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Speaker 1: Okay, let's untack this. I want you, the listener, to

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just picture a scenario for a second, something that sounds

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like it's straight out of the wildest science fiction you

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can imagine. Right, You step away from your life for

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just a weekend. Maybe you go on to retreat, you know,

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a quick journey somewhere. You are gone for what feels

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like three days.

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Speaker 2: Seventy two hours exactly.

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Speaker 1: Yeah, you come back expecting Monday morning, and you find

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that centuries, centuries have passed. Everyone you know is dust,

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your entire civilization is unrecognizable, and the world has just

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fundamentally changed while you were gone.

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Speaker 2: That concept, I mean, that is the ultimate existential shock,

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isn't it the idea that time is relative not just

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to where you are, but to your personal experience. But

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the real question for this deep dive is, well, is

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this just a story? Is it a dramatic narrative device

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we use.

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Speaker 1: In fiction, or is it something else?

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Speaker 2: Or is it a documented, consistent phenomenon that has been

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recorded across human history long long before we had the

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math to even begin to explain it exactly.

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Speaker 1: And that's our mission today. This is a true deep

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dive into an extraordinary set of source materials that intentionally

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bridge that gap between the mythological and the scientific.

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Speaker 2: Yeah, we're really going to be tracing a thread here,

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we are.

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Speaker 1: We're going to trace this idea, the ability to manipulate

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or transcend time, all the way from ancient religious texts

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and historical legends about these cosmic travelers, right through the

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groundbreaking physics of Albert Einstein.

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Speaker 2: And all the way up to today to the actual

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prototype devices being built in labs right now trying to

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create a literal loop in time.

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Speaker 1: It's a remarkable journey really connecting the stories of ancient

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kings and fishermen to E equals MC squared.

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Speaker 2: It is. We've gathered sources detailing accounts from well from

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sacred Indian texts, from Japanese folklore, and even from the

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Hebrew Bible, and we're going to follow that all the

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way to the latest theoretical physics on wormholes, and like

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you said, the experimental hardware of ring lasers.

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Speaker 1: So the core question we are tackling today and it's

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based on this way health of material. It's just it's

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utterly fascinating. Our sources suggest that this ability to transcend

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time might not be a new concept at.

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Speaker 2: All, not even close to new.

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Speaker 1: In fact, it's been documented across wildly disparate cultures for millennia,

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often linked to cosmic travel. So has the mastery of

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time already occurred, maybe gifted to, or even possessed by

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our ancient ancestors. And are we only now, with our

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advanced science, finally starting to catch up?

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Speaker 2: That's the question. Let's unpack the evidence and see what

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really stands out.

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Speaker 1: So where do we even begin with something this big?

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Speaker 2: Well, what's so fascinating here is that the earliest records

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we have, they seem to indicate that time travel, or

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at least extreme time dilation, isn't treated as you know,

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magic or some kind of prophecy. It's treated almost like

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an expected consequence, a side effect, a side effect, exactly,

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a disruptive but expected consequence of high stakes, cosmic or divine.

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Speaker 1: Travel, which brings us directly to our first section time

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dilation in ancient history. And this is where the legends

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are just so powerful, because they offer what feels like

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literary evidence, often written in the oldest, most sacred books

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of a culture, that this short subjective experience for a

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traveler can translate to a huge objective time gap back

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on Earth.

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Speaker 2: And we have to begin with what many researchers consider

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one of the most compelling early accounts, the ancient Indian

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text the Mahafrata.

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Speaker 1: Okay, so set the stage for us the Mahavarada.

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Speaker 2: This is a sacred Hindu text and scholars trace it

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back as far as the eighth century BC. It's ancient,

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and within it there's this remarkable account involving a historical figure,

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a king named Revita, King.

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Speaker 1: Ravita, and his story sets up what sounds like a

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perfect relativistic scenario.

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Speaker 2: Right, it's almost textbook. King Vita, seeking guidance, decides to

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travel away from Earth and he ascends to the heavens.

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His purpose is very lofty. He wants to meet with

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the creator god Brahma.

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Speaker 1: So this is no ordinary trip. This isn't just a

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walk to the next village.

