Hepta wrote:Hades wrote:Just watched this. Not bad, but not great either.
though I definitely think it was interesting and this is a far better view on the universe.
what do the other 3 documentaries have to offer Hepta ?
My free time is gonna be very limited pretty soon, and I don't think I want to offer 3x more than an hour if it's at the same level of the one above (no offence).
Fair enough, and none taken mate. I really like the Electric Universe concept, it all makes much more sense to me compared to what we've been taught in school and in mainstream media. Sorry but I don't think I can convince you anymore if the guys in the video didn't manage to. What you saw was just a brief introduction and the following episodes goes in deeper into everything but it doesn't stop there.
What is really fascinating for me though is how they connect mythology and astronomy. I just wanna make clear that this is not some David Icke bullshit with reptilians and hidden dimensions for anyone reading this hehe. And it's nothing religious either for anyone who think it might be because of the mythological part of it. It's the exact opposite.
What these guys are saying is that the core archetypes in mythology from all the different cultures around the world is transliteration of the dynamic events between and of certain celestial bodies that our ancestor witnessed. These bodies happened to be Saturn, Mars and later Venus. Of course the "primitive" human mind could only interpret these events using their fantasy as of what really happened at that time so all these stories emerged which later helped shape our modern religion for example.
The scientific basis that makes this possible is if you stop believing that gravity alone created the solar system, which accordingly to standard scientist took 4-5 billion years. With the electric model the "birth" of a solar system can be much much faster. This is a big part of the concept that our ancestors lived in a time where the sky was much different than todays. But that we somehow forgot our past and that all these old texts eventually just became ridiculous stories for the modern human when it really was something that totally shaped the entire early civilisations throughout the world, It wasn't just randomly made up. Plasma science has in some way unlocked the door to truly understand what mythology is because the patterns spread from each culture has a unified consensus. And that is really is interesting. However this is just the historical part of the Thunderbolts Project hehe...
Once you got that basic foundation you can really start digging into the real science of this (which is my favourite part), mostly talked about by Wal Thornhill and Donald E Scott.
If I were to recommend at least one episode to not completely waste your time it would be the second episode about the lightning scarred mars you should really watch it. That one is really good. Like do you still believe that the geology of Grand Canyon here on earth is shaped by flash floods for thousands of years? Think again, it all happened in matter of seconds...
hah, I think you just explained most of what I already saw in the 1st video, so anyone who doesn't feel like watching it, here you go !
I completely agree this is interesting stuff, but I already saw a similar documentary about this, done by the obutu-movement, I think,
and I'm not sure if it was discussed here a few pages back or if I found it some other way.
It goes into how they find all these unknown structures in Africa, all over the continent,
and how they try and explain them by saying it's designed to hold cattle, which just doesn't make sense at all since there is never an opening in them.
I can't even remember now what they were for, but it does open the question to our general conception that the primitive cultures were really that "primitive".
I'm not sure if you saw Battlestar Galactica (the new series from about a decade ago) and if you watched it till the end.
But the "clue" of the story is that they basically always try to get back to earth, and when they finally find it, it's a totally deserted, lifeless thing.
So they set course to find another similar planet, where there is only the most primitive life, like neanderthalers or something,
so the few survivors start their life on that planet again, later on mixing with the local lifeforms.
I know this all sounds like a lot of hocus pocus, but it's an interesting theory nonetheless, and the documentary about it was actually really well done,
they just showed archeological and antropological discoveries, and, yes, just like here, they said the sky must have been totally different back then,
and I always like how they question the science we have now.
Even a theory that can sound strange can have some truth in it, if you can give enough "evidence" to support it.
Some times it just takes a long time to change people's view, just like it will take time to change people's view to that electric model.
They got me convinced with that documentary.
But I'm in no way saying I agree with all the stuff from that documentary made by the Obutu-movement.
I just think you should always have an open mind, and hear people out if they do have sensible arguments.
hmm, maybe I should start with that 1st documentary...