(03-06-2010, 02:28 PM)Ashim Wrote: Are we really a binary system?
Planet "x"?
Ra on Planet "x"
Quote:11.4 Questioner: Is there a planet opposite our sun, in relation to us, that we do not know about?
Ra: I am Ra. There is a sphere in the area opposite your sun of a very, very cold nature, but large enough to skew certain statistical figures. This sphere should not properly be called a planet as it is locked in first density.
Jose Arguelles answers the question "are we really a binary system?" definitively in 'Earth Ascending:An Illustrated Treatise on Laws Governing Whole Systems'.
Quote:The binary triplet configuration is a whole number code and visual construct. From this configuration as it manifests in the 260-unit matrix of the Sacred Calendar, one-eighth of the psi bank warp, all other structures and process are derived. In this regard the binary triplet configuration is the primary resonant structure common to all processes and systems. It is the visible form of the cosmic code.
It's bilateral symmety defines it as binary or twofold.
Quote:...it also represents the basic dynamic or mechanism of the double helix, of the genetic code. i.e./ two strands of DNA crossing and winding around each other. As the basic code of life containing the information governing both the replication and auto-regulation of all living organisms, all DNA is based on the binary triplet configuration. The basic structure of DNA is as follows: of the two strands, one contains the template of the other....Further, each strand processes information in a direction opposite the other.
Translating this process into terms of the biopsychic situation of human life and consciousness, one information flow moves from the future to the present, the other from the past to the future. The former is the flow or current of vision, intuition, dream. The other represents information as it is manifest and codified into symbols, written forms, material structures, books, libraries, and so forth...
Here is a link to this section of the book-
Earth Ascending pg.32
Be sure to read pages 44-46.
Emergent Culture explores and expands on Arguelles' work by analyzing past and current events and the Tzolkin cycles in a very relevant presentation.