Re: Pyramidable

From: grapheus (grapheus_at_www.com)
Date: 10/08/04


Date: 8 Oct 2004 04:08:07 -0700

pharisson@yahoo.ca wrote in message news:<f2b64e4d.0410072051.4310edf2@posting.google.com>...

>
> > >I read your article from Anistoriton. I know those three numbers, 30,
> > >31 and 12 that might be related with the calendar but, you must
> > >demonstrate that all your numbers are pertaining to a calendar and
> > >what they represent. What are the names of the months and days? How do
> > >you explain the groups of Duhoux from a calendar point of view? He
> > >offers a good demonstration that the language of the Phaistos Disc
> > >cannot be Greek.

Yves Duhoux' "demonstration" is flawed by the "Blind Structural
Analysis" he used. With such method, it's really easy to see
"prefixes" where they don't exist, by comparing for instance in
English "sure" and "cen-sure" , "tri-syllabic" and "cen-tri-fugal".
The PROVED decipherment, i.e. the "Proto-Ionic Solution" has shown
that some of Duhoux' "suffixes" were true, others not.
Moreover, Y.Duhoux has NEGLECTED the fact that ancient scribes had NOT
THE SAME IDEA as us, concerning what "a word" is. The example of the
Texts in SYLLABIC CYPRIOT SCRIPT show that they were considering as
"one word" the conjunction KAS + the following word, for instance.

> >
> > I agree it can not be Greek language,

This is a FALSE idea, as shown by the PROVED decipherment of the
Phaistos Disk.

> > in that the hieroglyphs
> > represents a minutely calculation, which contains the Minoans concepts
> > for a calendar, in a nearly reconstructable form.

That the Phaistos Disk would be "Minoan" is ALSO WRONG. Not only the
PROVED decipherment has shown that, but it is "a priori" a VERY
IMPLAUSIBLE hypothesis for lots of reasons (stamps in RELIEF --
Hieroglyphs not identical to the Cretan ones -- Clay of the Disk of
non-Cretan origin --etc.)

> Don't forget that
> > the calendar is otherwise lost.
> > What you further write, is not my choice, it is an Eurystheus choice,
> > and you should be very cautious not to mistake myths for real life.
> > Don't be misused as a decoy in this case.
> > How come the torso "Venus of Milo" be an ideal of beauty? Is it
> > because we like roast duck for Christmas? No, but because our sense of
> > proportions approximately tell us, what she looked like.
> > Your sense of proportions should tell you too, that the only mystery
> > left is the lack of responses to my geometrical decipherment.
> > >
>
> There is a general agreement among scholars that the language of
> Linear A is not Greek. If Linear B is Greek, the earlier Linear A is
> not, the Phaistos Disc hieroglyphic used in the same period with
> Linear A and even ealier cannot be in the Greek language.

This conclusion is WRONG. Its ARBITRARY character is obvious once 1)-
the Disk has been recognized as NON -CRETAN 2)- the Disk has been
recognized as belonging to a "Cycladic Proto-Ionian Culture".

Regards

grapheus

> Hieroglyphic
> script was invented to write a text not to count the icons and
> calculate them. In other ancient scripts there are symbols for
> numbers. The text seems to have an internal musicality and could be a
> heroic poem or a song. The Minoan calendar is unknown and if you have
> really found it on the Phaestos Disc it is very important but, you
> must demonstrate everything step by step. On the disc one can find all
> kind of numbers and count them up and down, from left to right, from
> right to left and make all kind of statistics without actually to make
> any decipherment. Others can play games with the hieroglyphs, like a
> monkey, without to read and understand them. Why Eurystheus choice?
> The uzurper cannot win this time. Don't confuse myth with reality in
> the 21st century AD. The evidence of Heracles is overwhelming.
> Eurystheus must do the labours. For your lack of responses there seems
> to be no mystery just some reasons. If the thieves are not roaming
> around, you did not make any discovery.
>
> Searching in Anistoriton for an article of Faucouneau about two
> inscriptions, one on a silver pin and the other on a gold ring I found
> an interesting article about the Linear A script. There is also
> another article with the same topic as the article of Faucouneau to
> read in parallel for comparison.
> www.anistor.co.hol.gr/english/enback/m034.htm
>
> > >> > >>
> > >> P.S. How was the case. Why even mentioning the discovery of insulin,
> > >> when it was still left for someone to find human insulin?
> > >> That is the question.
> > >
> > >What do you mean? >
> > > Don't you even know, who I am?
> >
> > http://home.gvdnet.dk/~hagen/phaistos.htm
> >
> Maybe not... I read your homepage and article. Take care.
>
> Regards,
>
> Paul



Relevant Pages

  • Re: [patch 0/4] [RFC] Another proportional weight IO controller
    ... Linear volumes may well be the most common ones. ... You loose all your data when one disk dies, ... striping, or redundancy from raid. ... but each disk in a stripe ...
    (Linux-Kernel)
  • Re: /dev/hda1 not umounting.
    ... I was trying to use the disk as per-normal? ... errors first. ... Any imaging program basically tries to read "linear" sector by sector. ...
    (alt.os.linux)
  • Re: FGC to Grapheus
    ... interpretate Linear A Signs on the base of Linear B correspondants or ... Phaistos Disk is NOT related in one way or the other to the LinearA/ ... This Greek Ethnic Group moved South in three ...
    (sci.lang)
  • lossless growing of linear RAID (resizing)
    ... linear and then grow the system. ... running RAID-0. ... the disk cannot become 100% full, ... edit raidtab to include a new raid linear device. ...
    (Debian-User)