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Speaker 2: Not at all. This is a trip to the realm

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of the gods. It would likely require travel at velocities

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or proximity to gravitational fields that we now know would

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absolutely warp time.

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Speaker 1: Right, It's a journey to a different frame of reference

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physically exactly. So.

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Speaker 2: The journey itself is described as taking a subjectively short

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period for the king, maybe it's a few weeks, maybe

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a couple of months. He's in the Creator God's presence,

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he's receiving divine guidance, and then he returns to Earth,

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fully expecting his kingdom, his family, his entire world to

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be waiting for him just as he left it.

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Speaker 1: But that's not what happens, not even close.

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Speaker 2: The result, as the sources note, is just shocking. Ravita

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comes back and discovers that not months, but hundreds of

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years have elapsed on Earth. Wow, the political structures are gone.

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Everyone he knew is long long dead. The sources we've

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looked at suggests that many modern researchers view this specific

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Hindoo tail as one of the oldest successful records of

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time travel we possess.

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Speaker 1: And it's the physics of it that's so compelling.

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Speaker 2: That's the key. It's not just a story about a

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long nap like Rip van Winkle. It's story about the

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differing rates of time flow depending on where you are

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right when you are moving at extreme velocities or you're

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subject to different gravitational fields, the kind you'd encounter in

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the heavens near a god who is essentially a massive

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power source. Your subjective time is by definition vastly different

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from the rate of time flow back on terrestrial earth.

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Speaker 1: That very concept that you think you've only been gone

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for a little while, but you come back to find

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centuries have passed. I mean, that is the definition of

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relativistic time dilation.

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Speaker 2: It is, and here it is documented centuries before Einstein

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even formalized the math and his special theory of relativity.

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It's mind blowing.

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Speaker 1: And you know, if we only had this one account,

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it would be easy to just dismiss it as a

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cool story, cultural myth. Yeah, but the depth of our

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source material shows this theme is not isolated. We find

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an almost structurally identical tale halfway around the world in Japan,

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the legend of Urashima Taro.

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Speaker 2: It's such a powerful cultural echo. The story of Yushimataro

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has the exact same core time dilation mechanism, but the

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setting is completely different. It shifts from the cosmos down

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to the deep sea.

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Speaker 1: So who was he?

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Speaker 2: Tarro is a simple fisherman and for an act of kindness,

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he saves a turtle. He's rewarded with an invitation to

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the underwater palace of reugion who is the protector god

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of the sea.

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Speaker 1: Okay, so again a journey to a divine, other worldly realm.

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Speaker 2: Precisely, he's enveloped in this magical, beautiful experience in this

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subaquatic palace. But to him, the experience feels incredibly brief.

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The sources often cite a subjective period just three days

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the geeze. Three days he's treated to the wonders of

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the ocean floor, completely disconnected from the rhythms of the

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surface world. But then he wants to go home.

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Speaker 1: And when he gets back to a small fishing village,

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the time discrepancy is severe.

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Speaker 2: It's devastating. He finds his home is in ruins, the

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geography the coastline is physically changed, and he discovers that

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three hundred years have passed while he was gone.

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Speaker 1: Three hundred years for his three days.

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Speaker 2: And the emotional weight of this version is so intense.

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His house's rubble. Everyone he knew is long dead. The

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historical records don't even contain his family's name anymore.

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Speaker 1: It's a complete erasure.

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Speaker 2: It is, And this really highlights the analytical point the

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sources make. The recurring theme across these cultures isn't just

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the time job itself. It's the sense of profound, devastating loss.

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It's the physical, irreversible consequences of this kind of extreme

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time travel.

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Speaker 1: It emphasizes that it's a one way street.

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Speaker 2: It's an absolute one way journey. You gain this incredible

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knowledge or experience, but you sacrifice your past life entirely.

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Speaker 1: You can't go back. That emotional trade off is so

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central to the myth, isn't it He gets this extraordinary

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divine experience, but he pays for it with the total

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dissolution of his personal history is identity.

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Speaker 2: It's a powerful narrative tool, for sure, but it's also

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a surprisingly accurate psychological portrait of what a time traveler's

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fate would probably be.

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Speaker 1: And that theme of finding a wood full of strangers

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when you get back, combined with some kind of unexplained

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physical event that's repeated in yet another and maybe even

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more surprising source.

