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Appendix
V: Precession vs divine creation
What is driving the evolution of
consciousness described by the
Mayan Calendar?
by
Carl Johan Calleman
How is the Mayan
Long Count to be explained? Why did this ancient people, that were the
most mathematically advanced of their day, choose to use a chronology
that consisted of thirteen different periods of 144,000 days each, starting
on August 11, 3114, BC and ending on December 21, AD 2012? On a more
fundamental level three different types of answers have been given to
this question, a materialist, a spiritual and what might be called a
pseudo-spiritual, answers that are linked to different world views.
In the materialist world view the astronomical, physical cycles are
seen as primary to the spiritual whereas in the spiritual world view
they are seen as secondary.
The first is the standard anthropological explanation that says that
the beginning date for the Long Count was chosen because of some myth
that lacked a real meaning. The choice of baktuns, katuns and tuns,
etc. for following time is then simply explained by the Mayan way of
counting, which used twenty as a base. According to this line of reasoning
they choose the number twenty as the basis for counting because it corresponds
to the sum of fingers and toes on a human being. And in this view the
celebration of katun shifts etc. is in principle no different from our
own celebrations of centuries and millenniums. The tzolkin, intimately
linked to, and synchronized with, the Long Count is seen as a reflection
of the human gestation period rather than the other way around. This
may be described as the standard academic view. It is also a materialist
view, where the Long Count is seen merely as way of keeping track of
physical time and where the counting system is seen as based on material
factors such as the number of toes, fingers etc.
The first suggestions in modern times that the Mayan calendar was really
a reflection of changing ages were probably those forwarded by Frank
Waters in his Mexico Mystique of 1975 and by Peter Balin in his Flight
of the Feathered Serpent in the same year. Balin saw the Venus passages
at the end of the Cycle, while Watersı sought explanations to the beginning
and end-dates of the Long Count in their horoscopes. Nonetheless, Waters
made the crucial observation that the beginning date of the Long Count
was not all that different from the beginning of the Jewish calendar.
He also pointed out that this was the time when the first higher civilizations
emerged on this planet. These were very important steps towards finding
the reality basis of the Mayan calendar.
Jose´ Argüelles took the next major step in The Mayan Factor where he
outlined several crucial ideas for the future understanding of the Mayan
calendar. There he emphasized the Mayan cycles of 260 and 360 days,
and the fact that these lacked physical correspondents. He also suggested
that human history was the result of a galactic beam of thirteen baktuns
that created the seasons of human history, and made an initial description
of how this manifested. In this, Argüelles took major steps away from
the astrological perspective towards a spiritual explanation where the
archetypal influences of the tzolkin symbols were seen as playing a
primary role. His explanation to why the Great Cycle had started at
the point that it did was however vague and implied the existence of
some kind of active seeding by a galactic federation, rather than an
evolving divine plan. Argüelles was the first in modern time to systematically
work on the deeper meaning of the Mayan calendar and presented an alternative
interpretation to that of the academic by suggesting that the Great
Cycle caused the spiritual evolution of humanity. This line of thinking
may be called the spiritual interpretation of the Mayan calendar.
The present work essentially belongs to the same paradigm, but introduces
three key facets that are crucial for our understanding of the Mayan
calendar. First, it shows that the Great Cycle is just one of nine different
major creation cycles, where the first goes all the way back to the
Big Bang. Second, it identifies the holographic projections of the World
Tree on the galactic, planetary and human levels. Third, it unifies
the Mayan calendar with the Old World creation story and so identifies
the thirteen Heavens of the Maya with the Seven DAYS and Six NIGHTS
of Godıs creation.
Then there is an explanation to the Mayan calendar that may be called
the pseudo-spiritual. This recognizes the existence of different qualities
and energies linked to the various time cycles of the Maya, but seeks
to base these upon the physical reality. This is fairly common today
where we are all still affected by the materialist planetary frame of
consciousness and a more spiritual, galactic consciousness is only beginning
to emerge. An example of such a pseudo-spiritual interpretation is Argüellesı
later work with the Dreamspell, where he departs from the Mayan tzolkin
count and places more emphasis on the astronomical year than on the
spiritual qualities of the days.
