifying celestial objects no longer hinder those who free up the celestial arena from celestial sphere geometry. |
#22
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Notice how carefully Oriel, over a period of some years, has avoided
explaining exactly where his views and the views of other members of this group differ. He writes whole paragraphs - sometimes nultiple paragraphs - hundreds of times a year but refuses to explain something as basic as this. He also refuses to answer any questions designed to identify what the difference might be. As an example - Oriel, if you look due south at midnight on July 1st and again at midnight on January 1st of the next year will you see the same stars in the same places. Yes or no? |
#23
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On Feb 23, 10:39*pm, "Martin R. Howell"
wrote: Quoting palsing: HA! Best reply of the year... YMMV. However, I doubt that Oriel is posting here for the _frisson_, let alone in such an... explicit... fashion. I believe he is sincere in his view that astronomy has gone the wrong way. And since this "wrong way" appears to be that we have chosen to leave God out of our thinking, thus going along with the atheisic celestial mechanics of Laplace, indeed you won't reach him with vulgarities - they will only confirm his belief in his superiority, moral and otherwise, over the rest of the world. John Savard |
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