Significance of the Moon in Ancient Civilizations

by Radhakrishnan. P | 2017 | 51,158 words

This study analyzes the Significance of the Moon in Ancient Civilizations and it’s contribution to modern astrology. This thesis also aims at integrated scientific explanations on New and Full Moon and their influence of Geo-physical phenomena and also analyzes how significant a role the moon plays in keeping the life on earth. Astrology is the or...

Around 4.5 billion years ago, when the solar system was still in its infancy, a Marssized planet collided with the proto-Earth and blasted our baby planet to smithereens. Earth’s rocks did not just melt; they vaporized, the very elements in those rocks turning into gas the way boiling water turns into steam.[1] Eventually, the remains of the original Earth cool and settled down, condensing to once again form a solid planet. The leftovers formed the moon. That is the latest twist in the decades-old story about how Earth’s moon came to be, and it’s based on new measurements of elements in both worlds. To explain this similarity, scientists come up with a way to make the moon mostly from the Earth, and not the impact or, says Kun Wang, a geochemist at Washington University in St. Louis. He was intrigued by a new computer model that debuted this spring at the annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. In this model, the Mars-sized object hit Earth with such violence that the impact or and Earth’s mantle vaporized. The eminent thinkers of century old civilizations considered Astrology with artificial intelligence due to its intellectual reputations.[2] The modern researchers questioned the accuracy of predictions in terms of testimony to problem solving strategy of Astrology due to constant motions of moon and other planets and short falls of finding the configurations of birth time. It is true that the contemporary Astrologists strongly believe that artificial intelligence today is comparable with astrology was then.

Footnotes and references:

[1]:

E-News httpp://www.popsci.com by Rebecca Boyle, September 12, 2016.

[2]:

Derek Partridge (1993); The Foundation of Artificial Intelligence A Source Book; Cambridge University Press, pp-00)

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