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Speaker 2: The Hebrew Bible.

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Speaker 1: This is a truly arresting point for the source material.

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An account involving the prophet Jeremiah in Jerusalem that just

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just it mirrors both the cosmic and the aquatic travelers

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in its key mechanisms.

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Speaker 2: The account involves Jeremiah and a few of his friends

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in Jerusalem. Jeremiah sends a young boy, a follower of

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his name Abim Alek or a Bim for short, to

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go collect some fresh figs from a hill just outside

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the city walls.

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Speaker 1: Okay, a simple task, a.

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Speaker 2: Very simple task. A Bim goes out, he gathers his figs,

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and then the incident happens. The physical phenomenon. He suddenly

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hears what the text describes as noise and wind in

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the air, a sudden atmospheric disturbance, and then he becomes unconscious.

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The sources label it a.

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Speaker 1: Blackout, a blackout caused by this strange noise and wind.

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Speaker 2: Exactly when he wakes up, it's hours later, it's near evening.

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He grabs it figs. He runs back to the city,

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but everything is wrong. The city is full of strange soldiers,

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unfamiliar faces. He's completely disoriented, and he starts asking for Jeremiah,

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for his friends.

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Speaker 1: And this is the moment, the punchline, if you will,

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This is.

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Speaker 2: The undeniable moment that anchors the story firmly. In our discussion,

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an old man, a total stranger to a Bim, tells

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him directly that was sixty two years ago. Sixty two

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years And the analysis and the sources really stresses this point.

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They say, quote, it's a time travel story written in

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the Bible.

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Speaker 1: So let's focus on the commonality here. With King Ravita,

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the jump is caused by being near a divine realm in.

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Speaker 2: Space, right, high gravity, high velocity.

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Speaker 1: In Taro's case, it's this magical underwater palace, another of

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the worldly place, but with a bim it's different. It's

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a sudden physical displacement signaled by that noise in the

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wind in the air.

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Speaker 2: That description is incredibly intriguing, isn't it. It sounds like

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a massive energy displacement, maybe a portal opening or some

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kind of feel collapsing that precedes the time jump and

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physically knocks them out.

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Speaker 1: So, whether it's the king traveling to the heavens, the

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fishermen traveling underwater, or the boy just getting knocked out

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by an energy event on a hill, in all three cases,

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the traveler experiences this tiny subjective time passage while the

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objective time on Earth jumps forward by decades or even centuries.

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Speaker 2: The mechanism of extreme time discrepancy is just so consistent

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across these wildly separate global cultures.

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Speaker 1: India, Japan, the ancient Near East.

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Speaker 2: It suggests a shared cultural framework for understanding cosmic travel

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and its temporal consequences. If they didn't have the formal mathematics,

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they certainly had the consistent narrative mechanism.

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Speaker 1: It really elevates these stories beyond just simple myths. They

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become potential cultural records of phenomena that defy our idea

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of linear time.

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Speaker 2: Okay, so let's try to connect this idea of ancient

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travel to where these travels might have been coming from

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or where they were accessing this knowledge.

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Speaker 1: Right, and that leads us directly into section two. Yeah,

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the cosmic origin point we're talking about serious and these

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divine emissaries.

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Speaker 2: To do that, we have to shift our focus to

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ancient Egypt, which was really the epicenter of so much

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early astronomical and religious observation. Specifically, we need to look

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at the cult of Isis and Osiris, particularly around the

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Temple of Isis on a Gilkia.

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Speaker 1: Island, Okay. And this temple it dates back to the

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fourth century BC. Right, It was a central place of

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worship for Isis.

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Speaker 2: It was Isis was the goddess of fertility of nature.

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She became, according to the sources, the most important deity

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that ancient Egypt ever had, the ultimate figure of motherhood

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and worship.

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Speaker 1: And she was married to her brother Osiris.

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Speaker 2: Who symbolized death and the underworld, but also rebirth. They

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were the quintessential power couple, the popular husband and wife

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that permeated every facet of Egyptian life, symbolizing that cycle

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of life, death and regeneration.

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Speaker 1: But for our discussion of cosmic origins, their importance goes

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way beyond their earthly roles. It comes down to their

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elation explicit celestial mapping.

