Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Welcome to new visitors from "Where Did the Road Go?" (and to returning friends)



video: Interview recorded on July 16, 2016 (link).

Big thank you to Seriah Azkath and the listeners of "Where Did the Road Go?" for having me over to the backroads of Ithaca and Ovid in upstate New York's finger lakes and forests region for a most enjoyable conversation.

Ithaca, of course, shares a name with the island home of Odysseus in the Odyssey, to which the long-suffering wanderer is constantly trying to return.

Ovid, on the other hand, obviously takes its name from the incredibly important ancient poet and philosopher, whose recommendations on the abstention of the eating of flesh are discussed in this previous post, and whose extremely influential Metamorphoses is filled with important Star Myths containing esoteric content (see for example this discussion of the myth of Salmacis and Hermaphroditus as retold for us by Ovid).

During the course of the hour, we touched on a variety of subjects, including some nuances that I don't believe have been discussed in any interviews previously. It's always interesting to me to see what "shape" emerges from different conversations, because everyone brings different interests, backgrounds, and areas on which they are currently focusing -- and the shapes that emerge will thus be different even when the same people talk together on different days, let alone people who have never spoken before.

You can listen to the discussion online at the main "Where Did the Road Go?" website, and you can also access this and other "Where Did the Road Go?" interviews in the iTunes and Google Play podcast sites, as well as on Facebook -- and probably by one of several other options that you can find by visiting "Where Did the Road Go?" using your mobile device.

You can also subscribe to Seriah's "Where Did the Road Go?" YouTube channel.

Please go give it a listen, and help support inquiry into matters of importance to human consciousness and our experience in this simultaneously spiritual and material cosmos. I also hope you will take the time to check out some of the excellent content in the archives there, and give it some positive feedback to say "Thank you" for the hard work that goes into creating a show like this.

Below is a list of some of the main topics the conversation visited during its wandering journey through the forest of related subject matter, along with links to related material for those who are interested in pursuing any of those further:
  • The evidence of catastrophe in the shaping of the earth, from the Grand Canyon (here and here), to the undersea canyons (here and here), to the evidence that earth may have undergone a "Big Roll" (here, here, and here). Seriah also included several links related to these topics on the page for the interview here.
  • The evidence that the myths of the world -- including virtually all of the stories found in the Bible -- are based upon a common system of celestial metaphor: see sample discussions here, as well as others linked in the list here.
  • A post detailing more of the evidence that argues that the Samson story is based upon celestial metaphor, and a video I made to illustrate some of that evidence more visually.
  • Discussion of the reasons why I believe the scriptures describing the visit of the Magi show us that the passages are describing celestial events and not terrestrial events.
  • How this worldwide system of celestial myth appears to provide evidence of an extremely ancient lost civilization -- or lost knowledge -- and how what we can see today is in many ways like a vast ruin whose original purpose and complete outline is now covered in mist, sand, snow, and jungle vines.
  • The importance of the concept of "predictive power" in a theory or hypothesis.
  • A video I made back in 2012 to help illustrate the concept of precession, using the "analogy of the dining-room table" (see also the discussion here, among many others you can find simply by searching for the word "precession" on the blog, which is fully searchable).
  • Arguments that the scriptures in the Bible, as with virtually all the world's myths and sacred stories, convey a worldview or understanding of the nature of the cosmos and of human existence which can be described as essentially shamanic
  • Some discussion that shows that the loss of the ancient wisdom (or ignoring it) causes us to lose our way and follow the wrong road.
  • The "wax on, wax off" analogy for understanding the concept of the esoteric (see also discussions here and here).
I very much hope you will enjoy the interview and that my conversation with Seriah will provide you with some subject matter that will be a blessing to you in some way, and I hope to return for another discussion some time in the future, the next time I am following a pathway through the forests and begin to wonder, "Where Did the Road Go?"