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In message <328C98DE.612A@PioneerPlanet.infi.net> SaidaReturn to Topwrites: > Mr. Pink wrote: > > > > While researching in school I had read a book that mentioned the fact > > that Romans had steam powered elevators?!? > > > > Is this true, was it a bad dream, can anyone shed some light? > > > > thanx > > > > -just a fan of the roman empire > I didn't know they had any buildings tall enough to make elevators > necessary, but then I could be wrong. Steam-powered elevators--I hope > the pyramidiots don't get wind of this. That might fuel a discussion > that could last for at least a month. Maybe you just read somewhere > that Julius Caesar wore elevator shoes. Sweet dreams! Elevators were used in the Coloseum to bring things up from the basement to the arena floor, but they were not steam. They were operated by windlasses, ie. manpower. -- John. Rowley Regis. West Midlands. UK. e-mail: john.fowler@zetnet.co.uk
A letter excoriating the Amarna Research Foundation for appointing Prof. Dr. Dietrich Wildung , Director of the Berlin Egyptian Museum,and Mr. Dennis Forbes, editor of KMT, trustees of the foundation is posted @ http://www.amarna.com/eir/imports/letr2arf.htm The Mansoor Amarna Collection is exhibited @ http://www.amarna.comReturn to Top
On Fri, 15 Nov 1996 19:23:29 GMT, chiksika@tir.com (chiksika) wrote: >XinaReturn to Topwrote: > > >>There was no "Flood" of the bible. There is NO archeological, >>geological, or biostratographic evidence. Next.... > > While I have no intention of involving myself in this "debate" and >admire your dueling with a closed mind who seems to think they have a >direct channel to god him/herself,many cultures have a flood >myth/story. Chinese,Sumerian,Chaldean,Mayan,Norse, and Native American >cultures all have flood sories that have been handed down.My native >tribe(Shawnee) has a flood story. True, and these vary widely, eg the main Chinese flood myth has the Emperor defeating the flood by building dykes, etc. And, of course, most major civilizations grew up on flood plains. Now I don't intend to sit here and >call this absolute "proof",however my personal studies have shown IN >MOST CASES there is at least a certain amount of truth in this type of >data. At the end of the last ice age there was a tremendous amount of >water which was either directly melted into the various bodies of >water or through evaporation found it's way into the atmosphere. But slowly -- so slowly, I've been told, that the typical nomadic group wouldn't even notice it. Still there were probably exceptions to this at various times, and of course floods can occur in locations other than plains.
Eliyehowah wrote: > I accept God's nature as my sources. This means I bow or humble myself > to any scholar who presents physical data requiring me to find an answer> to any contradictions. I do not bow to mere hypothesis, nor to popular view,> nor to famed authors or scholars. Data MUST be from God (meaning physical). Then this means you must produce the physical data that proves several different things that your now oft published Gifs contain. One of them being the (in)famous biblical flood, the other is the age of certain humans on earth (if anything mankind lives longer now than he did in ancient times), and the incredibly underestimated time frame that you have for mankind's existence. Where are the evidences outside of these gifs? These are wrong, and if the are not wrong, where are their root sources at? > Such data is dendrochron and C-14 etc. Yes, I humbly agree they must be> explained as to why their results. And I will admit the fields I have yet to know. If you wish to feel this makes me inadequate to represent my God that is your choice, but I will still present the case rather than sit back and watch. You havent presented much of anything. You just admited the C-14 does not match your figures, how is it that thousands of independant scientists or even ones affiliated with established organizations have not seen fit to prove these things that you think are correct. The answer is, I would imagine, is that there *is* no proof outside of your faith in your religion. The bible was never intended to be taken as a literalism, and those who take it as such are simply unable, or unwilling to see what is underneath. This is not fault of their own, the data has been so manipulated over history that its very difficult to ascetain what is metaphor and what is history,it is blended. There is an excellent book for any people of faith who have a difficult time resolving it with what they know is the truth and what has been scientifically proven, "Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism: A Bishop Rethinks the Meaning of Scripture" by John Shelby Spong, (a bishop in Episcopal Church) 1991, Harper Collins Publishing, ISBN 0-006-067518-7. It is an excellent book, it is written objectively and by someone who does have faith in his God and in what he knows is the truth. These things are not incompatible, its just that he realizes (as some do not) that to know what is in the mind of the Creator at all times is the height of arrogance. I choose to be less arrogant, and just go by what I can know now, and wait for the endresults whenever that time is. > I will too. Chicago Oriental Institute's Richard Parker's from the Americana. The OI has a wide range of study on the Near East. It will be interesting to see who comes up with what. Ankh udja seneb em Hotep! XinaReturn to Top
> NEUROLOGISTS FIND EVIDENCE > OF INTELLIGENT FOLLICLES > IN ED CONRAD'S BRAIN Everybody seems to be having a chuckle at my expense. So I decided I'M going to have a chuckle at my expense. ~~~~~~~~~~ > (Boy, if I were sitting on the stool in the other corner > of the ring, I'd certainly have a field day with this one!)Return to Top
Group, I think you will find the following of interest.... Paul Pettennude Some asked me to post my observations re: the script on the Olmec celts identified by Chen, Hanping as Chinese in US News & World Report Nov. 4, pp. 46-8. I have finally seen the article with the reproduction of the Olmec grapsh and the section that Chen believed was similar to the oracle bone script of the Shang. 1. the graphs isolated by Chen are not Chinese. They bear some graphic similarity to some archaic Chinese graphs or parts of graphs but as single graphs equal nothing and do not have the equivalents he assigned to them. It is bogus. 2. obviously, the graphs/glyphs pulled out by Chen should be considered within the context of the entire "inscription." This is impossible as the rest of the marks bear none but a few isolated similarities. In fact, the Olmec "script" may not represent language at all, but like the Naxi and other ur-scripts, be more a code for storytelling than an actual transcription of language. The Shang oracle bone script, on the other hand, is very advanced and unquestionably qualifies as belonging to a writing system. 3. finally, the "inscription" must be considered within the context of the sculptures. there is very little beyond an occasional face of human representation in Shang period art (some carved jade figures, but these are kneeling, often incised, and covered with animal decor, tatoos, clothes, etc.). One famous bronze has a shaman like figure in the mouth of an animal, but there is no similarity to the Olmec representations. The only set of free standing statues I know about belong to the neolithic Hongshan culture discovered in the northern borderlands of present day China...separated from the Shang by thousands of years and from the Shang "homeland" by hundreds of miles (and certainly not "Chinese"). These naked sculptures are female, some pregnant, and do not have the tall malformed cranium. They were found in a temple/mortuary complex. There was no evidence of any script. (for articles in English see works by Elizabeth Childs-Johnson or Tong, Eng-sheng). 