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Speaker 2: That's the crucial link. According to ancient Egyptian religious belief,

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the goddess Isis was known as the divine mother, and

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this is the key. She was believed to be the

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soul of the brightest star in the sky, Sirius.

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Speaker 1: So she wasn't just associated with it, she was the star.

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She was the.

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Speaker 2: Literal manifestation of that star's light and power, and her

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husband Osiris, he was mapped to the constellation Orion. The

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sources state that the constellation was the literal living embodiment

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of the great god Osiris.

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Speaker 1: So you have this cosmological pairing Sirius and Orion ruling

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the skies.

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Speaker 2: And their alignment governed the life and the entire cosmology

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of the Egyptian people. Sirius, which they called Sophis, was

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critical because its heliacal rising, its reappearance in the sky

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just before dawn signaled the imminent annual flooding of the.

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Speaker 1: Nile, which was necessary for all their agriculture. Their life source.

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Speaker 2: Exactly life itself depended on the timing of Sirius.

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Speaker 1: But the reverence for this specific star for serious it

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goes way beyond just Egypt's calendar, doesn't it. Our sources

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detail a global significance, suggesting a much broader connection to

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some kind of advanced knowledge transfer.

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Speaker 2: The documentation on this is really compelling. The sources state

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that many ancient cultures We're talking the Egyptians, the Chinese,

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the Greeks, and the Japanese, they all shared beliefs or

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legends that they're gods. The very entities who created or

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educated them came from the star Sirius.

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Speaker 1: That is just an astonishing level of cultural coincidence, especially

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given the physical distance and the lack of obvious contact

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between some of these civilizations thousands of years ago.

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Speaker 2: It really suggests a shared cosmic memory that somehow transcends

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geography absolutely. And this specific cosmic knowledge isn't just traced

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through high culture and monuments. The source material points out

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that it originated in ancient Egypt and Africa, and it

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specifically cites the Dogon tribe of Mali.

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Speaker 1: The Dogon are famous for this.

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Speaker 2: They are the Dogon possessed this astonishingly accurate astronomical knowledge,

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and they taught that beings of light came from serious

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and created humankind.

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Speaker 1: And if the Di Dogan, this relatively isolated tribe, somehow

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possessed detailed, accurate knowledge of serious be a companion star

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that's completely invisible to the naked eye, and they linked

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their very origins to that system, it just raises these

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profound questions about where that information came from.

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Speaker 2: And the key takeaway here, according to the researchers compiling

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this material, is that Sirius is singled out by so

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many cultures, not just because it's bright, even though it

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is the brightest star in the night sky right.

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Speaker 1: Its significance is tied to a specific repeated claim about

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knowledge transfer.

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Speaker 2: The claim is that Sirius is somehow responsible for sending

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us emissaries who educate us. It suggests a systematic, sustained

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relationship where advanced beings from that star system are accelerating

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human civilization by providing crucial knowledge.

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Speaker 1: So, if King Ravita was traveling to meet the creator

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god Brahma, and if Brahma.

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Speaker 2: And the other creator gods were associated with Sirius, as

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these materials suggest.

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Speaker 1: Then Ravita's time dilations experience wasn't just a random trip

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to heaven. It was a trip to the emissary's home.

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Speaker 2: Base that provides the necessary connective tissue. The legends of

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time dilation record the consequences of traveling to the source, and.

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Speaker 1: The Syrian legends pinpoint the source itself. So if advanced knowledge,

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including the secrets of time manipulation, was delivered by emissaries

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from Sirius, how does that framework translate to the modern era.

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Was the greatest mind of the twentieth century also somehow

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receiving a similar download of advanced information.

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Speaker 2: And this is where we make the pivot. We're now

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shifting our focus from myth and ancient claims to the

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modern theoretical framework. Section three Einstein's Annis Morobolis and this

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idea of the downloaded genius.

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Speaker 1: Albert Einstein's work is really the lynchpin that makes all

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these ancient myths physically plausible. I mean, his work on

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relativity allows for the real possibility of time travel and wormholes.

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We need to zoom in on one specific year, nineteen

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oh five.