Another example is provided by John Major Jenkins book Maya Cosmogenesis
2012, where the author seeks to ground the Mayan Great Cycle, and its
changing energies, in the 26,000-year astronomical cycle that the earth
undergoes because of precession. Both writers thus seek to adapt the
spiritual cycles to the astronomical rather than the other way around,
something that I believe can only lead to a dead end. The Dreamspell
calendar was discussed in the previous Appendix IV and the present Appendix
will be devoted to Jenkinsı theories and the astrological Doctrine of
the World Ages generally. The three types of explanations, the materialist,
the spiritual and the pseudo-spiritual have widely different consequences
and for this reason this is not a question of merely an academic interest.
Before discussing precession I would however like to give some words
of praise for some of Jenkinsı work. First of all, Jenkins has made
a significant contribution in clarifying the nature of the true tzolkin
count, and he should to a large extent be credited with having exposed
the nature of the Dreamspell as an invented count. His defence of the
true 584,283-tzolkin count also against academic aberrations is impressive.
Also, although he has developed his thinking outside of the beaten academic
path, Jenkins knows the Maya and their myths and is very well versed
in the literature about them.
Jenkinsı idea in Maya Cosmogenesis 2012 is essentially that the Maya
had targeted the end date of their Long Count, December 21, 2012, because
a specific alignment between the midwinter solstice sun and the galactic
center supposedly would occur then. Thus, they would have devised the
Long Count calendar to describe the last in a series of five Great Cycles
(together they have a duration of 25,626 years) that would reflect the
precessional cycle of the earth currently estimated at some 25,920 years.
In his work, Jenkins then in practice disregards the 5,125-year long
Long Count actually used by the Maya and shifts the attention to the
sum of five such cycles amounting to a period of 25,625 years. The idea
has caught on and many now seem to think that the Maya some 2,500 years
ago had exactly determined the duration of the precessional cycle so
that the Long Count end-date hit right at its end in the year 2012.
To the many who believe in the astrological Doctrine of the World Ages
this has had a strong appeal.
A discussion of precession and the astrological Doctrine of the World
Ages is hence in its place. The phenomenon of the precession of the
earth, resulting in the wobbling movement of its axis, was to my knowledge
first described by the Babylonian Kidinnu in 315 BC and the Greek astronomer
Hipparchus of Nicea in 130 BC. It seems however likely that a drift
in the position of stars had been noted even earlier and very likely
as human beings gained a long term consciousness of the passage of time
around the beginning of baktun 6 (see Chapter 9) speculations about
a possible link between the moving positions of the stars and the coming
and going of ages began. There is no reason to believe that the Maya,
who commonly aligned their buildings with the heliacal rising of stars,
would be an exception to this awareness of the precession of the earth.
From the limited perspective of an inhabitant of this planet the precessional
movement becomes apparent through the slow change in the points on the
horizon where stars rise. This is generated by the slow wobbling movement
of the earthıs axis, which is similar to the circular movement of the
axis of a spinning gyroscope (or bicycle wheel) that a force has been
applied to. Our own situation on earth may then be likened to that of
a flea living on a spinning gyroscope whose axis wobbles. Because of
this wobbling movement the outlook of the flea on the external world
will gradually undergo change. Thus, the flea would experience a change
in perspective when looking out, "changing ages," as the axis of the
gyroscope would be pointing in different directions. This is a parallel
to what the ancients did from their earth-centred perspective. The point
to realize however is that these changing views of the ancients - or
of the flea - do not bring about a change in consciousness. Precession
only changes the external appearance of the sky.
