Post by Andrei Tchentchik on Jan 31, 2020 10:29:27 GMT 2
(.#373).- We are the descendants of extraterrestrials.
We are the descendants of extraterrestrials.
February 1st, 2019.
The Helek, ultimate proof of our extraterrestrial past ?
Jean Sendy, famous and highly respected French ufologist, seemed to have found a rather interesting index ...
His find ?
A simple measure of the time used in Antiquity, especially by the Hebrews and their calendar, which is called helek.
Helek literally means "part" and is written: Halakim plural. It can also mean "volume" for a book, as is the case of the Zohar divided into helek.
Hélek is a unit of time that corresponds to 1/1080 of an hour.
This one, quoted in the sacred book of Judaism, the Torah, holds its strangeness in its incomprehensible precision.
In the passage where it is mentioned, the day is divided (like us) in 24 hours, each hour in 1080 regalim "instants" (rega singular) and each rega in 76 helek.
Either time particles equivalent to 3.333 ... / 76 = 0.0438596491 seconds, or approximately 1 / 20th of a second.
Using these units of measure, experts could accurately calculate the instant of the month of each month, or "Molad", and determine the first day of the month, or "Roch-Hodech".
In the Hebrew calendar, the first day of the month bears the name of Roch-Hodech, the "Head of the Month" in Hebrew. This day is called "Neoménie" among the Greeks, and the "Calende" among the Romans.
Under Jewish law, the Sanctification of the first day of the Hebrew month depends on the appearance of the new crescent moon.
It is this precise moment that determines the Molad, the instant of the new lunation. In this way, when the new "Molad" was accurately determined, it was possible for scholars to define when the first day of the lunar month or Roch-hodech would fall.
The "Molad" is the precise moment of the lunar conjunction, corresponding to the beginning of the alignment of the moon between the earth and the sun. This cosmic alignment is repeated once every 29 days 12 hours 44 minutes and 3 seconds 1/3, in the system of the average calculation of this moment called "Molad".
It is the subdivision of the time in 1080 which allows simplifications of calculation because this number is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 10 etc.
In addition, the hélek is a unit of elementary time to express the lunation in an integer number of units. All the operations necessary for the establishment of the very complex Hebrew calendar are thus made in integers, without possible rounding errors.
After a quick calculation, we realize that a helek is approximately 0.043739893 seconds!
How such an old people could find any use with a measure of time so weak and insignificant for anyone. Even us, a man living in the third millennium, can not picture it without using an adequate and accurate measuring device.
The Origin of the calendar and units of time.
The ancient Egyptians used a twelve-hour cut of the night. Subsequently, they also divided the day into twelve hours; according to the seasons, these hours were more or less long.
One can think that to make twelve subdivisions made it possible to divide easily the day in thirds, in quarters or in sixths. In addition, twelve were already used to subdivide the year into months or lunations, by observing the lunar cycles during the year (see history of the measurement of time).
In fact, it is very likely that the division was based on the observation of the position of the sun in the sky, with the naked eye or with an instrument. The position of the sun was also used for orientation on land and sea.
On the other hand, the second, which appeared among the Babylonians, corresponded more or less to the period of resting heartbeat, easy to count, and was also appreciated later for the definition of rhythm in music. The time then was about 3600 seconds which was easy to divide into multiples of 60, which is also a multiple of 12.
The symbolism of the number 12, and the ease of dividing it into 2, 3 or 4, and the ease of dividing the minute and hour in 5 in this system makes it possible to use only integers would thus have led to the creation of the sexagesimal system to divide the time in minutes and seconds equal and whole.
A day usually includes 24 hours of 60 minutes or 3600 seconds. However, the duration of certain calendar days may differ from this duration by more or less one second, depending on the adjustments that may be made according to the evolution of the earth's rotation and which, depending on the case, lengthen or shorten the duration of the rotation. last minute of the calendar day. The duration of the last hour of these days (generally June 30 and December 31) can therefore vary by more or less a second.
The origin of Hélek
The Torah texts reveal to us that God taught Moses on Mount Sinai that the length of the lunar month is 29 days, twelve hours, and 793 halakim. And that the moon can not be renewed in less than 29 days and a half, 2/3 of an hour and 73 halakim.
The Torah was revealed about 3,000 years ago.
And Jean Sendy cleverly notes that in the 18th century, science was still far from being able to evaluate time in milliseconds. Indeed, the first chronometer of John Harrison (around 1730) still had significant errors on the seconds. Skeptics will say that the Hebrews simply invented this figure for convenience and that, therefore, it would not correspond to anything. But is this the case?
Not really.
If you have fun multiplying a helek by the speed of light (equal to about 300 000 meters / second), we get about 13 000 helek / second.
And we know that this number "13" was very symbolic for many peoples, including the Hebrews.
