Warwick L Nixon Wrote:
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> Sam, I wasn't referring to the Stellar
> associations with the Dead KIng and/or his
> constructs, cults or rituals.
>
> I was referring to your "literal" interpretation
> n of a language you cannot read being the basis of
> any understanding you have in that regard
>
> Which I took to be the gist of Hermione's
> question
I "made up" nothing. I simply determined what every word had to mean to fit seamlessly in context and to always have this same meaning. In most cases Egyptology had every word "exactly correct" and even those they missed were slight misses. Indeed, the primary difference between our interpretations is not in the definitions of words but rather how the meaning they express is formatted. If you parse Ancient Language like all modern languages must be parsed to have any meaning at all then the meaning of Ancient Language is lost. There is no modern equivalent. Parsing Ancient Language is akin to trying to solve a complex mathematical equation not by solving it in the indicated order but instead taking it in some other order where numbers affect operations and everything has connotations. Each sentence is structured in a single defined way and every word has a single meaning. They can not be parsed.
Certainly I can be wrong but it is very curious that the literal meaning of the writing dovetails with my theory. They built no tombs for kings. They (nephthys and isis) rebuilt the kings' bodies so that he could live forever but at night when it was (frequently) impossible to see the king on earth he ferried to the stars on the boat of re.
Egyptology circumscribed the meaning of every word and I stumbled backward into their meaning. This required countless thousands of searches and is an ongoing process since I understand only about 80% of it. Learning new words is less important now because the only ones left are used only once or a few times. Meanings of words become apparent through context.
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Man fears the pyramid, time fears man.