There is thus nothing mystical about this movement which is explained
by Newtonıs Law of Gravitation. According to Newtonian mechanics the
equation determining the precessional cycle of the earth is:
d(prec)sun/dt + d(prec)moon/dt = KPS cos (eps)
Where eps is the particular inclination of the earthıs axis (23°) and
KPS is an expression of the degree of bulging of the earth. What this
equation means is that the duration of the precessional cycle is directly
dependent on the masses and distances of the sun, moon, and planets,
the inclination of the earthıs axis and its degree of bulging. (Mars,
which is smaller than the earth and at a longer distance from the sun,
has a precessional cycle of some 170,000 years). The duration of the
precessional cycle is thus entirely based on physical factors, which
may be calculated and explained by exactly the same equations that are
used to place space sonds on Mars, build skyscrapers, etc, and whose
validity there is thus little reason to question. What this means is
that if precession were behind the coming and going of ages, then inhabitants
of a planet whose axis had another declination than our own would develop
at a different rate than ourselves. On a planet with no inclination
of the axis (and hence no precession) no evolution could take place.
On a planet made from a non-bulging material (and hence no precession)
no evolution could take place. A planet with no moon would have a considerably
slower precessional movement and hence a much slower rate of the evolution
of the consciousness of its inhabitants. From a creationist perspective
it seems extremely unlikely that the evolution of consciousness should
directly and proportionately depend on such physical factors. Yet, the
astrological Doctrine of the World Ages has been based on this astronomical
movement. This doctrine states that as the polar axis shifts direction
as a result of the precessional movement the vernal point will point
towards the different twelve signs in the Zodiac during eras each of
2160 years. Each of these eras is then called an age which shares certain
qualities.
Three things stand out about this Doctrine: A/ It is arbitrary. Thus,
the vernal point at Spring Equinox determines the sign supposedly characterizing
an age. But why Spring equinox? If the autumn equinox were chosen another
sign would rule the ages. Jenkins has chosen the midwinter solstice,
which seemed to fit the Mayan end date, but this is arbitrary too. Why
not let the summer solstice determine the age? Similarly, the division
of the zodiac into twelve signs is arbitrary in this context. The Maya
divided the Zodiac into thirteen different constellations, and the same
is true for some recent astrologers that have introduced a thirteenth
sign, Ophiucus. Thirteen signs would create different definitions of
the ages.
B) The fact that ancient peoples may have speculated about a link between
the earthıs precession and the passing of ages does not prove that such
a link exists. More likely, because the precessional cycle was the only
physical evidence the ancients had of a time period of longer duration,
because they noticed that times change, at least from baktun 6 and onwards,
and had a belief system according to which the changing positions of
stars and planets in the sky influenced civilizational development,
it seemed logical to them that the precessional movement causes the
changing times. But this does not prove that this is the case. It only
explains why some ancient peoples might have thought so. And, really,
no one has proved that precession has an effect on human consciousness.
To provide such proof would mean to clearly show how the coming and
going of ages is directly linked to the precessional cycle with an exactness
on par with what has been shown regarding the influence of the divine
process of creation on the different baktuns of the Great Cycle. Despite
the lack of such evidence the Doctrine of the World Ages has however
had a long history, and like a medieval papal doctrine the idea continues
to live on. Since the early seventies the notion of an approaching Age
of Aquarius has been the very foundation of the New Age movement.
C) The astrological Doctrine of the World Ages is earth-centred rather
than galactic. Thus, the coming and going of ages is believed to be
determined by our local solar system, since this is what determines
the duration of the precessional cycle. In a galactic view, on the other
hand, the earth is but a holographic resonance projection of the entire
galaxy, meaning that the spiritual cycles on earth have the same duration
as the spiritual cycles in the galaxy and the universe at large. The
spiritual cycles of the galaxy and the change in consciousness that
they cause on earth is thus not dependent on the exact physical position
of the earth in relation to the solar system or any other physical factors.