4. a point of correction: the US News & WR article claims that Chen is the foremost authority of only about 12 scholars worldwide who are trained in ancient script (podunck Lehigh Univ. has two!). First, Chen is a very minor scholar. Second, there are more than 12 scholars in the US alone who can read Shang script, many many more in China and elsewhere. There is a leading authority on Shang script visiting Dartmouth college right now: Qi, Wenxin. If you are at UBC, talk to Ken Takashima in Asian Studies. off to class, C. Cook, Assoc. Prof. of Chinese Lehigh Univ. D. TschudiReturn to Topwrote in article ... > > In Article , write: > > Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primene t.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsf eed.internetmci.com!howland.erols.net!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!news.lsa.umich. edu!umich.edu!piotrm > > From: piotrm@umich.edu (Piotr Michalowski) > > Newsgroups: sci.archaeology.mesoamerican,sci.archaeology > > Subject: Re: Shang script among Olmecs > > Date: Sun, 10 Nov 1996 14:03:03 > > Organization: University of Michigan > > Lines: 22 > > Message-ID: > > References: <19961101032000.WAA24439@ladder01.news.aol.com> <55fplj$ish@news1.io.org> <55s2eo$q8k@news1.io.org> <563pc6$ari@midland.co.nz> > > NNTP-Posting-Host: pm036-14.dialip.mich.net > > X-Newsreader: Trumpet for Windows [Version 1.0 Rev A] > > Xref: news1.epix.net sci.archaeology.mesoamerican:4355 sci.archaeology:55449 > > > > In article <563pc6$ari@midland.co.nz> gblack@midland.co.nz (George Black) > writes: > > > > >>I won't get too excited just yet. There have been others who have claimed > > >>that they too can "read" Olmec inscriptions. However, some of these have > > >>claimed they can read them because they are written in an *African* > dialect. > > >>So the Olmec were borrowing their writing from not only the Chinese but > > >>the Africans as well. How interesting.... > > >> > > > > Actually, there has been some serious work on this > > writing system, which is the earliest deciphered writing system in > > Mesoamerica, if I understand things correctly. Since the script includes > > syllabic as well as logographic values, and can be demonstrably shown to be > > represent "pre-proto-Zoquean", that is a stage of an ancestor to languages > > still spoken in the area today, I wonder how anyone could read them in > another > > language, especially Chinese, which, unless I am mistaken, is hardly related > > > to any Mesoamerican language. A short report on the decipherment can be > > conveniently found in John B. Justeson and Terrence Kaufman, "A Decipherment > > > of Epi-Olmec Hieroglyphic Writing," Science 259 (1993) 1703ff. One > sometimes > > wonders why anyone bothers with serious research, when even articles on > > Science are not read, but all sorts of sensationalist nonsense brings on > > myriads of comments! > > Of course, "written language" containing syllabic and logographic values could > be interpreted by speakers of many languages if familiar with logographic > values. The amount of content understood would be in inverse proportion to the > amount of syllabic information contained in the document. Ideograms are read > accurately to this day by people speaking widely diverse languages. > So, was Shang at time of Olmec writings primarily logographic? Is there a > significant number of matches between the two? Do we really need someone > fluent in Shang to look at these matches? Pictographic evolution is available > for Asian writings...Olmec should reveal close matches of same...Is Dr. Chen > available for lectures? ;0 > > Serious research becomes part of a body of knowledge and is available to those > few who can and will pursue its meanings...the comradeship of researchers is > a smaller circle than that of people who read Discover/Omni/chariots of the > dogs and these huge numbers of people have access to newsgroups...you can > exchange information in a newsgroup, but you can't find validity and > respect...that comes from your peers who see your postings or read your > publications and ultimately validity and respect come from your interior. > Although I am not a scholar or any sort, I feel I see more cross-pollenization > of info going from the serious to the dilettante than from d. to d. (if we > weed out all that repetition) or d. to s., and I thank the s. for that. > > >
Im a student,age of 16,serious,mature,and fascinated by archeology. Id like to get a job this summer,working on archeologic project,in any country of this world. If you want me to help you this summer,feel free to mail me or leave a message at this newsgroups. if you mail me,dont forget to say that the e-mail is for Charles PerreaultReturn to Top
In articleReturn to Topseagoat@primenet.com (John A. Halloran) writes: >One would have to compare the vocabulary in a modern compilation of literature >with the vocabulary of the Hebrew bible. It is true that there are certain >standardized expressions that are frequent within certain books, so it is >easier to read because one does not encounter the kind of variety that is >common in modern Hebrew literature. It is also true that in ancient >literature in particular, the prose category was a late invention, with >literature having to belong to a particular genre to be created at all. The >study of literary genres is one of your fields of expertise, is it not? I am sorry, but this misses the point. There is no way of relating the stylized poetic language of the Old Testament, which was composed in different periods, and which has very specific poetic elements, as well as a limited vocabulary, with spoken Hebrew of any particular time. >>That is quite incorrect. The first writing system is not a full represenation >>of any spoken language, but a new semiotic system. It has hardly any verbs >>and was devised to notate only a limited official set of transactions. >Actually, I found 1,119 distinct Sumerian logograms, and have seen the >estimate that by the Old Babylonian period 60 percent of Sumerian words >consisted of compounds, making a total known vocabulary by the Old Babylonian >period of 2800 words. Again, this misses the point. The early writing is not a direct representation of any spoken utterance, and in any case it was devised for very limited purposes. Old Babylonian Sumerian is a different story, it is almost exclusively poetry, and it was not spoken in any speech community. e also have many words in lexical texts that may have never existed in the spoken language. Whatever the vocabulary of Sumerian was at any given time, one could not use the written language to establish that. As for the rest of your argument about "compounds" and the number 2800, I am afraid I have no idea what his means. The whole argument. or what I have seen of it here, is based on very strange notions of relationships between language and society and about development from "simple" to "complex". There are unwritten languages in many societies that are not highly "complex," in the way it has been used in this discussion, that have extremely developed vocabularies. Moreover, linguistic complexity is a subjective matter. I find Arabic morphology much more "complex" that, let us say, Turkish, and English very simple compared to Russian or Polish, but someone else might have a very different personal point of view on such matters. In essence, all languages are equally "difficult" or "complex," just as all serious musical instruments are equally difficult to master well. It might be easier to learn a few chords on the guitar than to get a one really good tone out of a French Horn or clarinet, but to play any of them well takes years of practice.
