Anthony Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> MJ Thomas Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Anthony Wrote:
> >
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> > -----
> > > My own research in the subject has left
> me
> > with no
> > > choice but to reach the same conclusion
> you
> > offer
> > > here, Ritva.
> > >
> > > Every room was conceptually planned well
> in
> > > advance of the first stone being placed.
>
> > Period.
> >
> > Hello Anthony,
> >
> > Any thoughts on the sequence of this
> planning,
> > i.e. what the architect started with and
> ended
> > with?
> >
>
> You start with the placement of the sarcophagus on
> the west side of the westernmost chamber in the
> structure. Everything else radiates out from
> that, conceptually and spiritually.
This would imply that the core was built first as a column, which is not demonstrated by the monument itself. The chambers do not make part of one central column.
Ronald.
>
>
>
> > I'm currently quite convinced that the
> entire
> > interior design started with the King's
> Chamber
> > and ended with the redesigning of the
> > Antechamber.
>
> I don't think anything was significantly
> redesigned, but possibly adapted for real world
> application of conceptual plans that didn't quite
> work the way they thought they would.
>
> I built a sewing cabinet once. If I had cut all
> the boards according to my plan, the door would
> not have fitted properly. Period. There really
> wasn't a flaw in my plan that I could identify...
> only that the final construction left a
> quarter-inch gap on one side of the door. The
> real world never, ever works out the way we
> hypothetically planned it. So, I adjusted the
> actual door when I cut it to be a perfect fit for
> the opening left by the cabinet.
>
> Now, there are those who pretend to study the
> pyramid of Khufu who would blather on and on about
> my sewing cabinet, stating how the cupboard
> portion was made to such an extreme tolerance of
> accuracy to fit the odd shape of the door so
> perfectly... Oi.
>
> Anthony
>
>
> [
www.GizaBuildingProject.com]
>
Quote:"Men are apt to mistake the strength of
> their feeling for the strength of their argument.
> The heated mind resents the chill touch and
> relentless scrutiny of logic." -- William E.
> Gladstone
>
> For magic is so mixed up with the world's history
> that, if the latter is ever to be written at all
> in its completeness, giving the truth and nothing
> but the truth, there seems to be no help for it.
> If Archaeology counts still upon discoveries and
> reports upon hieratic writings that will be free
> from the hateful subject, then HISTORY will never
> be written, we fear.-- H.P. Blavatsky
>