In Maya Cosmogenesis 2012 Jenkins partly distances himself from the
standard Old World Doctrine of the World Ages. Noting that the Maya
divided the Zodiac into thirteen rather than twelve constellations and
that many astrological authorities place the advent of the Ages of Aquarius
several centuries into the future Jenkins rejects this as the basis
of the Mayan chronology. Following the lead of Terence McKenna, who
has written a foreword to his book, he instead comes to build almost
his entire argument for the precessional theory on what he claims is
a rare alignment of the midwinter solstice sun with the centre of our
galaxy at the very end date of the Long Count.
There are several serious problems with this interpretation. Firstly,
Jenkins argues that the Great Cycle was based on an event targeted at
its end-date, rather than by its beginning-date. The fact is however
that the explanations we have from the ancient Maya, from the seventh
century AD in the capital of Palenque, clearly do not describe events
at the end of the Long Count, but explicitly around its beginning in
3114 BC. And if we listen to what the Maya had to say about this creation
date it makes sense from what we know then actually happened in Sumeria
and Egypt.
Already this highlights the strangest and most inexplicable omission
in Jenkins work the total neglect of the creation stories actually
presented by the ancient Maya in Quirigua and Palenque. These describe
creation at the beginning of the Long Count, in 3114 BC, as it was viewed
by the ancient Maya. Thus, if we want to understand the meaning of the
Long Count I feel that one of the first places to go is to the accounts
of the Mayans themselves and that have been described in some detail
by Schele and co-workers. But in Jenkinsı hypothesis the beginning of
the Long Count lacks meaning it is nothing but the last fifth of a
precessional cycle and therefore he places the attention elsewhere.
Nonetheless, I do not feel that the description of creation in Palenque
is something that serious research about the meaning of the Long Count
can allow itself to overlook.
This omission is all the more serious as the evidence he presents to
support his theses is mostly mythological, and myths are very shaky
ground to build theories upon. In my own book I have presented very
different interpretations of some of the myths that Jenkins use. We
can however never be certain as to the meaning the ancients placed on
myths, and I do not claim that my interpretations of Mayan myths are
exclusively correct. Ancient myths often have several layers of meaning,
and it may even be that the meaning of these has changed as the consciousness
of human beings has evolved. A myth that meant a certain thing to the
Maya of baktun 7 might have meant something entirely different to the
Maya of baktun 10, not to mention the Europeans of baktun 12. Also,
deep esoteric spiritual truths might have been popularized in materialist
terms for broader layers of society to assimilate it (Something that,
incidentally, also happens today as some seek astronomical explanations
to spiritual cycles).
The ancients are not here to ask so it would seem that we will never
know what their symbols and myths meant exactly. What is unique about
the ancient Maya is however that they have helped us understand their
myths through the extensive use of dates. While an ancient myth may
be ambiguous by itself a date is not, and a date means the same to us
as it did to them. I would like to exemplify this with a myth discussed
by Jenkins, the Shooting of Seven-Macaw by the Hero twins, Hunahpu and
Xbalanque. While I interpret this as the Seventh DAY of the Cultural
Cycle being brought to an end by the new Yin/Yang polarity initiating
the beginning of the dualist Great Cycle, Jenkins interprets Seven-Macaw
as the Big Dipper which begins to fall from its north pole location
in the sky some time around 1000 BC. Since anthropologists agree that
the Maya identified Seven-Macaw with the Big Dipper it would at first
seem that Jenkins has a strong case. But what if the fall of the Big
Dipper from its polar position was just a way for popularizing the end
of the Seventh DAY of the Cultural Cycle (I have already suggested that
during NIGHTS the ancient Egyptians would be led into identifying the
Seven LIGHTS of a creation cycle with seven stars, and there is no reason
why the ancient Maya would not have succumbed to the same type of illusion
regarding Seven-Macaw in the NIGHT of baktun 7). Thus, if Jenkins interpretation
were correct we would expect that they would have dated the fall of
Seven-Macaw to baktun 5, which is when the Big Dipper began to fall
from its polar position. But in fact they do not. They date the fall
of Seven-Macaw to May 28, 3149 BC, even before the present creation
began with the First Father raising the World Tree. The neglect of the
actual Mayan dates presented in the creation stories, in favor of his
own interpretation of their myths tainted by the astrological Doctrine
of the World Ages, is in my opinion a great shortcoming of Jenkinsı
work, which has very serious consequences. To take another example of
this, Jenkins interprets the rebirth of the First Father as a symbol
of the midwinter sun being in the location of the galactic centre at
the end of the precessional cycle. In Palenque, it is however described
that this rebirth took place on June 16, 3122 BC, which is before the
beginning of the Long Count, and not at its end (nor does it fall on
a midwinter solstice).