Numerologists specializing in sacred writings have found that the numeral value of YHWH (which represents the tetragrammaton, that is, the "proper name" of God) is 26, 2 multiplied by 13.
It is said in the Torah that God is ehad ("One"), and the value of this word is 13.
This number appears on many occasions that we can not list them all, because of the enormity of the work. This figure is also found in science in general and in astronomy in particular: the volume of the Earth is 1 / 13.10 ^ 5 and that of the Sun is 1 / 13,01.10 ^ 5.
But again, one could indefatigably say that these are only strange superstitious coincidences. This last index should however annihilate all possible suspicions.
When Moses went up to Mount Sinai, God gave the Prophet a tally of how long it would take.
The Almighty tells him that the duration of a lunation is exactly 29.5 days 2/3 of an hour and 73 halakim. Here are the data provided by God:
2/3 of an hour: 2/3 x 1080 = 720 halakim
In total: 720 + 73 = 793 halakim
793/1080 = 0.734259 hours
Or: 0.734259 / 24 = 0.03059 days
To this we add the 29.5 days
In total: 29.5 0.03059 = 29.53059 days.
What does science say ?
Carl Sagan, head of research at the American Space Institute deduced from his research that the duration of renewal of the moon is 29,530,588 days, the same figure obtained in the Torah.
On the other hand, for other researchers, it is obvious that Hélek would be the unit of time best suited for precise calculations of spatial distances without rounding errors since it corresponds to the unity of the speed light ... (so the ideal unit to travel in space ...)
These amazing results lead us to other questions.
How could Moses have invented this unit of temporal measure?
And above all, what real need would it have been to use a fraction of the time as precise as the Hélek at a time when no one cared to be at a close hour?
The Hebrews, this nomadic people, who had no advanced technology, knew perfectly the duration of a lunar 3500 years before we rediscovered it with our very sophisticated measuring devices!
Jean Sendy then looks for the way in which this people drew such knowledge. For him, the explanation is to look for space. According to this theorist, it is the extraterrestrials who created humanity by mixing the genes of Cro-Magnon men with theirs.
Then, during the history of humanity, over the years they would have returned to Earth to bring us the technologies necessary for our evolution. The peoples would have remembered some scientific data provided by their creators to incorporate them in their sacred books.
Messianic Times, openness to the cosmos, Paris, Robert Laffont, "The Enigmas of the Universe", 1975.
www.elishean.fr/
Copyright les Hathor © Elishean/2009-2019/ Elishean mag
F I N .
We are the descendants of extraterrestrials.
February 1st, 2019.
The Helek, ultimate proof of our extraterrestrial past ?
Jean Sendy, famous and highly respected French ufologist, seemed to have found a rather interesting index ...
His find ?
A simple measure of the time used in Antiquity, especially by the Hebrews and their calendar, which is called helek.
Helek literally means "part" and is written: Halakim plural. It can also mean "volume" for a book, as is the case of the Zohar divided into helek.
Hélek is a unit of time that corresponds to 1/1080 of an hour.
This one, quoted in the sacred book of Judaism, the Torah, holds its strangeness in its incomprehensible precision.
In the passage where it is mentioned, the day is divided (like us) in 24 hours, each hour in 1080 regalim "instants" (rega singular) and each rega in 76 helek.
Either time particles equivalent to 3.333 ... / 76 = 0.0438596491 seconds, or approximately 1 / 20th of a second.
Using these units of measure, experts could accurately calculate the instant of the month of each month, or "Molad", and determine the first day of the month, or "Roch-Hodech".
In the Hebrew calendar, the first day of the month bears the name of Roch-Hodech, the "Head of the Month" in Hebrew. This day is called "Neoménie" among the Greeks, and the "Calende" among the Romans.
Under Jewish law, the Sanctification of the first day of the Hebrew month depends on the appearance of the new crescent moon.
It is this precise moment that determines the Molad, the instant of the new lunation. In this way, when the new "Molad" was accurately determined, it was possible for scholars to define when the first day of the lunar month or Roch-hodech would fall.
The "Molad" is the precise moment of the lunar conjunction, corresponding to the beginning of the alignment of the moon between the earth and the sun. This cosmic alignment is repeated once every 29 days 12 hours 44 minutes and 3 seconds 1/3, in the system of the average calculation of this moment called "Molad".
It is the subdivision of the time in 1080 which allows simplifications of calculation because this number is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9 10 etc.
In addition, the hélek is a unit of elementary time to express the lunation in an integer number of units. All the operations necessary for the establishment of the very complex Hebrew calendar are thus made in integers, without possible rounding errors.
After a quick calculation, we realize that a helek is approximately 0.043739893 seconds!
How such an old people could find any use with a measure of time so weak and insignificant for anyone. Even us, a man living in the third millennium, can not picture it without using an adequate and accurate measuring device.
