"The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

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"The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Alfred Joe's Boy » Thu Sep 06, 2012 9:45 pm

The following is excerpted from Solar Revolution: Why Mankind Is on the Cusp of an Evolutionary Leap, recently published by Evolver Editions/North Atlantic Books.


Until recently astrophysicists believed that solar flares were a completely random phenomenon. But in recent years, patterns of solar flare cycles have been discovered using supercomputers. And what's amazing about these cycles is that they coincide with the periods in the Mayan calendar.

In addition to the Tzolkin calendar, which consisted of 260 days, the Mayans also had the Haab, whose 360 days and 5 so-called "nameless" days make it essentially the same as the modern lunar calendar. The Haab was mainly used to determine the most propitious time for planting and harvesting. Another Mayan calendar, known as the Long Count, is based on astronomical calculations of the solar year, and in terms of our calendar extends from 3114 BC to December 21, 2012 -- which is also the end date of the Tzolkin calendar.

Inasmuch as the Tzolkin (like the I Ching and Kabbala) describes an intermeshing of cosmic constellations and eras of consciousness, one possible explanation for the mysterious and abrupt end of the Mayan calendar is that the Mayans believed that on December 21, 2012, a consciousness-changing event would transpire that would be of such magnitude that it was pointless to make any calculations beyond that threshold. On the other hand, it is also possible that they understood this date to be the epicenter of a cyclical change with transformative effects that would develop over a period of time, ultimately leading to a transformation of planetary consciousness and civilization that was beyond their capacity to express in stone and symbol.

From the Mayan perspective, it is possible that after the culmination of this epochal shift, neither the movements of the heavenly bodies nor the course of life on Earth would be the way they were before -- a prophecy that has provoked a mixture of dread and anticipation ever since people first heard about it. And this in turn may well prompt you to ask yourself fundamental questions such as these: What will become of us? What will the explosive power of this transformation feel like? Will it feel threatening -- or will it bring salvation?

For many years now, even the most hard-boiled scientists have come under the sway of these predictions, for there is overwhelming evidence that the time frames of the Mayan myths and our astrophysical prognostications coincide. In point of fact, a comparison of the solar flare activity in the Tzolkin and Gregorian calendars clearly shows that something very unusual may occur on December 21, 2012, or in the time after it. This is also confirmed by a NASA report, which warns that a "perfect storm" could penetrate the Earth's magnetic field if solar flares reach the level of the solar storm of 1859 (known as the Carrington event), whether during the spring or autumn equinox of 2012, or at another time.

The Earth's orientation at certain times may make it particularly vulnerable to particle bombardment. In any event, we are currently experiencing an increase in solar activity, along with a weakening of the Earth's electromagnetic fields -- and a weakening, also, of the heliosphere, the protective sheath of energy put out by the Sun. This means that our planet is becoming evermore susceptible to the transformative effects of cosmic radiation and solar winds. The Mayans' focus on December 21, 2012, could be similar to the prediction a physician might make when choosing a due date in a pregnancy: the birth is not necessarily going to happen exactly on that day but is almost certain to happen at some point around it.

The Carrington event refers to an extremely powerful solar storm that was observed in 1859 by British astronomer Richard Carrington. It had far-reaching effects, such as the northern lights being visible from the Rocky Mountains to Cuba (which is not normally the case) and the collapse of the telegraph system. This so-called white-light event is the strongest known event of this kind. The Carrington event occurred without warning in the middle of an average solar activity cycle and had a powerful effect on the Earth.

According to the NASA report, far more severe eruptions than those of the Carrington event may be in store for us. And in view of this fact, the lack of awareness of this threat on the part of governments and the general public is mystifying.

However, the NASA report may change all that, since it warns that millions may perish during a massive solar-storm event. NASA says this would genuinely be the mother of all cataclysms -- the absolutely worst-case scenario. Whether it happens on the exact date of the 2012 winter solstice or in the following period, such an event would be devastating because of our modern dependence on artificial technologies and vast supply lines that deliver goods each day to our stores and supermarkets.

Comparable albeit weaker solar storms have wreaked havoc in recent memory as well. In 1989 a solar storm knocked out power in the entire province of Quebec, resulting in the total disruption of everyday life. Computer systems, traffic signals, and mobile phones were disabled, and the province was on the verge of chaos. This incident showed that normal daily life simply grinds to a halt in the face of a massive power outage. Elevators were stuck, the entire province was plunged into darkness at nightfall, and all airplane flights were cancelled because the province's control towers had no data.

A similar event occurred in Sweden in 2003, resulting in a sudden power failure. It later emerged that a solar storm had knocked out the country's electrical grid.

These two events provided a frightening taste of the destruction, chaos, and hysteria that an even more severe geomagnetic event could wreak on our cities.