Instead of basing himself on the actual datings and descriptions presented
by the Maya regarding the beginning of the Long Count Jenkins devotes
much space to argue that the Maya knew about precession, and there is,
at least in my own view, really no reason to doubt that they did. In
the Mayan cities pyramids and other buildings were often aligned with
the rising of certain stars and as time went by they probably noted
a precessional shift. But so what? Nowhere in the Mayan accounts from
ancient times is a cycle of 26,000 years described. Nowhere! Is it then
defendable to simply ignore their own accounts of creation at the beginning
of the Long Count? Moreover, if no one has ever demonstrated that precession
has an influence on human consciousness, is it then really meaningful
to base a theory upon it?
Another Mayan mythological concept that is important to discuss is the
World Tree. Jenkins suggests that this is formed by the cross of the
ecliptic (local planetary component) and the equator of the Milky Way
(galactic). But this interpretation is impossible. The ecliptic and
the galactic midplane are at an angle of about 60° in relation to each
other, and in all representations from the Maya the World Tree is formed
by the perpendicular arms of a cross, which give rise to the four geographical
directions on earth. I have seen no exception to representing the World
Tree as a perpendicular cross, and if the World Tree were formed by
the sixty-degree angle of the ecliptic and the galactic midplane it
could not be the source of the four perpendicular directions. Since
our resonance with the World Tree is the very basis for our orientation
in the world, a sixty-degree World Tree would leave us very disoriented.
The four perpendicular directions are part of a worldview common to
all Native American peoples (see Brotherston), and Medicine Wheel ceremonies
are for instance always based on the four perpendicular directions.
As Schele and co-workers point out the ecliptic is, in the crosses of
Palenque, instead symbolized by a snake twinned around the perpendicular
arms of the cross. The same symbolism is incidentally present also in
ancient Nordic mythology where Midgċrdsormen (the middle area serpent)
is symbolic of the ecliptic outside of the World Tree. It is not part
of the World Tree. In reality, the true galactic cross is invisible
(it has no material manifestations) and is formed by the galactic midplane
and a line perpendicular to it. To realize this distinction between
the double-headed serpent and the horizontal arm of the cross is crucial
as it shifts the perspective away from our local planetary environment,
of which the ecliptic forms part, to the true invisible cross, which
is a galactic phenomenon. Here Jenkins neglect of the Mayan creation
story surfaces again. This describes that the First Father raised the
World Tree in 3114 BC, and I have shown empirical evidence from human
history that its holographic projection on earth (which has 90° angles)
becomes evident in the even-numbered baktuns of the Great Cycle, one
of which began in 3115 BC. But with Jenkinsı interpretation of the World
Tree as the 60° angle between the ecliptic and the galactic midplane
the creation story in Palenque completely lacks meaning, and, as far
as we know, nothing happened with the 60° cross between the ecliptic
and the galactic midplane in the year 3114 BC.
But if the Long Count is not based on its end-date, but on its beginning-date,
what is this latter date based upon? Well, the beginning date of the
Long Count is the day the sun stands in zenith in Izapa, the location
where the Long Count was most probably invented. It is well known that
the day of solar zenith played an important role among the ancient Maya
judging from the many shafts serving to determine solar zenith dates
that have been discovered. In a tropical region it is very understandable
that this would be a candidate for a day "when time began". It is thus
simply an accident that the end date of the Long Count falls on a midwinter
solstice, since this is where the end-date must fall if its beginning
is set at the solar zenith in Izapa. Strangely, Jenkins is aware that
the beginning date of the Long Count is the solar zenith in Izapa, but
does not point out what a remarkable accident this would be if the Long
Count was meant for targeting the end-date. After all, to compute the
day of solar zenith some three thousand years into the past is feasible.