Replying to jimamy@primenet.com : rejohnsn@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu wrote: : : >Today, this pattern of reproduction is found among elephant populations : >that are being hunted. : : I've no knowlege of the study discussed so I ask: Are the elephants that : are being hunted subject ONLY to the hunting stress, OR, are they ALSO : suffering from stress due to habitat loss? I don't know about the elephants, but the same pattern is seen in, for instance, Plaice in the north atlantic. The response to increased predation is reproduction at younger age and smaller size. Atleast for the plaice loss of habitat isn't an issue, but heavy predation by trawling is. MVH: Mike Noreen |"Cold as the northern winds Net: ev-michael@nrm.se | in December mornings, | Cold is the cry that rings | from this far distant shore." Proud to have been dubbed 'Incorrigible', 'idiot', and 'IQ below 50' by that most "complex" of Black Knights - Peter Nyikos!Return to Top
>naomis444@aol.com wrote: >>Looking for assistance in finding Near Eastern texts on the subjects of >>covenants, holiness, judgment, and reconciliation. I am fairly aware of >>the Gilgamesh Epic and it's similiar texts, but looking for others from >>the various archaeological periods in the Near East. Any assistance will >>be most appreciated. The subjects you list could be interpreted in different ways, so you will have to be the judge as to what texts might be appropriate. The best place to start would be Jack Sasson, et al, eds., Civilizations of the Ancient Near East. There are a number of articles there, with bibliography, that will lead you to specific texts in translation. A number of interesting treaties from the 2nd millennium have been published recently and they might be of use to you.Return to Top
In article <56fas9$6ta@news.ptd.net>, edconrad@prolog.net (Ed Conrad) writes: >Michael ClarkReturn to Topwrote: > >>On Mon, 11 Nov 1996, Ed Conrad wrote: > >>> To my mind, the ONLY physical anthropologist who possessed scientific >>> integrity in a search for honest answers to legitimate questions about >>> man's origin and ancestry was the late Dr. Earnest A. Hooton, longtime >>> professor of anthropology at Harvard University. >>> >>(T)ed? Do you know any LIVING anthropologists? > >Quite frankly, no! >Oh, I do know of some who are still walking and talking because >I see them on TV every once in a while, usually after an ``incredible >discovery" like the time they claimed to have found Little Lucy's >fossilized babushka. > >But, unfortunately, as anyone who follows their rather mechanical >straight-from-the-book irrational establishment-protecting commentary >is well aware, they're actually brain dead zombies. > >To be honest, I found their unusual condition so intriguing that some >time ago I sought an explanation from Clayton Lennon because of >his expertise in explaining the cause of abnormalities such as this. > >Well, let me tell you, Michael, what he told me was was rather >shocking, to say the least. > >Apparently, the zombie-like condition is the result of a disconnection >between the brain and another (unmentionable)( part of the body. > >It just so happens that the anthropologists' years of abnormal >absorption of nonsensical incorrect data has disrupted the Fornix >Optic Thalmus -- located in the interior of the brain -- and has >adversely affected the rather complex Human Services system. > >In turn, it has triggered the spontaneous growth of miniscule >purplish-shaped hourglass-like embers on the north and southeast >walls of the large intestine. > >Consequently, nauseous gases usually emitted from the rectum, >accompanied by ``popping" noises but oftimes even louder -- are >required to take a detour to you know where but have no alternative >and have to find a different route. > >Amazing as the human body is -- God bless God for creating evolution! >-- they found a way. > >Most amazingly, these gases shift to reverse, re-enter the stomach, >bean-stalk up the spinal cord, enter the Limbic Lobe, make a almost >perfect U-turn -- sort of like a Cho Cho coming 'round the mountain -- >and enter the Fornix Optiic Thalmus. > >It's then that they relocate the entrance to spinal cord, zip down the >bean-stalk, make a bee-line to the oxyntic glands of the stomach and >race like helll to the outer limits of the large intestine where they >finally find the Exit. > >I know it sounds incredible, Michael. But, as we both know, truth >indeed IS stranger than fiction. > Guys that write for small town newspapers on the other hand, are well known for their generally wonderful ability to portray complex issues simply, and awesome overall intelligence.