It is still a mystery how the Mayans were able to create calendars that could forecast astronomical events, such as the orbits of Venus and other planets, so accurately. It is likewise unclear what will happen in the period after the Mayan calendar breaks off. Many modern thinkers and visionaries, after studying the Mayan fascination with this mysterious threshold, have offered their own interpretation of what this event may mean for humanity and the Earth: As we enter the next age by passing through the solstice portal on December 21, 2012, a new light will shine on the Earth and will usher in a new era. Such an interpretation has also been offered by contemporary Mayans and followers of other indigenous cultures with prophecies about this time.

But what "light" are these visionaries and contemporary Mayans referring to? Is this an allusion to what Carrington termed a white-light event? Also, what do the Mayans, other indigenous people like the Hopi of Arizona, along with many visionaries, mean by a "new era"? From a study of the Popol Vuh and other sources, it seems clear that the Classic-period Mayans were not only anticipating an event in nature, but also -- and above all -- envisioning a transition that would affect the spiritual dimension of life. But then where exactly do astrophysics and myth intersect in such a situation? In our rational culture, do we even have the capacity to consider a spiritual reading to be plausible?

In Western culture, we tend to put far more faith in quantifiable facts that can be proven empirically than in observations made by other cultures -- despite the fact that the Mayans even predicted the demise of their own civilization. Nevertheless, the correlation between solar activity and human behavior has been scientifically proven. This issue formed the subject of the highly regarded bestseller The Mayan Prophecies, by two Canadian authors, Maurice Cotterell and Adrian Gilbert. The Mayan Prophecies demonstrates the undeniable association between solar cycles and the rise and fall of kingdoms. Cotterell and Gilbert found a direct temporal association between specific solar activity cycles and political changes, from the Babylonians to the Mayans to the Romans.

An important point in this regard is made by José Argüelles in his study of the Mayan calendar, in which he discusses the significance of the Sun for the Mayans. Apparently the Mayans knew that our Sun is one of many celestial bodies and that it orbits around other suns. While on a literal level, there is no evidence that the Mayans understood that the Earth orbited around the Sun, on a symbolic level, they understood that all suns in the universe rotate around a center, namely the Hunab-Ku, or "heart of the cosmos."

According to José Argüelles's interpretation of the Mayan calendar in The Mayan Factor, Hunab-Ku, the enormous black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy, will subject the human race to an immense "Galactic Synchronization Beam," as Argüelles termed it, around the year 2012. In the interest of exploring this theory I will now discuss the galactic system in a bit more detail.

The Mayan observation that our galaxy contains a "central Sun" is accurate in light of current scientific knowledge. Astrophysicists refer to this phenomenon as a black hole, an entity that is thought to be located at the center of our galaxy and around which our entire solar system orbits. One such orbit takes a staggering 225 million years.

In recent years an exceptionally large amount of activity has been observed in this center which, to the consternation of scientists, does not square with their current picture of the universe. One manifestation of this phenomenon is radiation that has been detected at increasingly short intervals and that "is directed at the Earth like car headlights." This radiation, which is referred to as gamma ray bursts (GRBs), chiefly originates in the farthest reaches of our galactic center (i.e., from the black hole).

Here too the scientific data and visionary interpretations of the Mayan prophecies seem to agree. Argüelles described a "Galactic Synchronization Beam" that is emitted by the central Sun at certain times and affects the Earth's electromagnetic environment and our level of background radiation, spurring evolutionary changes and mutations. This beam also calibrates, according to this hypothesis, the mental and psychic existence of human beings by setting off vibrations in them that are transmitted via the Earth and the Sun, and that are emitted by the central Sun, an enormous black hole or Hunab-Ku.

Esoteric though this hypothesis may sound, it is confirmed by the findings of modern astrophysics. During a solar storm, massive amounts of gases known as plasma are emitted from the solar corona, which is the outer layer of the solar atmosphere and is visible at sundown as a pearly, faint halo extending a great distance. These "mass coronal projections" (as experts call them) spew hot plasma into space at speeds amounting to millions of miles per hour. But unfortunately for us earthlings, the particles that compose hot solar plasma carry an electrical charge, and if these particles enter the Earth's atmosphere, they can provoke magnetic storms and polar lights -- which in turn affect the geomagnetic field and thus all life on Earth, all the way down to the cellular level.

Far fetched though it may sound, we humans are extremely susceptible to cosmic electromagnetic forces and gamma radiation. Human DNA apparently exhibits a property that acts as an "antenna" for gamma radiation. Our DNA contains carbon crystals that react to radiation like a resonator. Moreover, all of the atomic elements of our DNA have the capacity to pick up electromagnetic energy like a radio antenna, whereas the carbon crystals amplify incoming electromagnetic signals, which is a mechanism we know from broadcasting technology.