We may understand how it could have been done given the level of exactness
the Mayans had attained in estimating the duration of the physical year.
To project the galactic location of the midwinter solstice two thousand
years into the future, on the other hand, simply would not have been
feasible. It is one thing to be aware of the effects of precession and
an entirely different thing to compute its cycle or to make projections
about its course a few thousands years into the future, and Jenkins
provides no explanation as to how it could have been made. Even if such
a computation may seem easy for people with astronomical software in
their home computers, the fact is that even todayıs scientists, using
laser technology and satellite-based measurements of the earthıs movement,
are uncertain as to the duration of the precessional cycle by a few
hundred years (notably because the earthıs axis does not really describe
a cycle and hence does not return to the same point) and would shun
a task of pinpointing a precessional position a few thousand years into
the future.
A key question is however if the midwinter solstice sun actually eclipses
the galactic centre in the year 2012. The fact of the matter is that
the midwinter solstice sun will be closest to the galactic centre in
the year 2219, far from the end date of the Long Count, and this both
McKenna and Jenkins acknowledge. But the fact is that also the crossing
by the midwinter solstice sun of the galactic equator, which Jenkins
considers a more appropriate marker for the changing of the ages, occurred
already in 1998. The logical conclusion from this would then be that
we would already have passed into the new age, and, since the Mayan
calendar was inaccurate there would be no reason to use it. Jenkins
recognizes in a passage and in the footnotes of his book that the alignment
occurs in 1999, and has confirmed this in contacts with astronomers
with astrologers, who have noted this alignment. Yet, throughout his
book he keeps referring to "the end-date alignment" as if this was a
reality, when in fact, the midwinter solstice sun does not align with
the galactic equator in the year 2012. It is not easy to understand
how this is to be interpreted. Are we to believe in something we now
know to be wrong because Jenkins thinks the Maya believed in this. He
refutes those with exaggerated demands for accuracy in this matter.
Well, I do not think we can be accurate enough. The thing is that the
Long Count is coordinated with the tzolkin count, and if Jenkins precession
hypothesis were true then this would mean not only that the Maya had
made an error in calibrating the precessional cycle, but also by consequence
that the tzolkin count used in Classical time would be wrong. Personally,
I do not believe it is.
The theory presented in this book has however already disproved the
precessional theory, in that it has shown that one of the major Mayan
creation cycles, that of Thirteen hablatuns, goes back all the way to
the Big Bang, to a time when no planets and stars or even galaxies existed.
Hence, the tun-based Mayan creation cycles, of which the Great Cycle
is one, describe a creation that is primary to all physical phenomena,
and this includes the sun, the moon and the earth whose mechanistic
relationship determines the precessional cycle. Thus the precession
of the earth is not the basis for the tun-based calendrical system.
If anything the tun-based system may explain the precessional cycle
of the earth and it partly does, but this would be outside the scope
of this article. Thus, divine creation is primary to matter.
Moreover, the theory presented here has demonstrated, to the extent
that it is possible today, that biological evolution on earth is just
an aspect of the evolution of consciousness in the entire galaxy. But
if the evolution of the planet results from a holographic resonance
projection of our galaxy, it can not depend on factors such as the masses
of the earth, moon and sun, or the declination of the earthıs axis,
which are particular to our own planet. Emphasis on precession thus
limits us to a local planetary perspective and stands in direct contrast
to a holographic, galactic model where the periodicity of the evolution
of consciousness on our own particular planet is determined by energy
changes taking place on a galactic level.
