The Large
Hadron Collider (LHC), which is at centre of the experiments, is the world's largest and highest-energy
particle accelerator, and considered "one of the great engineering
milestones of mankind".
The first
beam was circulated through the collider on the morning of 10 September 2008 at 10:28 local time. We notice from the chart
that Mercury-Mars were conjunct and rising at 15li along with Venus (13li10)
and TNP Zeus (11li03) The Sabian symbol [1] for this degree (15li) is CIRCULAR
PATHS – an uncanny image of the actual collider which is essentially a circular
path! The star Gienah [10li55] in the
Crow’s wing was a part of T’ien-Tche
in China
– the Celestial Chariot and represented wind and high speed travel.
It was also called Tchang-Cha, the Track of Dust. For the ancient Chaldeans it was In-dugud-Khu,
the Great Storm Bird - close enough images to high speed particle beams in the
accelerator as the ancients could get.
On the MC
is TNP Vulcanus conjunct the star Procyon, alpha Canis Minor.
It is truly the Hound of Heaven.
“Seek and ye shall find” should be the motto here, for these are people who
will spend their lives in a search for God, for reasons, meanings and universal
understanding, lost or hidden knowledge, alternate dimensions. [2]
From Diana
Rosenberg’s account of Procyon [25cn52] we get a picture of the scientists
pursuing the god particle at the CERN. Also here are 85 Geminorium and Chi
Geminorium, stars of Pollux – the evil (immortal) twin to Castor (the good or mortal twin) – a beautiful
symbol that contrasts ‘dark matter’ with ‘normal matter’ as we know it.
Diana
Rosenberg also points out that the raven is an alchemical symbol of blackening [3]
and mortification (the nigredo) or first
stage of matter and conditions produced by separating out the elements. In
depictions of the Fall, the raven often appeared on the Tree of Knowledge from
which Eve picked the fruit.
[1] The
Sabian Symbols Libra 1-15; http://bit.ly/vFrnKv
[2] Secrets
of the Ancient Skies; Diana Rosenberg (v1. p.441)
[3] Secrets
of the Ancient Skies; Diana Rosenberg (v2. p.63)
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