And pretty much the same thing happens with our cells, whose structure enables them to receive electromagnetic signals from the cosmos. Furthermore the resonance frequencies of gamma ray bursts (GRBs) are the same as those of the elementary particles of our atoms, thus setting the stage for far-reaching changes in our bodies and brains that probably also include complete restructuring in both.

These are the factors that make the prospect of a consciousness-changing "synchronization beam," in alignment with Mayan calendrical wisdom, so Earth shattering from a scientific standpoint. A beam of radiation, emitted from the center of the Milky Way and synchronized with the solar cycles, could transform -- in a sense, reencode -- the double helix of our DNA.

The quantum physicist Brian Swimme became one of the first researchers to raise this possibility, when, in commenting on and expressing agreement with José Argüelles's theories, he stated that actions and worldviews (i.e., the mindsets of entire cultures) are determined by the properties of galactic tides whose code may have been received and transmitted by the Mayans both mathematically and symbologically. Swimme furthermore observed that, in the parlance of quantum physics, one could posit that an electrodynamic exchange occurs between solar electrons and human electrons.

These insights explain a number of phenomena that have long defied explanation based on mainstream medical concepts. For example, why is it that at certain periods the incidence of mental disorders that are not transmitted bacterially or virally increases? One possible explanation was formulated in 1963 by American physician Robert Becker of the Albert Einstein Hospital in New York. He demonstrated a direct correlation between mental disorders and cosmic events, in that the number of patients admitted to psychiatric hospitals was found to increase significantly during particularly severe solar eruptions. Based on his clinical work, Becker also reported that solar wind- magnetosphere interaction and extreme susceptibility of hospitalized psychiatric patients coincided down to the minute.

The conclusion that can be drawn from all the research findings in this sphere is as plausible as it is noteworthy: humankind is in the midst of a transformation process whose consequences are still very difficult to foretell. However there can be no doubt that this transformation involves far more than just a paradigm shift or the advent of new political systems, for it will affect every aspect, level, nook, and cranny of life and will catalyze a dynamic that will sweep before it all evolutions of all living things.

The advent of this cataclysmic event is concretely signaled numerous times in various aspects of Mayan culture. Making interpretations based on Mayan glyphs, theorists ranging from Argüelles to Cotterell and many others have proposed that the cyclical transition has a cathartic function: they speak in terms of "awakened human beings" who will carry out a "sacred mission" and will "cleanse the Earth" -- and for whom a new consciousness and new form of civilization will be ushered in once we pass through the initiatory threshold represented by December 21, 2012.

Copyright © 2012 by Dieter Broers. Reprinted by permission of publisher.


http://www.realitysandwich.com/sun_heart_mind_galaxy
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby semper occultus » Sat Sep 08, 2012 5:32 am

Alexander Chizhevsky Russian: Алекса́ндр Леони́дович Чиже́вский (also Aleksandr Leonidovich Tchijevsky) (February 7, 1897 – December 20, 1964) was a Soviet-era interdisciplinary scientist, a biophysicist who founded "heliobiology" (study of the sun’s effect on biology) and "aero-ionization" (study of effect of ionization of air on biological entities).[
He also was noted for his work in "cosmo-biology", biological rhythms and hematology."[2] He may be most notable for his use of historical research (historiometry) techniques to link the 11 year solar cycle, Earth’s climate and the mass activity of peoples.[
Image

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Chizhevsky

Sunspots and mass excitability

Chizhevsky proposed that not only did geomagnetic storms resulting from sunspot-related solar flares affect electrical usage, plane crashes, epidemics and grasshopper infestations, but human mental life and activity. Increased negative ionization in the atmosphere increased human mass excitability. Chizhevsky proposed that human history is influenced by the eleven year peaks in sunspot activity, triggering humans en masse to act upon existing grievances and complaints through revolts, revolutions, civil wars and wars between nations.[6]

He analyzed sunspot records (and approximated records), comparing them to riots, revolutions, battles and war in Russia and seventy-one other countries for the period 500 BCE to 1922 CE. (A process known as historiometry.) He found that a significant percent of what he classified as the most important historical events involving large numbers of people occurred around sunspot maximum. Edward R. Dewey, founder of the Foundation for the Study of Cycles, analyzed and published his data in 1951 in the Foundation's publications.[7] In a 1971 book Dewey described the "four components" of Chizhevsky's eleven year cycle and their approximate lengths: 1) a three year period of minimum activity characterized by passivity and autocratic rule; 2) a two year period during which masses begin to organize under new leaders and one theme; 3) a three year period of maximum excitability, revolution and war; 4) a three year period of gradual decrease in excitability until the masses are apathetic. Dewey questioned Chizhevsky's theory because in Chizhevsey's data, the sunspot cycle height lagged about a year behind his "mass excitability index."[8]