There is a final point to discuss: As Jenkins himself points out the
tzolkin is older than the Long Count by some 500 years. The Long Count,
which was devised later, has then been developed so as to be in synchrony
with the tzolkin, meaning that for instance katun endings always take
place on Ahau days, creation days. Jenkins presumably shares the view
of most everyone engaged in the Mayan calendar that the tzolkin is a
sequence of energies reflected in its various combinations of numbers
and glyphs (He has in fact written extensive and interesting material
on the subject). But if the Long Count has been developed on top of,
and after, the tzolkin in such a way as to be synchronized with it then
the Great Cycle, too, must reflect a sequence of energies. And, of course,
the progression through thirteen cycles, such as thirteen days or thirteen
baktuns, reflects a growth cycle from seed to fruit. But if the days
of the Long Count are locked in their positions by the tzolkin, which
itself reflects creation energies that are real, how can the Long Count
at the same time reflect precession, which is a mechanical movement?
The answer, as I have argued, is that the Long Count does not reflect
the precessional cycle of the earth, which according to the definition
used by Jenkins would have ended on December 21, 1998. Not surprisingly,
this date falls on 12 Cimi and is not an Ahau day in the tzolkin count.
Why then, we may ask, does the idea that the earth passes through an
evolutionary 26,000-year cycle have such an appeal? Probably because
there actually is some truth to it. The last 65 tzolkin units of the
Cultural Cycle began 26,000 tun ago. An important change in human consciousness
was indeed the result of the beginning of these 65 last units of the
260-baktun Cultural Cycle. In a sense this was the time when the earth
became whole and as a resonance projection of this the human being became
whole and attained a self-reflexive consciousness. We see this manifested
in parallel ways at different hierarchical levels of the universe. On
the level of the earth, we may note that the oldest undisputed date
for inhabitants in the Americas (on the Los Angeles river) is dated
to 23-24,000 BC, meaning in practice that we have reasons to believe
that from this time and onwards the whole earth was inhabited by carriers
of a human consciousness. On the level of the human being, the oldest
human statuette discovered (in Bohemia) is dated to the same time, reflecting
the emergence of a self-reflective human consciousness. These are holographic
resonance phenomena so that at the same time as the whole earth would
have been seen from the outside as covered by human beings, a statuette
of a human being, thus also visible from all directions, was for the
first time created by a human being. The beginning point of the 65 last
baktuns of the Cultural Cycle thus brought self-reflective consciousness,
and this was a very important step. Similarly, the beginning points
of the last 65 katuns of the Great Cycle in AD 730 and the last 65 tun
of the Planetary Cycle in AD 1947, brought changes in consciousness
in line with the energy pattern of the tzolkin. It is only that this
energy pattern and these points in time have nothing to do with precession.
The reader may wonder what is the purpose of such a lengthy critique
of Jenkinsı work and the precessional theory. Does it really matter
what we believe is the underlying mechanism of the Mayan Long Count?
I think it does. I feel it is important, and maybe crucial to the future
of humanity, because the precession and divine creation theories have
very different consequences. Thus, in the precession view, the end of
the Great Cycle represents nothing but the beginning of a new 26,000-year
cycle of the earth's movement and the changing consciousness of mankind
is then supposedly shaped by an endless line of such repeating cycles.
In the precession view there is not necessarily a divine plan behind
the evolution of human consciousness, since this seems explicable by
the movements of matter. Thus, the precessional theory leads to a concept
of time, which is both linear and materialist.
In the creation view, on the other hand, the energy changes are not
explained by any material changes, but directly through divine LIGHT
thus providing proof of the existence of God and the need for human
beings to live up to such an origin. Because there is then a temporal
hierarchy of creation cycles, the current acceleration of time becomes
understandable. In the creation view the end of the Great Cycle means
the completion of divine creation, and the liberation from energy changes
of a divine origin shaping our path. Mankind will come off age to shape
its own path at the end of time as we know it. But to arrive at this
we may value a correctly calibrated calendar to help us surf on the
waves of creation.

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