valis@pacificnet.net (Shem) writes: >I am very interested in Mesopotamia, read about it voraciously in my >free time, and have decided I want to learn Akkadian. Could anyone >recommend a book that would serve as a good general introduction to >learning the language? One possibility is Rykle Borger's "Akkadische Lesestücke". In my opinion it is better than Riemschneider. The choice of texts is wiser, vocabulary is good and it does not try to learn all the phases of language at once. And it contains cuneiform -- redrawn with Neo-Assyrian type signs. Only I suppose it hasn't been translated into English. Unfortunately there is no introduction on "Teach yourself" -type. All books mentioned need some previous linguistic competence and hard work! +++ Laura Kataja [||] Never /\ /\ +++ +++ Dept. of Asian and African Studies [||] trust a ( *~~~* ) +++ +++ University of Helsinki [||] smiling \ + / +++ +++ EMAIL: lkataja@cc.helsinki.fi [||] cat! ( ) +++Return to Top
>Believe me, it gets better. The two species in question are *Equus >asinus*, the true ass, and *Equus hemionus*, the onager, or Asiatic >half-ass. I always thought a half-ass was a mule. The OED thinks so too, but calls it obsolete! It says "tr. Gr. hemionos", too. My Greek dictionary says the latter means "a half-ass, a mule". -- Joe Fineman jcf@world.std.com 495 Pleasant St., #1 (617) 324-6899 Malden, MA 02148Return to Top
I take it we can begin building upon our timelines we have now provided. And you will understand then why I then regard some things AFTER this Flood that by numeric year you would view as BEFORE my year for the Flood. And thus avoid confusion when you call my shots. Rather than forcing each other into the goal of being a farce...the science world versus religious world.... let us understand first what we are each claiming. Though Creationists cannot speak for me and my God (so please dont insult me by presuming I have their beliefs, it will run us into a tangent), may I presume you *DO* have the scientific beliefs of the world....or are you too as individual as I am in your beliefs? I do not consider the Flood quite yet a debate in our topic but rather C-14. Debating whether C-14 is in error or not, and WHERE is it in error. If you know C-14, you will know we both (science/religion) believe it to be in error. C-14 does NOT match your ancient history of epoch 3000 BC to 2000 BC, nor does it match mine as Flood 2370-2000 BC..... (note the 3000 BC epoch = 2370 BC epoch equation) but rather falls between the two. (Closer to mine than yours.) However, you will NOW see how I can scrutinize and criticise my own work......... The chart --appears-- to match MY chronology perfectly with no adjustment. But as a realist towards the Bible I must recognize the C-14 method as dating Egyptian DEATH, (not Egyptian life) and that a curve of increase (to explain pre-Flood dates of man's works as 20,000 years) does not spread thru earth's atmosphere in but one year. For this reason, the charts I will present from the C-14 convention of your scientists cannot proudly be claimed by me as perfectly matching my work. [Simply, my Egypt doesnt begin in 2370 BC when Noah walked off the ark. And so C-14 Egyptian dates which proudly support 2370 BC (not 3000 BC) cannot be used by me to produce a 2370 BC Egypt. This means that the C-14 results which God supplies speaks equally to me as it does you to come up with an explanation. Your people say the trees in dendrochronology are accurate in count and that their C-14 in them is 720 years off. I contend that the trees are off, and that the C-14 is BASICALLY correct for planet earth (yet for these Egyptian Pharaohs (biblical generations 1 thru 4 living 400 years all die during 12th dynasty Egypt), the C-14 dates of these Pharaohs MUST be regarded by me as 2170 BC Giza to 2030 BC as 5th dynasty death, to 2020 BC as the inaugurated HOUSE (pharaoh by Mena) to 1943 BC inaugurating the 12th dynasty during which the 1st thru 4th dynasty kings died down til 1824 BC. Restoring human longevity is the claim I make for my God. A restoration of what was lost. Below is the short replies to your last post. If you wish to present C-14 at this time, please do so. Otherwise with your permission I will proceed to present the C-14 for Egypt epoch (flood) and down past 2000 BC, so that you may scrutinize as you wish and ask me where I get this crap. >Eliyehowah wrote: >> I accept God's nature as my sources. > This means I bow or humble myself >> to any scholar who presents physical data requiring me to find an answer > to any contradictions. I do not bow to mere hypothesis, nor to popular view, > nor to famed authors or scholars. Data MUST be from God (meaning physical). >Then this means you must produce the physical data that proves several >different things that your now often published GIFs contain. One of them >being the (in)famous biblical flood, the other is the age of certain >humans on earth (if anything mankind lives longer now than he did in >ancient times), and the incredibly underestimated time frame that you >have for mankind's existence. Where are the evidences outside of these >GIFs? These are wrong, and if they are not wrong, where are their root >sources at? WELL PUT >> Such data is dendrochron and C-14 etc. Yes, I humbly agree they must be > explained as to why their results. And I will admit the fields I have yet to know. If you wish to feel this makes me inadequate to represent my God that is your choice, but I will still present the case rather than sit back and watch. >You havent presented much of anything. You just admited the C-14 does >not match your figures, how is it that thousands of independant >scientists or even ones affiliated with established organizations have >not seen fit to prove these things that you think are correct. The >answer is, I would imagine, is that there *is* no proof outside of your >faith in your religion. >The bible was never intended to be taken as a literalism, and those who >take it as such are simply unable, or unwilling to see what is >underneath. This is not fault of their own, the data has been so >manipulated over history that its very difficult to ascertain what is >metaphor and what is history,it is blended. >There is an excellent book for any people of faith who have a difficult >time resolving it with what they know is the truth and what has been >scientifically proven, "Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism: A Bishop >Rethinks the Meaning of Scripture" by John Shelby Spong, (a bishop in >Episcopal Church) 1991, Harper Collins Publishing, ISBN 0-006-067518-7. >It is an excellent book, it is written objectively and by someone who >does have faith in his God and in what he knows is the truth. These >things are not incompatible, its just that he realizes (as some do not) >that to know what is in the mind of the Creator at all times is the >height of arrogance. I consider this an excuse. And it places Jesus at the height of arrogance for knowing the mind of God. I presume the bishop is therefore Catholic and believes Jesus *IS* God so as to eliminate this problem using the trinity. No wonder your frequent quoted Catholic church has committed its crimes and excused itself. But you dont have to be Catholic nor even believe in God to excuse yourself with doctrines. Science has its worshipped doctrines. That includes the doctrine I am sick of hearing about our viscious animal instincts back to cave man and desires without morale. >I choose to be less arrogant, and just go by what >I can know now, and wait for the end-results whenever that time is. >> I will too. Chicago Oriental Institute's Richard Parker's from the Americana. >The OI has a wide range of study on the Near East. It will be >interesting to see who comes up with what. ************ everyone benefiting from my work please email my postmaster, my site will move unless those appreciative send email to counter those trying to destroy it ************ A voice crying out and going unheard, (40 years Oct 7) Nehemiah's (9:1) 50th JUBILEE of Tishri 24 God's 1000 years has begun Sep 14 of 1996. http://www.execpc.com/~elijah/Ezra1991CE.gif Discover the world's true chronology thru the Bible at http://www.execpc.com/~elijahReturn to Top
In article <56kbd4$6qo@kruuna.Helsinki.FI> lkataja@cc.helsinki.fi (Laura Kataja) writes: ? >One possibility is Rykle Borger's "Akkadische Lesestücke". In my >opinion it is better than Riemschneider. The choice of texts is wiser, >vocabulary is good and it does not try to learn all the phases of >language at once. And it contains cuneiform -- redrawn with Neo-Assyrian >type signs. Only I suppose it hasn't been translated into >English. >Unfortunately there is no introduction on "Teach yourself" -type. All >books mentioned need some previous linguistic competence and hard work! I would second that. None of the books currently available are really suited to self-insruction. It depends on what one wants. If someone has linguistic knowledge and just wants an idea of the language, a good grammar will do. If someone wants to read texts in the original at some level of competence, it would be best to take some lessons from someone. It is virtually impossible to learn the writing system properly without help from a teacher, as there are so many little things one has to learn that are not in any textbook. John Huenhgard's new Akkadian primer was supposed to be out about now, and I may simply have missed it. This is an extremely detailed book. I could not use it as I cannot work with the way it is organized, but if someoe does not mind the structure, it is excellent. I have used an earlier version in classes as supplementary reading and it works very well.Return to Top
In article <56gmto$k7r@scream.auckland.ac.nz>, drc@antnov1.auckland.ac.nz says... > >Can we get a little respect for New Guinea here, please, Mr Whittet? >It is not a "small island". I don't believe I ever said it was a small island... At the time population first arrived in New Guinea it was actually connected to Australia by land. > It is the second largest island in the world... >But by any criterion the language diversity in New Guinea >(and Melanesia generally) is the highest in the world. That really is a qualitative as opposed to guantitative measure and thus not very useful in this discussion. What we are looking at is the correlation between the need for language and the use of language, the number of words in a single language as opposed to the number of words in a geographic area helps us to assess that.. > >This thread seems to be moving off into a discussion of >relative vocabulary size, but before this happens can I >get something clear? It appears that Mr Whittet has somewhat >modified his original claim, from > > >(A) Human language only began when people started living in cities. Can you find anyplace in the preceeding thread where I actually said that? If not why not use what I actually said? > >to the less startling > >(B) Vocabularies got larger when people started living in cities. > >Am I right about this change of position? No. Since that really isn't what I said, perhaps a few quotes from previous threads will help clear that up for you. I began by saying: 1.)"Language c 7000 - 3500 BC is not likely to be ahead of the curve. Levels of social organization provide a good way to judge its effectiveness. Essentially, things like social stratification, politics, trade, industry, science, which require language, build language. All of these things are associated with urbanization. The rise of urban centers is thus a good clue as to where language is developing. Placing language building among the steppe nomads does not work." Then there was some discussion: I asked Loren Petrich: :> >>Care to put a number on it in terms of the number of vocabulary >>words used? > >>Lets try number of vocabulary words in a culture >> number of cities of 25,000 plus people >>c 7000 BC >>c 3000 BC >>c 1200 BC >>c 500 BC > >>and then compare that with any modern language you care to name. This is where New Guinea came into the conversation. Loren said: > > Why not study some New-World or Australian or New-Guinean >languages some time? These are spoken by people whose technology is (or >at least had been when they were discovered by European explorers) >comparable to that of eastern-Mediterranean peoples at the earlier times >on your list. I replied Just plug the numbers in, that should answer the question. I don't happen to have a dictionary listing the number of words in a native american language, or for that matter aboriginal Australian. I think Tagalog is spoken in some parts of New Guinea and the Philipines. (By the way, to answer an earlier question which was raised, A better phrasing might have been: "I think Tagalog is spoken in the Philipines and some parts of New Guinea", but both sentences are symantically equivalent in the sense I intended) The vocabulary of Tagalog will do, or Vietnamese if you prefer. Compare the number of words in those languages to the number of words in English, Latin, Greek and Sumerian. I would be suprised if you do not find a correspondence between population size and vocabulary size for any culture you care to look at. Then an exchange with Ben: What I said was that things which require language, build language. If you think about this for a moment you will realise that the very essence of language is interaction with other people. The more people you are surrounded by the