In 1992 Arcady A. Putilov, a researcher in Animal and Human Physiology, [9] published a paper empirically testing Chizhevsky hypothesis analyzing events described in Soviet historical handbooks. Putilov found that the frequency and "polarity" of events, including revolution, is the highest in the years of the solar cycle maximum and the lowest in the year before the minimum.[10] In 1996 professor of psychology Suitbert Ertel (University of Goettingen) corroborated a "substantial" relationship between solar activity and revolutionary behavior through statistical analysis of a "Master Index of Violence from Below" (MIVE) for the period 1700-1985 CE.[11]



Modern Reconfirmation of Ancient Beliefs

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The relationship between human behavior and the sun’s activity has been extensively studied by Professor Alexander L Chizhevsky, a Russian scientist, who presented a paper to the American Meteorological Society at Philadelphia in the late 19th century. In 1939 Chizhevsky was elected Honorary President of International Congress in Biological Physics, for his publication “The Terrestrial Echo of Solar Storms”. Given the suppressive circumstances of the Government under Stalin he was arrested and deported for his research. Chizhevsky's publications included research of blood and electromagnetic parameters of erythrocytes (red blood cells) in relation to human biorhythms, among which were the influence of the Cosmos on human psychoses, Physical factors behind the process of history, and Epidemiological catastrophes and periodic activity of the Sun.

Chizhevsky developed a new discipline known as Heliobiology (biology in relation to the activity of the sun) and compiled a study of the history of mass human movements in comparison to solar cycles. He classified the behavior of masses into phases such as excitability, creativity, integration or individualization of the masses. With annual evaluations ranging from 500 BC to 1922 AD, he created the Index of Mass Human Excitability.

Image


Noting signs of human unrest throughout the history of 72 countries, Chizhevsky found that 80% of the most significant events occurred during periods of maximum sunspot activity maintaining that acute changes in nervous and psychic human activity is related to sunspot maxima. In contrast, solar minimums were found to be correlated to periods of tolerance to repression as though human masses lacked the vital energy to make the necessary changes. He later extended this theory to increases of pandemics which were also found to rise during minimal sunspot activity, including deadly diseases like Malaria, Yellow Fever, Diphtheria, Typhus, and Dysentery. Essentially, the lack of solar stimulation is related to Life itself. Even scarcities of vegetation have occurred during minimal sunspot activity.

In the period sunspot maxima, the solar flares and the subsequent geo-magnetic reactions effect the many subtle reactions that take place within our bodies at the atomic level. Since the cell in little more than an electromagnetic resonator that emits and absorbs high frequency radiations, it has been theorized that changes in solar magnetic activity have a direct relationship to biological and metabolic processes. Outcomes of this effect include cultural bursts in creativity (painting, literature, and science) and overall stimulation of human behaviour.
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Hammer of Los » Sat Sep 08, 2012 10:40 am

...

Er yeah.

Thanks guys, great stuff.

I might comment later.

We'll see.

...
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby swindled69 » Sat Sep 08, 2012 11:58 am

Sun is God. get it.
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Sat Sep 08, 2012 12:32 pm

OP author wrote:Until recently astrophysicists believed that solar flares were a completely random phenomenon. But in recent years, patterns of solar flare cycles have been discovered using supercomputers. And what's amazing about these cycles is that they coincide with the periods in the Mayan calendar.


Pinchbeck is running a really professional circus over there at Reality Sandwich. Why settle for just plain interesting ideas when you can get them with a thick, viscous layer of New Age horseshit slathered all over them? I can definitely understand the appeal.
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby DrEvil » Sat Sep 08, 2012 6:23 pm

Wombat beat me to it. I was going to comment on how the OP article was full-blown grade A crap.
It's full of nonsense like:

"For many years now, even the most hard-boiled scientists have come under the sway of these predictions, for there is overwhelming evidence that the time frames of the Mayan myths and our astrophysical prognostications coincide.",

or how about:

"...and a weakening, also, of the heliosphere, the protective sheath of energy put out by the Sun."
Sources?

Or:
"It is still a mystery how the Mayans were able to create calendars that could forecast astronomical events, such as the orbits of Venus and other planets, so accurately."
No it's not. Either the author ignores that inconvenient fact or he doesn't know any better.

Or ( :shock: ):
"In recent years an exceptionally large amount of activity has been observed in this center which, to the consternation of scientists, does not square with their current picture of the universe. One manifestation of this phenomenon is radiation that has been detected at increasingly short intervals and that "is directed at the Earth like car headlights." This radiation, which is referred to as gamma ray bursts (GRBs), chiefly originates in the farthest reaches of our galactic center (i.e., from the black hole)."

Again, sources? This is utter nonsense.

Or (holy crap!):
"Argüelles described a "Galactic Synchronization Beam" that is emitted by the central Sun at certain times and affects the Earth's electromagnetic environment and our level of background radiation, spurring evolutionary changes and mutations."