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Speaker 2: That year physicists and historians call it the Annis Mirabolis,

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the miracle year, and it's because the scale of Einstein's

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achievement was just it was truly unprecedented. In that single year,

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he offered four separate.

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Speaker 1: Papers, four papers that changed everything.

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Speaker 2: They redefined mankind's perception of the universe, on the photoelectric effect,

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on Brownian motion, on special relativity, and on mass energy equivalents.

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Speaker 1: To put that in perspective for you, the intellectual output

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of nineteen oh five would have been a lifetime's worth

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of revolutionary work for any other scientist. But Einstein did

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it in twelve months while.

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Speaker 2: Working as a patent clerk, grappling with totally different problems

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during his day job. It's just incredible.

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Speaker 1: So let's focus on the two most crucial papers for

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our discussion. The first one, obviously, is the equation E

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equals mc squared.

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Speaker 2: Right, we hear it all the time, but for this

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deep dive, we need to understand why it matters for

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time travel. It showed that mass could be created or

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destroyed converted into massive amounts of kinetic energy. The sources

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note this forms the basis for nuclear fission and fusion.

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Speaker 1: But more importantly for this it proves that mats is

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energy and vice versa. Why does that matter for manipulating

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time and.

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Speaker 2: Space Because to bend the fabric of space time enough

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to create a wormhole, or to accelerate a craft to

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relativistic speeds like King Ravita's journey, you need almost unfathomable

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amounts of energy.

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Speaker 1: An e equals mc square. It tells you where that

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energy is.

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Speaker 2: It tells us it's locked inside matter itself.

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Speaker 1: Yeah.

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Speaker 2: Without that energy equivalence, wormhole travel is impossible.

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Speaker 1: Even in theory and the other key paper from that

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year laid the groundwork for his theory of relativity, which

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fundamentally changed how we understand the relationship between space and time.

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Speaker 2: It unified them into the concept of space time. It

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made time manipulation a byproduct of space manipulation and vice versa.

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Speaker 1: So the obvious question becomes, where did this incredible compressed

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universe altering insight come from? How did one person make

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four of these discoveries in such a short period.

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Speaker 2: And our sources delve really deeply into Einstein's methods, focusing

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on the role of well altered states of consciousness of

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the famous thought experiments exactly his Gadankin experiment. These were

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kind of three dimensional metaphorical play which enabled him to

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visually and geometrically approach problems that were just they're intractable

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using pure math alone.

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Speaker 1: He was highly skilled at putting himself into these altered states,

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basically performing mental gymnastics to explore a space most people

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just won't go, so he could receive these very very

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novel and new.

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Speaker 2: Ideas ideas that bypassed traditional linear scientific deduction.

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Speaker 1: The classic example is him imagining what it would be

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like from a first person perspective, sitting on a beam

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of light moving through space. What would time look like,

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what would length and mass look like from that point

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of view.

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Speaker 2: He used these intense visual narratives to unlock the secrets

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of the universe, and the subjective experience was clearly intense

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for him. Einstein himself described them the moment you first

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developed the concept of relativity, saying it was like a

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storm going off his head.

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Speaker 1: That doesn't sound like quiet, methodical lab work. That sounds

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like an explosive downloading of information.

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Speaker 2: And that intensity leads directly to this extraordinary, non traditional

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hypothesis put forward by the ancient astronaut theorists referenced in

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our sources. They explicitly link this genius to the cosmic

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origin points we just talked about choria to serious. The

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argument they present is compellingly simple. If great discoveries don't

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just come from intensive labor, but from the genius accessing

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some shared universal realm that downloads advanced information to them,

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then the source of that knowledge must be external to

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our current level of civilization.

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Speaker 1: So the suggestion is that these geniuses aren't just developing

402
00:19:46,240 --> 00:19:50,359
ideas internally. They're tapping into an advanced field of knowledge

403
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or a metaphysical.

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00:19:51,920 --> 00:19:54,599
Speaker 2: World, a realm that allows them to access the inner

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workings of the universe. The theory posits that the information

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is so potent that, once access the genius remembers the

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information forever onwards.

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Speaker 1: And here's where the link back to Sirius really comes

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in the argument is that extraterrestrials are intentionally accelerating the

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cognitive abilities of a select few. These geniuses help further

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the development of human piviolization.