more likely you are to encounter new words. > >Do you suppose that every one of these New Guinean hunter-gatherer groups >are getting their languages from their urbanized cousins? No, I expect they have the ability to communicate with others about all the things that are important to them. My guess is they might have a vocabulary of thousands of words. I don't expect them to have a vocabulary of hundreds of thousands of words which is about average or at least not uncommon among people who do a lot of reading. I would suggest that language probably evolved at about the same rate people did. A Neolithic village or group of hunter gatherers may talk to one another less often than they gesture. ... Sophistication is related to urbanization. The frequency of interaction with others is related to our ability to communicate. ... Consider what we actually use language for. What would a city be without politics? What would politics be without language? ... I think you will find that language is intimately linked to the structures which make urbanization possible. The number of words people use as a quantitative measure of the complexity of their language is by no means a qualitative measure of the complexity of their language. Which sections of the curve I described get lumped together depends on your perspective. If you look at the whole curve, hunter-gatherers, can describe everybody between c 200,000 and 20,000 BC. Nomadic pastoralists and neolithic village farmers generally come along after 10,000 BC. Urban centers emerge after about 3,000 BC. We come along after the curve has gone vertical. Today you can go off to the middle of New Guinea and find the tribesmen with cell phones talking to their brokers in Singapore. ... Language in New Guinea took hundreds of thousands of years to evolve and in the last few hundred years has been overwhelmed by western influences to the point where it may well not survive in its indiginous form another century. I hope that helps clear up your confusion. > >Ross Clark > steveReturn to Top
Mike WrightReturn to Topwrote: >.... If I have a larger vocabulary than you >do, is my English more sophisticated than yours? Generally the answer to that question is yes. The more educated and the more sophisticated you are, the more likely you are to have a large vocabulary. The less educated and the less sophisticated you are, the more likely you ae to have a small vocabulary. Think about it for a minute. If the size of your personal vocabulary didn't mean something, why did they test you on vocabulary and word usage before they let you go to college, or for that matter in some states before they let you go to high school. The idea that languages with large vocabularies are more sophisticated than languages with small vocabularies isn't a new one. And yes, you count the 40 words for snow or the 50 camel handling jargon words in the word count. The people who have 40 words for snow probably don't have as many scientific terms as 18th Century English had. And certainly 20th Century English has move scientific terms than the language of two centuries ago. Stella Nemeth s.nemeth@ix.netcom.com
rejohnsn@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu wrote: >On Tue, 12 Nov 1996, Nold Egenter wrote: >>...Their fixation on 'durability' >> widely makes their finds a scattered tohuwabohu! Have a look at our site >> which reconstructs cultural evolution SYSTEMATICALLY with the assumption >> of a pre-lithic "fibroconstructive" age: >Ahhh...real archaeology is speculation because we don't have >fibroconstructive artifacts (i.e. baskets), so I am going to >systematically reconstruct cultural evolution by ASSUMING such >artifacts.... Sorry, I just don't see the difference. Fibroconstuctive artifacts are baskets??? No way!! I am absolutely, positively NOT going to discuss textile techniques on this newsgroup again!! Nope! Not going to do it!!!!Return to TopStella Nemeth s.nemeth@ix.netcom.com
In article <01bbd259$1cf59740$9214838d@sunstorm.corp.cirrus.com>, "Steve Heeter"Return to Topwrote: >I have read many books which show pictures, >and give VERY general information. (as if it >is written by historians, not architects) > >I'm looking for source data including... > >Wood Fortress construction >(i.e. Motte and Bailey) > Foundation needs > Post formation > Post joining > Wall vs. Structure Needs > >Stone Fortress construction >(i.e. Castle or Abby) > Foundation needs > Ashlar block formation > Archway formation > Wood/Iron/Stone Co-Joints > Wood flooring (2nd floor +) > >Wattle and Daub construction >(i.e. Town Buildings) > Half Timber preparation > Wattle Materials > Daub Mixes > Foundation needs > Principles of Thatching(SP) > >I am involved in a business which is considering >the construction of these and other Medieval era >structures. They will need to be as accurate as >possible, including possible partial construction >to demonstrate the methods used. > >PS I have already worn out my David McCaulley >books and videos... > >Thanx in advance > Most of the wooden construction you are interested in you can see at Jamestown, the Mus. of Frontier Culture and Plymouth Colony. Wattle and Daub is simple you take and run your wattles in a basket weaving type pattern over and under and lock it with biscuits and then daub on the mud. Kirk
Eliyehowah (elijah@wi.net) wrote: [...] : I regard all C-14 readings from 20,000 BC to be postFlood 2370 BC. Eliyehowah, I've read your theory on how cosmic radiation creates new C14 atoms and hence distorts the C14 dating by shifting the balance between C12 and C14. Unfortunately this is scientifically impossible. Cosmic radiation consists mostly of gamma rays (extremely high energy light) and elementary particles (smaller than protons and neutrons). This means they cannot add mass to any atom exposed to them. Beta radiation can't do that either (high energy electrons or positrons). Alpha radiation could in theory (He4 nuclei), but the process of 2 protons and 2 neutron tunneling through the electron shell (rather than picking up a couple of electrons and becomeing an ordinary atom) is extremly unprobably - quite appart from these particles not reaching the surface of the earth (mean free path in air is a few centimetres - a couple of inches). C14 could theoretically be also formed by adding a neutron to C13, but since the half life time of a neutron is only 10.6 minutes (we are about 15 minutes light travel away from the sun) and the scattering crossection is comparatively high (with air) I would not expect to find any neutrons penetrating the atmosphere. So we cannot add any mass to the atoms we are looking at unless we bring the radiation source close enough to the atom that the mean free path is longer