Signs and Seasons by Jay Ryan
Jul 13, 2024 15:19:45 GMT -8
Post by The Ninevite on Jul 13, 2024 15:19:45 GMT -8
Understanding the Elements of Classical Astronomy is one of the best school aged books on the market for physics and astronomy, as well as timekeeping. Written in the United States, it centers on the Washington Monument as a kind of sundial point and covers all topics in terrestrial astronomy for the unaided eye. The book explains the changing of the seasons across the solar year, the monthly procession of the twelve equatorial constellations, and the orbit of the moon, including the eclipses. Published by a religious ministry house, and due to Biblical quotations and content won't be found in too many present-day common core schoolrooms, but scientifically sound, and the author's mathematics can be verified by observation.
It's sometimes hard to tell whether Christian school printers and writers really mean to be such elitists, sometimes it almost appears that classics and mechanics both are being kept secret by church and school men, but it's nevertheless true, and the publisher is in business to sell the book. It would do you well to buy and read a copy of this, if you didn't already get it in school. I know that I personally kind of dislike the word "zodiac" and tend to keep calling those particular twelve constellations "the equatorial band" myself, but I can also explain the Greek atomic spelling of etymological "Zodiac", and the naming of the constellations as well as the explanation for both the logical investigation and the coinage of the word are a great story. Also, you will find as you read astrological and occult literature and meet the practitioners yourself that "witchery" in its circle groups around hearths and in its newsy fliers will come more and more strongly to resemble an 'F' paper in fourth grade science more and more strongly the longer you study it and the closer you get to the center of each and every circle.
You'll do well to sharpen up on real astronomy anyway, and especially if you have to locate someone who does something else with it. You will never find that their knowledge of the subject is very advanced, and also that their studies are never thorough. Witch types are atmospheric but slow-witted bag actors, they come out at night and rely on oblique references and abstruse thought to make you think that they know some science and also some religion when they do not.
It's sometimes hard to tell whether Christian school printers and writers really mean to be such elitists, sometimes it almost appears that classics and mechanics both are being kept secret by church and school men, but it's nevertheless true, and the publisher is in business to sell the book. It would do you well to buy and read a copy of this, if you didn't already get it in school. I know that I personally kind of dislike the word "zodiac" and tend to keep calling those particular twelve constellations "the equatorial band" myself, but I can also explain the Greek atomic spelling of etymological "Zodiac", and the naming of the constellations as well as the explanation for both the logical investigation and the coinage of the word are a great story. Also, you will find as you read astrological and occult literature and meet the practitioners yourself that "witchery" in its circle groups around hearths and in its newsy fliers will come more and more strongly to resemble an 'F' paper in fourth grade science more and more strongly the longer you study it and the closer you get to the center of each and every circle.
You'll do well to sharpen up on real astronomy anyway, and especially if you have to locate someone who does something else with it. You will never find that their knowledge of the subject is very advanced, and also that their studies are never thorough. Witch types are atmospheric but slow-witted bag actors, they come out at night and rely on oblique references and abstruse thought to make you think that they know some science and also some religion when they do not.