A "Galactic Synchronization Beam"? Is it activated by a green decoder ring by any chance?
And the "central Sun" (black hole) doesn't emit magical beams "at certain times", it emits Hawking radiation.

I could go on, but I think I made my point. That said, the idea that solar activity might affect humans in some way isn't that far fetched. Solar activity messes with Earths magnetic field, which messes with the weak electromagnetic fields in our heads (possibly). Stick a magnet in someone's brain and you can make them see God.
"I only read American. I want my fantasy pure." - Dave
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Allegro » Sat Sep 08, 2012 9:50 pm



⋅ Error in the OP: “The quantum physicist Brian Swimme…” Brian Swimme is not a quantum physicist. He’s a mathematical cosmologist, who specializes, to some degree, in evolutionary cosmology. I researched online, and no where has he labelled himself a quantum physicist; others have, but not Swimme, himself.

⋅ In the OP, the words “hard-boiled scientists” begs the question, ‘Who?’

⋅ I’d suggest these questions, posed in the OP, “What will become of us? What will the explosive power of this transformation feel like? Will it feel threatening -- or will it bring salvation?” have been curiosities since the span of human conquest :P commenced upon Earth.

When reputable scientists will have begun to explore all earthlings, that is, all flora and fauna responses following unusual solar eruptions supposed to have pointedly thumped Earth’s magnetosphere before or after December 21, 2012, then excitement could ensue.
Art will be the last bastion when all else fades away.
~ Timothy White (b 1952), American rock music journalist
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby brainpanhandler » Sat Sep 08, 2012 11:53 pm

DrEvil wrote:Wombat beat me to it. I was going to comment on how the OP article was full-blown grade A crap.
It's full of nonsense like:

"For many years now, even the most hard-boiled scientists have come under the sway of these predictions, for there is overwhelming evidence that the time frames of the Mayan myths and our astrophysical prognostications coincide.",

or how about:

"...and a weakening, also, of the heliosphere, the protective sheath of energy put out by the Sun."
Sources?

Or:
"It is still a mystery how the Mayans were able to create calendars that could forecast astronomical events, such as the orbits of Venus and other planets, so accurately."
No it's not. Either the author ignores that inconvenient fact or he doesn't know any better.

Or ( :shock: ):
"In recent years an exceptionally large amount of activity has been observed in this center which, to the consternation of scientists, does not square with their current picture of the universe. One manifestation of this phenomenon is radiation that has been detected at increasingly short intervals and that "is directed at the Earth like car headlights." This radiation, which is referred to as gamma ray bursts (GRBs), chiefly originates in the farthest reaches of our galactic center (i.e., from the black hole)."

Again, sources? This is utter nonsense.

Or (holy crap!):
"Argüelles described a "Galactic Synchronization Beam" that is emitted by the central Sun at certain times and affects the Earth's electromagnetic environment and our level of background radiation, spurring evolutionary changes and mutations."

A "Galactic Synchronization Beam"? Is it activated by a green decoder ring by any chance?
And the "central Sun" (black hole) doesn't emit magical beams "at certain times", it emits Hawking radiation.

I could go on, but I think I made my point. That said, the idea that solar activity might affect humans in some way isn't that far fetched. Solar activity messes with Earths magnetic field, which messes with the weak electromagnetic fields in our heads (possibly). Stick a magnet in someone's brain and you can make them see God.


That and well, even the title. The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy The milky way galaxy is mind boggelingly huge by comparison to our tiny little solar system. Sorry ajb. Don't mean to pile on, so I'll leave it at that.
"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." - Martin Luther King Jr.
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun Sep 09, 2012 7:12 pm

...

From my perspective, you guys are funny.

But what I really want to say is;

I find your lack of Faith disturbing.

I mean, if you had been struck by a gamma ray galactic synchronisation beam, you would bloody well know about it.

It's a damn good job I had my decoder ring handy.

...
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun Sep 09, 2012 7:20 pm

Wombaticus Rex wrote:Pinchbeck is running a really professional circus over there at Reality Sandwich. Why settle for just plain interesting ideas when you can get them with a thick, viscous layer of New Age horseshit slathered all over them? I can definitely understand the appeal.


Me too.

That's exactly the kind of New Age horseshit I like.

Nice and thick.

Like too much butter spread on too little bread.

But Horse Shit?

Know ye of the Fire Horse?

He snorts and stomps.

He likes his oats.

He is ill starred.

The sound of His hooves is as a clattering on the Bridge.

No, I have no intention of ceasing the empty pseudo mystical claptrap.

It's far too late for that now.

...
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Sun Sep 09, 2012 8:02 pm

You do it better than Dieter or Daniel, though.
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun Sep 09, 2012 8:55 pm

...