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Speaker 2: So we think of civilization as this slow linear progression.

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Speaker 1: But the source argues that giant leaps forward often happen

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in these sudden bursts because at certain pockets in time,

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specific individuals were genetically or neurologically wired to receive these

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downloads from advanced Syrian linked sources.

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Speaker 2: It's a bold claim. It's essentially saying human progress is

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not purely self driven, but assisted. But the sources don't

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just stop at theoretical speculation. They point to actual physical

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evidence concerning Einstein himself, and.

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Speaker 1: This is where the hypothesis gets a physical dimension. We're

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talking about the post mortem observations of Einstein's brain, which

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was removed and steadied after he died.

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Speaker 2: It's truly extraordinary evidence. And else is noted that Einstein's

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brain had a higher concentration of glial cells than the

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average human brain.

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Speaker 1: And glial cells they're like the brain support.

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Speaker 2: System, right exactly. They maintain the health of neurons. They

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provide insulation, they aid in signal transmission. A higher concentration

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suggests a brain capable of supporting a massive increase in

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neuronal activity and speed of processing.

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Speaker 1: And there was more. His brain had a wider parietal

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lobe than the average human brain.

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Speaker 2: Which is critical. The parietal lobe is key for spatial reasoning, mathematics,

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and what we call thought experiments, the exact three dimensional

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metaphorical play Einstein used to derive relativity.

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Speaker 1: It's not just the structure either. The sources also note

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that when he died, his brain maintained the health of

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a much younger man's brain.

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Speaker 2: Which suggests a physical structure that was just wired differently,

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capable of handling that storm of cosmic knowledge without degrading.

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Was this neurological advantage just a coincidence or was it

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the physical manifestation of a brain opt to tap into

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that cosmic reservoir of information.

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Speaker 1: The sources definitely emphasize that his brain was fundamentally wired

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differently than a normal humans.

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Speaker 2: So the argument really is that whether we're talking about

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ancient Hindu kings accessing the realm of Brahma or a

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twentieth century physicist accessing the secrets of light speed. The

450
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knowledge about the true warped structure of time and space

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seems to be accessed through these non traditional means, either.

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Speaker 1: By physical travel to a high energy source or.

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Speaker 2: Through altered states of consciousness that tap into a universal

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advanced knowledge reservoir potentially linked to Sirius, and that.

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Speaker 1: Leads us perfectly into the physics that makes those ancient

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legends and the Genius's theories possible. Section four Wormholes The

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Gateway to time and space.

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Speaker 2: We've established that Einstein's theory of relativity allows for the

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possibility of time travel by changing the rate of time flow.

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But for the Syrian emissaries or for King Ravita to

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make that trip, they need a mechanism for traveling across

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vast distances instantly.

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Speaker 1: This is where general relativity becomes the true cosmic map.

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Einstein's theory show that space isn't just empty nothingness. It

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acts like a material, a dynamic fabric called space time,

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something you can bend, warp, and crucially make holes in.

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Speaker 2: And the theoretical structure that exploits this warping to achieve

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instantaneous travel is what we now know as the Einstein

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Rosen Bridge, a wormhole a traversible wormhole, that's the formal name.

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The definition of a wormhole based on this advanced physics,

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is a structure in space time that involves essentially tearing

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a hole in the fabric of space, stretching that material,

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and then reconnecting it somewhere else, often vastly distant.

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Speaker 1: So its function is simple but revolutionary. It's a shortcut

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through the cosmos, connecting two distant points instantly by folding

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space over on itself.

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Speaker 2: This structure essentially acts as a teleporter. It's a mechanism

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that allows you to get between two distant places instantaneously

479
00:23:55,559 --> 00:23:58,519
bypassing the billions of years of travel time required by

480
00:23:58,559 --> 00:23:59,680
conventional propulsion.

481
00:24:00,039 --> 00:24:03,559
Speaker 1: Implications are vast. The theory even suggests it might connect

482
00:24:03,559 --> 00:24:06,599
points that are in different universes, creating multiversal gateways.