The Origin of the calendar and units of time.
The ancient Egyptians used a twelve-hour cut of the night. Subsequently, they also divided the day into twelve hours; according to the seasons, these hours were more or less long.
One can think that to make twelve subdivisions made it possible to divide easily the day in thirds, in quarters or in sixths. In addition, twelve were already used to subdivide the year into months or lunations, by observing the lunar cycles during the year (see history of the measurement of time).
In fact, it is very likely that the division was based on the observation of the position of the sun in the sky, with the naked eye or with an instrument. The position of the sun was also used for orientation on land and sea.
On the other hand, the second, which appeared among the Babylonians, corresponded more or less to the period of resting heartbeat, easy to count, and was also appreciated later for the definition of rhythm in music. The time then was about 3600 seconds which was easy to divide into multiples of 60, which is also a multiple of 12.
The symbolism of the number 12, and the ease of dividing it into 2, 3 or 4, and the ease of dividing the minute and hour in 5 in this system makes it possible to use only integers would thus have led to the creation of the sexagesimal system to divide the time in minutes and seconds equal and whole.
A day usually includes 24 hours of 60 minutes or 3600 seconds. However, the duration of certain calendar days may differ from this duration by more or less one second, depending on the adjustments that may be made according to the evolution of the earth's rotation and which, depending on the case, lengthen or shorten the duration of the rotation. last minute of the calendar day. The duration of the last hour of these days (generally June 30 and December 31) can therefore vary by more or less a second.
The origin of Hélek
The Torah texts reveal to us that God taught Moses on Mount Sinai that the length of the lunar month is 29 days, twelve hours, and 793 halakim. And that the moon can not be renewed in less than 29 days and a half, 2/3 of an hour and 73 halakim.
The Torah was revealed about 3,000 years ago.
And Jean Sendy cleverly notes that in the 18th century, science was still far from being able to evaluate time in milliseconds. Indeed, the first chronometer of John Harrison (around 1730) still had significant errors on the seconds. Skeptics will say that the Hebrews simply invented this figure for convenience and that, therefore, it would not correspond to anything. But is this the case?
Not really.
If you have fun multiplying a helek by the speed of light (equal to about 300 000 meters / second), we get about 13 000 helek / second.
And we know that this number "13" was very symbolic for many peoples, including the Hebrews.
Numerologists specializing in sacred writings have found that the numeral value of YHWH (which represents the tetragrammaton, that is, the "proper name" of God) is 26, 2 multiplied by 13.
It is said in the Torah that God is ehad ("One"), and the value of this word is 13.
This number appears on many occasions that we can not list them all, because of the enormity of the work. This figure is also found in science in general and in astronomy in particular: the volume of the Earth is 1 / 13.10 ^ 5 and that of the Sun is 1 / 13,01.10 ^ 5.
But again, one could indefatigably say that these are only strange superstitious coincidences. This last index should however annihilate all possible suspicions.
When Moses went up to Mount Sinai, God gave the Prophet a tally of how long it would take.
The Almighty tells him that the duration of a lunation is exactly 29.5 days 2/3 of an hour and 73 halakim. Here are the data provided by God:
2/3 of an hour: 2/3 x 1080 = 720 halakim
In total: 720 + 73 = 793 halakim
793/1080 = 0.734259 hours
Or: 0.734259 / 24 = 0.03059 days
To this we add the 29.5 days
In total: 29.5 0.03059 = 29.53059 days.
What does science say ?
Carl Sagan, head of research at the American Space Institute deduced from his research that the duration of renewal of the moon is 29,530,588 days, the same figure obtained in the Torah.
On the other hand, for other researchers, it is obvious that Hélek would be the unit of time best suited for precise calculations of spatial distances without rounding errors since it corresponds to the unity of the speed light ... (so the ideal unit to travel in space ...)
These amazing results lead us to other questions.
How could Moses have invented this unit of temporal measure?
And above all, what real need would it have been to use a fraction of the time as precise as the Hélek at a time when no one cared to be at a close hour?
The Hebrews, this nomadic people, who had no advanced technology, knew perfectly the duration of a lunar 3500 years before we rediscovered it with our very sophisticated measuring devices!
Jean Sendy then looks for the way in which this people drew such knowledge. For him, the explanation is to look for space. According to this theorist, it is the extraterrestrials who created humanity by mixing the genes of Cro-Magnon men with theirs.
Then, during the history of humanity, over the years they would have returned to Earth to bring us the technologies necessary for our evolution. The peoples would have remembered some scientific data provided by their creators to incorporate them in their sacred books.
Messianic Times, openness to the cosmos, Paris, Robert Laffont, "The Enigmas of the Universe", 1975.
www.elishean.fr/
Copyright les Hathor © Elishean/2009-2019/ Elishean mag
F I N .