You are very kind Wombat.

Changing Images of Man indeed.

Thanks again for that.

...
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby Alfred Joe's Boy » Mon Sep 10, 2012 10:14 am

"The Possibility of Play is the Present. No-thing is, every-thing is perceived." -- David McConville
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby semper occultus » Thu Feb 18, 2016 12:53 pm

Is the Solar Cycle Stoking ISIS?

WRITTEN BY DANIEL OBERHAUS

February 17, 2016 // 10:00 AM EST

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/is-the-solar-cycle-stoking-isis-geomagnetic-storms-alexander-tchijevsky

The rise of the Islamic State has been blamed on a lot of people and things since it began its takeover of the Levant. Whether it’s Bush, Obama, and Assad, or globalization, rap music, and amphetamines, at this point pretty much everything under the Sun has been cited for stoking the hate orgy that is ISIS—but what about the Sun itself?

Blaming a giant ball of thermonuclear explosions 93 million miles away for genocide on Earth might sound crazy, and perhaps it is. Joseph Stalin certainly thought so, which is why he sentenced Alexander Tchijevsky, the scientist who hypothesized that armed conflicts tended to ebb and flow in accordance with solar events, to a labor camp in Siberia for eight years for even daring to suggest such an outlandish idea.

According to Tchijevsky, if human psychology can be reduced to physico-chemical processes in the brain, then, like other physico-chemical processes in nature, it can be directly influenced by its surroundings.

In this sense, the Earth and everything on it—from the ionosphere to the biosphere—can be considered one common organism, where all the physico-chemical processes affect one another. Therefore, the vicissitudes of human history do not stand outside of nature, but rather develop in accordance with natural laws. The trajectory of history is not something mystical, but rather is the result of the interplay of human actions and natural events.

If this is the case, Tchijevsky figured, then it was simply a matter of figuring out the natural laws that governed the historical process. For this he turned to the Sun, which exhibits its own natural cycles and exerts a significant influence over terrestrial affairs via electromagnetic energy. This influence becomes particularly acute during geomagnetic storms, which are generally caused by coronal mass ejections—huge bubbles of magnetized plasma—and solar flares, and can lead to everything from auroras to widespread satellite failures.

The way Tchijevsky saw it, if any physical process was capable of affecting the entire planet all at once and on a regular basis (an important criterion, if history repeats itself), the regular electromagnetic disturbances caused by the Sun’s solar cycle were likely culprits.

Although Tchijevsky was persecuted by the Russian political community for his ideas throughout his lifetime, what if he was right that the electromagnetic activity of the Sun is capable of influencing the course of terrestrial history? Could Tchijevsky’s theories help us understand current conflicts, such as the war against ISIS, and give us insight into when they might develop in the future?

The solar activity did not enslave humans, forcing them to do something in particular. Rather, it merely influenced them to do something.

Tchijevsky completed his PhD at Moscow University in 1918, the year after Lenin had seized power during the Russian revolution. He wrote his thesis on the topic of the “Periodicity of the World Wide Process,” which examined the recurrence of certain events throughout history and the possible causes for these recurrences—in other words, why history repeats itself.

A few years later, Tchijevsky had expanded his thesis. He determined that the cause of this historical periodicity to be the result of the Sun’s electromagnetic influence over the Earth—in particular, he linked the regular occurrence of historical events to the solar cycle, matching battles, riots and revolutions throughout world history with particularly strong solar flares.

Tracing dozens of historical events around the world from the fifth century BC to 1914, Tchijevsky found that many of the most significant events in history occurred periodically. Moreover, they matched the Sun’s roughly 11-year cycle, the periodic change in the Sun’s activity as determined by the number of observed sunspots and levels of solar radiation.

The Four Phases

Working backwards from 1914, Tchijevsky divided human history into 11-year cycles, further subdividing each cycle into four periods: the period of minimum excitability, the growth of excitability, maximum excitability, and decreasing excitability.

The first period lasts for three years and is characterized by indifference of the masses to political matters and autocratic rule by a minority. The second period lasts for two years and is marked by the emergence of new ideas and the agitation of the masses.

The third period is three years long and sees widespread insurrection and revolt. It is this third period that corresponds to the peak of the Sun’s solar cycle, marked by an increased number of sunspots and corresponding increases in the rates of solar flares and coronal mass ejections.

The final period is three years long as well, and is characterized by an increasing apathy among the masses and a tendency toward peace.

According to Tchijevsky, this schema could account for the bulk of human history, from the riots of ancient Greece to the ascendancy of the Bolsheviks.

Although Tchijevsky tended to link the third period of each cycle with wars, riots and revolutions, he did not say the high degree of solar activity during this time suggested that humans would harm one another.