than the distance from the source to the atom (and the traveltime is shorter than the half life time). So under laboratory conditions we can produce C14 by: adding a neutron to C13; adding an alpha particle to Be9 (although unlikely to be successful); or adding a beta- to N14. The only way we can produce C14 is by radioactive decay from other nuclids. If you have a look at a nuclid chart you will see that out of 8 other nuclids surrounding C14 3 are stable (C13, N14, N15). So C14 can't be a product of decay from any of those. The other 5 all decay by emitting beta- (electrons). This means one neutron froms a proton and emits an electron. So we are actually now looking at an atom from one element changing into one of another element (e.g. C14 -> N14 + beta-). The converting a neutron into a proton also means the mass is not changed. So the only source for generating C14 is B14 which in turn can only be formed from Be14 (all of them decay under emission of an electron). We cannot create C14 by alpha decay (the only possible source, O18, is stable), we cannot do it by beta+ (positron) decay (N14) is stable, there are no nuclids in that area which decay by gamma emission, so there ore no other options for generating C14. : Radiologists are very cautious : to go beyond the lower figure of 50,000 (biblical 30,000). The reason for that is te nature of the decay. Radioactive decay is exponential. If you have 100 atoms to start with and you count again after the half life time (C14: 5730 years) you will be left with half the atoms. if you count another 5730 years later the number will have halfed again (you've only got a quarter of the original amount left) and so on. If you draw a diagramm you will see the curve gets flatter and flatter. Now any measurement has its errors in it which are usually shown by error bars. If my counting is only accurate to +-5 atoms Any dating beyong the presence of at least five atoms becomes scientifically unsound. Also well before reaching that point the error bars are so large (compared to the actual measurements) that a small variation would make a difference of several thousands of years. So giving a precice date is impossible (or cheating). And since the Number of C12 (and C13) doesn't change with time (and the C14) percentage is measured against these) small errors (+- a few %) in the analysis would really make a difference of millenia! No scientist would dare claim an accuracey which is beyond the measurement. RalfReturn to Top
valis@pacificnet.net (Shem) wrote: > >I am very interested in Mesopotamia, read about it voraciously in my >free time, and have decided I want to learn Akkadian. Could anyone >recommend a book that would serve as a good general introduction to >learning the language? > >Thanks, >Shem >valis@pacificnet.net >http://www.pacificnet.net/~valis/grimoire.html I don't have a book to recommend but I do know of a bookstore that has a selection of Akkadian textbooks, namely: Schoenhof's Foreign Books 76-A Mt. Auburn Street Cambridge, MA 02138 617-547-8855 I don't know if they have an 800 number or a website. -- John John Armstrong Preferred email johnarm@kurzweil.comReturn to Top
In article <56krip$nd0@dfw-ixnews2.ix.netcom.com>, S.NEMETH@IX.NETCOM.COM says... > >rejohnsn@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu wrote: > >>On Tue, 12 Nov 1996, Nold Egenter wrote: > >>>...Their fixation on 'durability' >>> widely makes their finds a scattered tohuwabohu! Have a look at our site >>> which reconstructs cultural evolution SYSTEMATICALLY with the assumption >>> of a pre-lithic "fibroconstructive" age: > >>Ahhh...real archaeology is speculation because we don't have >>fibroconstructive artifacts (i.e. baskets), so I am going to >>systematically reconstruct cultural evolution by ASSUMING such >>artifacts.... Sorry, I just don't see the difference. > >Fibroconstuctive artifacts are baskets??? > >No way!! How about some dates? First five knots used were what? First leaf wrapped around food and tied? First cord woven from grass? bark? hair? First rope woven from leather? First use of straw with clay to make daub? First woven net? First use of wool fiber as yarn or felt? First use of flax? First use of cotton? First use of silk? First sewn stitch? First basket? First wattle? First thatch? First paper? First woven fabric? > >I am absolutely, positively NOT going to discuss textile techniques on >this newsgroup again!! Nope! Not going to do it!!!!Return to Topaww come on...do it for us... > > >Stella Nemeth steve >
valis@pacificnet.net (Shem) wrote: > >I am very interested in Mesopotamia, read about it voraciously in my >free time, and have decided I want to learn Akkadian. Could anyone >recommend a book that would serve as a good general introduction to >learning the language? > >Thanks, >Shem >valis@pacificnet.net >http://www.pacificnet.net/~valis/grimoire.html I don't have any book to recommend but I do know of a bookstore that has a selection of Akkadian textbooks, namely:Return to Top
Since this discussion has been taken to yet another thread just a quick note: I've just posted a scientific reasoning why Eliyehowah's idea about C14 dating doesn't hold (answering an earlier post of his where he claims C14 was grossly inacuarate). In a nut shell: one can safely say it is impossible for cosmic radiation to create excess C14, as he claims (however strong this radiation may be). Ralf Eliyehowah (elijah@wi.net) wrote: [...] : I do not consider the Flood quite yet a debate in our topic but rather C-14. : Debating whether C-14 is in error or not, and WHERE is it in error. : If you know C-14, you will know we both (science/religion) believe it to be in error. : C-14 does NOT match your ancient history of epoch 3000 BC to 2000 BC,Return to Top
Ah, Jack, it appears that you have not met EJ before. This latest appearance is one of the most coherent posts I've seen from him. ( No, really) He exhibits all the behavior of someone who goes off his meds, gets worse and worse, then gets locked up for a few days (when he disappears) and is put back on track. I said this in jest the first time I ran across him but am beginning to believe I was right. Jack CampinReturn to Topwrote in article <1942@purr.demon.co.uk>... > > Eliyehowah writes: > > This is a reply. I have not chosen the header newsgroups this thread is > > found in. > > Yes you have, fuckwit. You can't weasel out of your responsibility by > saying "the other guy started it". > > > I have added alt.religion.christian to share with them > > I'm sure that group's readers are all *really* grateful. I don't think. > > Now edit your goddamn headers before continuing this discussion. > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - > Jack Campin jack@purr.demon.co.uk > T/L, 2 Haddington Place, Edinburgh EH7 4AE, Scotland (+44) 131 556 5272 > --------------------- Save Scunthorpe from Censorship --------------------- > >
