Ronald Wrote:
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> Don Barone Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Have at it then Ronald ...
> >
> > Prove your statement.
>
>
> No need to. There IS geometry in a town (logical
> consequence of the presence of large geometrical
> bodies), as there is at Giza (pyramids also are
> large geometrical bodies). The question is if this
> geometry was INTENDED. The answer regarding Giza
> is NO. The intention here was RESURRECTION.
>
Technically speaking it was revivification, not resurrection.
re·viv·i·fy /rɪˈvɪvəˌfaɪ/
–verb (used with object), -fied, -fy·ing.
to restore to life; give new life to; revive; reanimate.
versus
res·ur·rec·tion (rěz'ə-rěk'shən)
n.
1. The act of rising from the dead or returning to life.
2. The state of one who has returned to life.
It's a very subtle distinction, but the king's body was not returned to the land of the living, but instead it was allowed to live properly in the land of the dead.
Which, of course, is a rather funny way of putting it.
Anthony
You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him think.