Image: NASA/Wikimedia Commons
In Tchijevsky’s model, the solar activity did not enslave humans, forcing them to do something in particular. Rather, it merely influenced them to do something—as Tchijevsky saw things, it just so happened that bloody solutions often appeared to be the path of least resistance.

The Science

While Tchijevsky meticulously studied historical and solar events, he was never able to scientifically prove a causal link between human activity and the Sun.

However, a number of experiments in recent years have shown that there may be something to his hypotheses.

Neuroscientists at MIT have shown that they can influence people’s moral decisions by using magnets to disrupt neural activity in certain parts of the brain, for example, and research into Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation has shown that stimulating the brain with magnetic pulses can ease symptoms for everything from Alzheimer's to depression. These findings suggest the human body and mind are not impervious to the effects of electromagnetism, a basic assumption in Tchijevsky’s theory.

There’s also those who have bolstered Tchijevsky’s ideas in a more direct way. Among them is Abraham Liboff, professor emeritus of physics at Oakland University, who has been studying the effects of electromagnetism on human health since the late 60s.

Although Liboff doesn’t consider himself a disciple of Tchijevsky, his work has contributed to the growing body of research that is filling in the causal mechanisms for Tchijevsky’s correlations between solar events and human activity.

Liboff studies tiny magnetic fields generated by humans that are capable of being affected by the extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic fields in their environment or disturbances in the Earth’s magnetic field. He has done experiments on how these disturbances might affect social behavior.

To this end, Liboff has theorized an electromagnetic theory of consciousness wherein consciousness is a product of the small magnetic fields generated by neuronal flows in the brain. (There is some science to back up this theory; it has been shown that small magnetic fields can be generated via small amounts of force.) The magnetic field that Liboff postulates is generated by neuronal activity is miniscule—he estimates it to be on the order of about 100 nanoTesla—but given that billions of neuronal interactions could be happening in the brain at any given moment, these could produce a larger electric field generated by the brain.

If this larger field is the sum total of all the magnetic fields generated by all neuronal activity in the brain at a given moment, then Liboff thinks it could be a good model for consciousness.

If Liboff is right, this means that the tiny electromagnetic fields generated by the brain are capable of being influenced by other ELF fields, such as those generated by other people. He suspects that this could still have profound effects on a person’s consciousness, especially in situations where two people are really close to one another—like during sex or when a baby is in its mother’s womb.

As Liboff writes in an article currently under review at the Journal of Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine, “Despite not being consciously recognized by the receiving individual, one can anticipate that magnetic cues [small changes in the local electromagnetic environment] can nevertheless result in physiological responses similar to those effects that can occur, for example, following increased solar storm activity.”

So what about when the fields are much larger than those generated by the brain, such as those generated by actual solar storm activity? Liboff has also spent some time thinking about this and has postulated that the interaction of a weak static magnetic field (such as the Earth’s geomagnetic field) and a time-varying electromagnetic field (such as that produced by solar activity) can affect the way that ions interact with biological mechanisms and thereby influence the biological organism’s behavior.

"Once you start getting into social interactions from magnetic fields, all sorts of things are possible.”

Liboff has postulated that the physical process underlying this effect is due to something known as ion cyclotron resonance, whereby energy is transferred from the time-varying electromagnetic field (such as that generated by the Sun) to an ion when the resonance frequencies of the ion and electromagnetic field align.

Ion cyclotron resonance has already been harnessed as a powerful tool for regenerative medicine, promoting stem cell growth for bone and heart repair, but whether or not it is the mechanism responsible for psychological changes in humans is much less certain, and Liboff himself will be the first to admit that his theories and experimental evidence are far from widely accepted.

Liboff’s work certainly sounds as if it is starting to pull together something of a scientific explanation for what Tchijevsky was getting at, although Liboff is less certain.

“I'm not a follower of Tchijevsky,” Liboff said. “I think of him as sort of an amusing prelude to my present area of work. What I'm saying is for the first time there is a possibility of causation that goes along with this great number of correlative information in terms of the effects the sun has on living things. Maybe there’s something there. There’s an increase in suicides that is correlatable [with solar activity], so why not social unrest?"

"Certainly the question of ISIS seems like a long way from Tchijevsky, but that being said, once you start getting into social interactions from magnetic fields, all sorts of things are possible.”

Is the Sun Stoking ISIS?

If solar storms really can influence human psychology and biological processes, it stands to reason that if Tchijevsky and his followers are right about electromagnetism being capable of motivating masses of people to commit heinous crimes they would need to be able to account for the rise of the Islamic State.

The Sun is on its 24th cycle as per the Wolf index, which labels the solar cycle starting in 1755 as 1. We are over halfway through the current solar cycle, but it seems as though the correlation between Tchijevsky's periods and the actions of ISIS is somewhat close.

The first period, which started in January of 2008, should be characterized by a general political apathy. Indeed, there were no solar flares, and life was also relatively calm in Iraq and Syria.

