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Phlash
10-24-2004, 04:14 PM
I'm wondering if any of you have seen or know anything about this film, I am considering purchasing a copy...

http://www.thegreatyear.com/

The Great Year is a compelling documentary that explores the possibility that the fall of ancient civilizations around the globe, and the rise of modern civilization, might be related to our Sun’s motion around a companion star. The film examines evidence that ancient civilizations may have known of this celestial cycle and that our Sun may indeed display the characteristics of binary motion.

Just as the Earth’s spin on its axis causes day and night and our planet’s annual orbit around the Sun is responsible for the ongoing cycle of the seasons, what if there is some greater celestial cycle, lasting thousands of years, slowly influencing the rise and fall of civilization across the globe? Where is the evidence? What could be the cause?

To many ancient cultures, the answers lie in the stars. In their view, time and civilization did not progress ever forward in a strict linear path, but moved in a cyclical pattern, with human civilization and consciousness rising and falling as great ages came and went. To the ancient Mayans, we are entering the time of the Fifth Sun; Hindu and Vedic scholars spoke of the Yuga Cycle a great circular progression of ages; and in ancient Greece, Plato taught of a large cycle of time which would slowly return us to a “Golden Age”. He called this cycle: The Great Year.

The Great Year investigates the common thread in these beliefs and looks back into time seeking answers to the questions that still loom over science today. How far back into history do humankind’s roots really go? What did the ancients know about the stars and their movements and what can we learn from them? Why was the “Precession of the Equinox” universally revered? Many of these cultures spoke of an unseen sun that drives this movement of the stars across the sky over thousands of years and causes great ages to rise and fall. Could there be an unseen binary partner to our Sun? The Great Year examines this theory and finds growing scientific evidence to support it.

What makes The Great Year so compelling is that it reveals a startling truth embodied in the number one ancient mystery: the Precession of the Equinox. By showing the cutting edge scientific evidence that challenges the current theory, this film is sure to set off debates in the scientific, archaeological, and astronomical communities.

This provocative film, narrated by James Earl Jones, is accompanied by 18 minutes of animation and a moving original musical score. The message behind the film may be the beginning of a whole new way to look at time and history, and just might set off a new scientific movement to find our Sun’s binary companion.

Phlash

Phlash
10-30-2004, 06:35 AM
Well, no one responded to my prior post about this film so I went out and purchased a copy. Very disappointing. The film focuses on the ancient concept that the rise and fall of civilizations are caused/influenced by a 24,000 year cycle, similar in nature to the seasonal cycles. The Greeks called the cycle the Great Year, the Hindus call it the Yuga cycle, etc.

The film did not focus at all on the Mayan calendar except to mention it once and show a similarity between Mayan and Asian zodiacal progression.

One reason they may not have focused on the Mayan idea is that (and I'm no expert on this) the 24,000 year Great Year cycle seems to be contradicted by the 26,000 year Mayan Long Count.

One other thing that I found puzzling about this film is that I think I understood it to say that we are not now in the Kali Yuga. This contradicts other sources I have read on this that state that we are in fact in the Kali Yuga. I was not aware that there may be a split in authority about this - anyone out there have any insight?

On the positive side I credit the film's animation sequences with giving me a better understanding of how planetary precision works - know I understand better what I read in Maya Cosmogenesis 2012. There is an interesting suggestion that our sun actually has a binary twin that we have yet to "discover". And, James Earl Jones narrates the film.

This is a vast topic that cannot really be done justice in 47 minutes. The film seems more like an introduction to something that could be profound, but is mostly remidial in its explanation of the use of ancient structures (stonehenge, Great Pyramid, etc.) as astronomical tracking tools.

Phlash

nanouk
10-30-2004, 07:22 AM
maybe we will find out when the gateway thru the milky way is open, in 2012?

respect,

n.