Marc Line wrote: > On Fri, 15 Nov 1996, at 10:41:55, Eliyehowah cajoled electrons into this > > >Your dinosaurs versus my dinosaurs. > > Choice of weapons......Dinosaurs at dawn! LOL! Well, actually my Dino is on vacation in the bahammas at the moment. I can reach him by pager however! ;) > > >PUBLIC NOTICE: this convention is now closed. > > Loud cheers can be heard!!!! The sun comes out. Birds are singing. > God is in his heaven and all is well with the world! :))) And it *is* closed. I have quit....I cannto argue with someone who is mentally and emotionally so ill equipped. Please forgive me my soft heart! ;) t > these years!! This chap has the truth!! He alone knows the TRUE > history of the Earth. When asked what he put his longevity down to, > Adam replied, "Clean livin' sonny, a good woman and that fruit diet!" Dont forget however that an all-fruit diet has a tendency to cause acute diarrhea! ;) > > >So Xina, you are absolutely > >valueless if some scholar would send you into the world to gather data. > Yeah, a contention is only valid if you accept it without seeking > evidence to substantiate it. This logic also explains much. I dont particularly value your scholarhip nor ELijah's opinion, so I personaly dont care how I appear as a scholar to him or any other JW. The fact remains he nails his own coffin shut with every word he utters. > >And as Paul says my weapon is my tongue, Be careful how you waggle it, there are others that are not so tolerant. > Stand down the paramedics! Close the field hospital. No casualties > expected! Not when one side decides to withdraw from the battle seeing that it is not worthy of effort! XinaReturn to Top
FORUM ARCHAEOLOGIAE - Austrian Journal of Archaeology - A new quarterly journal of (mainly classical) archaeology published in Vienna, the first german-language internet archaeology journal. Including a discussion-forum. http://allergy.hno.akh-wien.ac.at/forum/ -- __________________________ H. NOeDL a8100668@unet.univie.ac.atReturn to Top
Piotr Michalowski wrote: > > In articleReturn to Topseagoat@primenet.com (John A. Halloran) writes: > > >One would have to compare the vocabulary in a modern compilation of literature > >with the vocabulary of the Hebrew bible. It is true that there are certain > >standardized expressions that are frequent within certain books, so it is > >easier to read because one does not encounter the kind of variety that is > >common in modern Hebrew literature. It is also true that in ancient > >literature in particular, the prose category was a late invention, with > >literature having to belong to a particular genre to be created at all. I would be the last one to say that Hebrew (or Arabic) is easy to learn, but, in case anybody is interested, the Hebrew Bible is written in simple prose, not much resembling the fancy, stilted language of, say, the King James version. The > >study of literary genres is one of your fields of expertise, is it not? > > I am sorry, but this misses the point. There is no way of relating the > stylized poetic language of the Old Testament, which was composed in different > periods, and which has very specific poetic elements, as well as a limited > vocabulary, with spoken Hebrew of any particular time. The vocabulary is "limited" only to the terms known in those days. Otherwise Hebrew is as rich as any other ancient language. Modern Hebrew is much the same as the old in structure, only it was forced to invent new terminology for things and concepts that have come into being over the last few millenia, sometimes borrowing from other languages. Again, do not be confused by the "poetic", stilted translations of the Hebrew made by other nations of the Old Testament. The actual Hebrew seems "modern" in comparison. > > >>That is quite incorrect. The first writing system is not a full represenation > >>of any spoken language, but a new semiotic system. It has hardly any verbs > >>and was devised to notate only a limited official set of transactions. I hope you are not including Hebrew or ancient Egyptian in this. > > >Actually, I found 1,119 distinct Sumerian logograms, and have seen the > >estimate that by the Old Babylonian period 60 percent of Sumerian words > >consisted of compounds, making a total known vocabulary by the Old Babylonian > >period of 2800 words. > > Again, this misses the point. The early writing is not a direct > representation of any spoken utterance, and in any case it was devised for > very limited purposes. If you are talking about the Hebrew Bibile--wrong. (snip) > here, is based on very strange notions of relationships between language and > society and about development from "simple" to "complex". There are unwritten > languages in many societies that are not highly "complex," in the way it has > been used in this discussion, that have extremely developed vocabularies. > Moreover, linguistic complexity is a subjective matter. I find Arabic > morphology much more "complex" that, let us say, Turkish, and English very > simple compared to Russian or Polish, but someone else might have a very > different personal point of view on such matters. In essence, all languages > are equally "difficult" or "complex," just as all serious musical instruments > are equally difficult to master well. It might be easier to learn a few > chords on the guitar than to get a one really good tone out of a French Horn > or clarinet, but to play any of them well takes years of practice. Arabic and Hebrew are by far the most complex languages I have ever studied. Polish is easier--but not to pronounce! To me, it is the toughest pronunciation of any language I am familiar with!
In article <56fch2$5v2@gcsin3.geccs.gecm.com>, "Richard P. Hanson"Return to Topwrites >Why do I read Ed Conrad's posts? They never seem to contain any >information, just personal (or impersonal) attacks. > >-- Richard, you probably read them for the same reason that I do - because your brain cannot allow you to belive that a supposedly educated human being can spout such utter, unbelievable, paranoid crap over and over again, without being confined in some form of institution. Youre brain is hoping you are going to read the words "I'm not going to post any more. I am a complete and utter idiot. Goodbye. Ed". Unfortunatly, your brain, and mine, and everyone elses, will no doubt have to wait a long long time for this joyous post. I assume I am right in saying he isn't in an institution? Might he have gained access to a Doctor's computer? -- Kathy McIntosh "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." Robert Byrne.