The second period, from 2011 to 2013, should be characterized by the spread of new ideas and the increasing agitation of the masses. It certainly saw the spread of new ideas, between the Arab Spring, the beginning of the Syrian civil war, and the renewed insurgency led by what would eventually become ISIS.

The third period, which began in January 2013 and ended in January of 2016, theoretically sees the height of conflict and bloodshed. Indeed, this period did see the largest advances by ISIS—which captured Fallujah and Mosul during this period—as well as a heightened US-led bombing campaign against the terror group.

We are now at the start of the fourth period, which should see a return to calm. It's far too early to say whether this will be the case, but the Iraqi army says it has recaptured Ramadi from ISIS, forcing fighters to flee.



A member of Iraqi security forces sits on an armoured vehicle mounted with a national flag on February 12, 2016, after security forces retook the eastern outskirts of Ramadi city from Islamic State (IS) group jihadists. Government forces recaptured areas on the eastern outskirts of the Anbar provincial capital from IS after weeks of fighting, and authorities say that all areas immediately surrounding the city have been retaken. Photo: AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/Getty Images
There is also some definite overlap between solar events and some of the major milestones that have shaped ISIS into the organization it is today.

Of particular note are the two flares that occur in the weeks directly following the establishment of al-Nusra, which would merge with ISIS the following year, as well as the string of X-class flares that follow on the heels of the ISIS prison raids in July of 2012.

That being said, over the course of the last two solar cycles there have been 97 solar events classed in the two highest tiers (M and X), so it’s highly probable that at least a few solar flares would match up with some formative events in ISIS’s history.

Siberia swallows Tchijevsky

Despite the approximate correlation between the development of ISIS and solar events, to blame ISIS on the Sun would undoubtedly raise a few eyebrows in scientific and political circles. This was certainly the case for Tchijevsky, who was continually harassed for his ideas beginning in 1924 with the publication of his theory in a limited run 72-page booklet titled Physical Factors of the Historical Process.

At the height of Soviet paranoia near the end of the 1920s, a time when suggesting that history was anything other than a long road to proletarian consciousness was enough to have you disappeared, the Kremlin demanded that Tchijevsky publicly renounce his theory of heliobiology.

Tchijevsky refused, but he had been made aware of his increasingly precarious position within Russian scientific and political circles, so he largely abandoned his historical research to focus on how air ionization influenced living organisms.

Although Tchijevsky was receiving international recognition for his pioneering work in the field of astrobiology (he was invited to lecture on biophysics at Columbia University and in 1939 he presided as president over the First International Congress on Biophysics and Space Biology in New York), the Soviet authorities continued to denounce his activities as counterrevolutionary.

In 1942 things came to a head for Tchijevsky and he was sentenced to a labor camp in Siberia, where he would remain for eight years before being released for rehabilitation into the Ural Mountains. While Tchijevsky would continue working on his experiments until his death in 1964, the Soviet smear campaign took its toll on his hypotheses: in the last 50 years, his ideas have fallen into total obscurity.

Image
Graph from Tchijevsky’s Physical Factors of the Historical Process.

Despite Tchijevsky’s persecution, the ongoing research into the effects of electromagnetism on the brain suggests that some aspects of his ideas are not as crazy as they first appear. If human psychology can really be reduced to physical processes in the brain, then it seems that these physical processes could be externally influenced—like by a geomagnetic storm, for instance. It is well known that times of peak solar activity can be disruptive occurrences for Earth, resulting in communication, navigation and electricity grid disturbances, so perhaps it could have consequences for that other great electric machine, the human brain.

Neuroscientists at MIT have shown that they can influence people’s moral decisions with magnets

While the ability to disrupt mental processes with electromagnetic energy is well documented and the events giving rise to ISIS roughly correspond to Tchijevsky’s four periods of excitability, this may very well be little more than a rough correlation without any causal implications. When looking at human history over the course of thousands of years, it wouldn’t be difficult to cherry-pick events which support such a theory at the expense of all the other major events which might disprove it, just as the linkage of solar events with the history of ISIS was only a close approximation, ignoring several large solar flares and battles.

In any case, we’ll need a lot more scientific data before we’re able to prove that solar energy is altering the course of human history. Luckily, folks like Liboff are producing data that appears to bolster Tchijevsky’s initial experiments with the hard data needed to bring them from the realm of speculation to science.

That said, if World War III starts during the next solar cycle peak in 2024 and science has provided us with a definite link between human psychology and solar activity, we still might want to admit that Tchijevsky was probably on to something after all.
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Re: "The Sun: The Heart and Mind of Our Galaxy"

Postby zangtang » Thu Feb 18, 2016 2:56 pm

i don't see the foreplay lasting another 8 years of this shit ?
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