View Full Version : Sacred Geometry and Armenia
Anonymouse
03-04-2005, 12:28 PM
I have been looking for this article for a long time. I posted it previous in another thread but that link is dead now. Alas I found it again. An interesting read for those who are familiar with the topic of Sacred Geometry.
http://www.tacentral.com/architecture.asp?story_no=2
http://www.astrologycom.com/geometry.html
Thai-Samurai
03-04-2005, 09:57 PM
friggin sweet, I useto have suspicions about numbers myself.
did not read it all but will do later on
its preety kool
thanks
jessoussi
03-16-2005, 12:55 PM
i didnt even open the site
TigranJamharian
03-16-2005, 04:07 PM
i didnt even open the site
Why did you feel compelled to let us know that you are an idiot.
anyway....Very interesting stuff, its funny how far ahead of the Greeks and early Egyptians we were in quite a few fields and yet we dont get one sentence in school books.
Anonymouse
03-18-2005, 08:31 PM
Why did you feel compelled to let us know that you are an idiot.
anyway....Very interesting stuff, its funny how far ahead of the Greeks and early Egyptians we were in quite a few fields and yet we dont get one sentence in school books.
Ignore that girl. She's 15 and one of those sketchy up and coming girls. After all, looking at her signature is enough to dispell anyones doubts of what we are dealing with here.
TigranJamharian
03-19-2005, 02:19 PM
Ignore that girl. She's 15 and one of those sketchy up and coming girls. After all, looking at her signature is enough to dispell anyones doubts of what we are dealing with here.
HAHAHA, i just noticed that. Thank you for the laugh.
Zaven_Armo
04-12-2005, 10:49 PM
wow those sites are amazing (i LOVE the geometry one since i love match) Thank you so much guy with the wig and scary eyes lmao :eek:
bell-the-cat
04-13-2005, 12:12 PM
I have been looking for this article for a long time. I posted it previous in another thread but that link is dead now. Alas I found it again. An interesting read for those who are familiar with the topic of Sacred Geometry.
http://www.tacentral.com/architecture.asp?story_no=2
http://www.astrologycom.com/geometry.html
Most of this is the architectural equivalent of seeing faces in patterned wallpaper - people see what they want to see, and seek to find patterns and meanings where there are none. :rolleyes:
And the first author is wrong in saying that Pagan temples were oriented to the east. They were not. They were mostly oriented north-south, with the altar/shrine either at the northern or at the southern end of the temple.
bell-the-cat
04-13-2005, 12:19 PM
Ignore that girl. She's 15 and one of those sketchy up and coming girls. After all, looking at her signature is enough to dispell anyones doubts of what we are dealing with here.
Given that you nicked your avatar from a long defunct website from the early 1990s called "Deadmeat", who are you to talk! :laugh: :p
As for her avatar, it's mild, I would have asked "make everyone die horribly, Amen". :evil:
bell-the-cat
04-13-2005, 01:35 PM
Given that you nicked your avatar from a long defunct website from the early 1990s called "Deadmeat", who are you to talk! :laugh: :p
As for her avatar, it's mild, I would have asked "make everyone die horribly, Amen". :evil:
Ooops - sorry :crying: its actually "redmeat.com" and it is still up and running, and not changed its design at all in years - yep, I've just looked at the first page of your "ankap thread".
Dig up the earliest books on website design, from the early 1990s, and you will see that site listed as an example because of its "cutting-edge advanced use of technology" :laugh: (i.e. it uses an animated gif file to make the eyes move). Ahhhh ... how technology has moved on from those innocent days when a mere animated gif would get people excited! :laugh:
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