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Date: 27 Jul 2007 22:28:04
From:
Subject: somebody is playing a terrible game with all of us
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the history of allman kind and lifeforms dna names events are encoded in the arabic zodiac.why?
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Date: 30 Jul 2007 04:03:39
From: John Savard
Subject: Re: somebody is playing a terrible game with all of us
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On Fri, 27 Jul 2007 22:28:04 -0000, guschelbauerjohann@gmail.com wrote, in part: >the history of allman kind and lifeforms dna names events are encoded >in the arabic zodiac.why? I think we're property. John Savard http://www.quadibloc.com/index.html
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Date: 29 Jul 2007 06:12:45
From: RMOLLISE
Subject: Re: somebody is playing a terrible game with all of us
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On Jul 27, 5:28 pm, guschelbauerjoh...@gmail.com wrote: > the history of allman kind and lifeforms dna names events are encoded > in the arabic zodiac.why? Allman kind? Hmm.... I guess I like "Live at the Fillmore East" and "Idlewild South" best...but there's always "Eat a Peach," too. Hope that helped, Skeezix. ;-) Unk Rod
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Date: 29 Jul 2007 17:44:46
From: MiKe T
Subject: Re: somebody is playing a terrible game with all of us
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"RMOLLISE" <rmollise@hotmail.com > wrote in message news:1185714765.682933.215840@g4g2000hsf.googlegroups.com... > On Jul 27, 5:28 pm, guschelbauerjoh...@gmail.com wrote: >> the history of allman kind and lifeforms dna names events are encoded >> in the arabic zodiac.why? > > Allman kind? > > Hmm.... > > I guess I like "Live at the Fillmore East" and "Idlewild South" > best...but there's always "Eat a Peach," too. Hope that helped, > Skeezix. > > ;-) > > Unk Rod LOL
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Date: 27 Jul 2007 22:59:45
From: CeeBee
Subject: Re: somebody is playing a terrible game with all of us
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On 28 jul 2007 wrote in sci.astro.amateur: > the history of allman kind and lifeforms dna names events are encoded > in the arabic zodiac.why? Should I panic? If so, when? Do you think using a telescope for stargazing is still safe? If so, what filter do you advice? If not, can I still watch stars outside the zodiac safely? Can I still name my dog after a zodiac star, provided I had a dog? Like Pollux, or Castor? Or should I wear protective tin foil when doing so? -- CeeBee *** entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem ***
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Date: 27 Jul 2007 22:49:23
From: Sam Wormley
Subject: Re: somebody is playing a terrible game with all of us
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guschelbauerjohann@gmail.com wrote: > the history of allman kind and lifeforms dna names events are encoded > in the arabic zodiac.why? > During the middle ages, the astronomical knowledge was preserved by the Arab cultures. Thousands of years ago and up until this last century, people had a thorough knowledge of the night sky and its motions. This is very clear from the many astronomical references in ancient literature, whether it be the Chinese lyric poets or the classical Greek and Roman writers. For Dante, astronomy was central to his whole vision of the world. The writings of Shakespeare and his contemporaries are full of astronomical allusions. But it is much more unusual to find astronomical references in modern writing. No part of our environment is so rich as an archive of other intelligences, as the night sky. The night is a repository of human cultural history. The names of the stars are entries in a family album that show us what we have been and what we have become.
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Date: 28 Jul 2007 20:20:15
From: MiKe T
Subject: Re: somebody is playing a terrible game with all of us
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"Sam Wormley" <swormley1@mchsi.com > wrote in message news:TDuqi.25296$Xa3.9416@attbi_s22... > guschelbauerjohann@gmail.com wrote: >> the history of allman kind and lifeforms dna names events are encoded >> in the arabic zodiac.why? >> > > During the middle ages, the astronomical knowledge was preserved by > the Arab cultures. > > Thousands of years ago and up until this last century, people > had a thorough knowledge of the night sky and its motions. This > is very clear from the many astronomical references in ancient > literature, whether it be the Chinese lyric poets or the > classical Greek and Roman writers. > > For Dante, astronomy was central to his whole vision of the > world. The writings of Shakespeare and his contemporaries are > full of astronomical allusions. > > But it is much more unusual to find astronomical references in > modern writing. > Because the cosmos has become disenchanted during the past 400 years and is nothing more than a pointless jumble of matter and energy.
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