483
00:24:06,960 --> 00:24:09,160
Speaker 2: Of course, the challenge, and we need to acknowledge the

484
00:24:09,200 --> 00:24:13,200
technical hurdle, is that while wormholes are mathematically allowed, stabilizing

485
00:24:13,200 --> 00:24:17,279
them is incredibly difficult. To keep a wormhole open and traversible,

486
00:24:17,799 --> 00:24:20,119
the geometry of space time needs to be maintained by

487
00:24:20,160 --> 00:24:24,359
some kind of immense energy field. Theoretical physicists have determined

488
00:24:24,440 --> 00:24:26,599
this requires something called exotic matter.

489
00:24:26,960 --> 00:24:30,160
Speaker 1: Exotic matter that sounds like something straight out of science fiction.

490
00:24:30,440 --> 00:24:33,880
Speaker 2: In practice it is, but mathematically it's defined as matter

491
00:24:33,920 --> 00:24:38,359
that possesses negative energy density. Normal matter like us has

492
00:24:38,440 --> 00:24:41,680
positive energy density. Its gravity pulls things.

493
00:24:41,440 --> 00:24:44,400
Speaker 1: In, so exotic matter would have repulsive gravity.

494
00:24:44,559 --> 00:24:47,799
Speaker 2: Repulsive gravity, it would force the throat of the wormhole

495
00:24:47,839 --> 00:24:51,559
open against the immense gravitational pressure that's trying to collapse it.

496
00:24:52,039 --> 00:24:55,880
If the Syrian emissaries achieved interstellar travel, they either solve

497
00:24:55,960 --> 00:24:59,079
the exotic matter problem or they found an energy source

498
00:24:59,160 --> 00:25:01,720
massive enough to s stay in that gravitational repulsion.

499
00:25:01,960 --> 00:25:07,359
Speaker 1: And that implication that the mechanism for instantaneous time warping

500
00:25:07,440 --> 00:25:12,039
travel exists in theory that suggests a profound cosmic reality.

501
00:25:12,160 --> 00:25:16,119
Speaker 2: Absolutely. The implication, according to our sources, is that all

502
00:25:16,200 --> 00:25:19,079
the necessary theoretical pieces are in place to accept the

503
00:25:19,119 --> 00:25:23,200
possibility of advanced intelligent life elsewhere. If instant travel is

504
00:25:23,200 --> 00:25:26,240
possible via wormholes, then the likelihood that we've had contact

505
00:25:26,240 --> 00:25:29,839
in the past or ongoing contact now is drastically increased.

506
00:25:29,920 --> 00:25:33,759
Speaker 1: Wormholes are the mechanism that makes ancient visitations plausible.

507
00:25:33,599 --> 00:25:37,279
Speaker 2: And this possibility of wormholes being used for instantaneous travel

508
00:25:37,640 --> 00:25:40,359
leads us straight back to the ancient world and this

509
00:25:40,559 --> 00:25:45,480
concept of ancient stargates and portals, if physics allows for this,

510
00:25:45,759 --> 00:25:49,599
was this technology somehow used in the ancient past, perhaps

511
00:25:49,640 --> 00:25:51,200
known by the emissaries from.

512
00:25:51,039 --> 00:25:54,640
Speaker 1: Serious This brings us to the Dendera evidence which is

513
00:25:54,720 --> 00:25:57,079
referenced in the sources. We're talking about the Temple of

514
00:25:57,079 --> 00:25:59,119
Hathor at Dendera in Egypt.

515
00:25:59,319 --> 00:26:02,279
Speaker 2: Exactly. The connection being discussed is the idea that if

516
00:26:02,319 --> 00:26:05,640
this technology exists, the ancients might have known about it

517
00:26:05,680 --> 00:26:09,240
and documented it, even if they used very different terminology.

518
00:26:09,640 --> 00:26:13,119
Speaker 1: And the Temple of Athor contains that famous astronomical ceiling.

519
00:26:13,960 --> 00:26:16,359
What does the interpretation of that ceiling tell us about

520
00:26:16,440 --> 00:26:17,240
cosmic travel?

521
00:26:17,839 --> 00:26:20,640
Speaker 2: When you view the ceiling, you see this explicit mapping

522
00:26:20,680 --> 00:26:24,240
of the cosmos, charting the stars and constellations. But the

523
00:26:24,240 --> 00:26:27,279
interpretation that links back to wormhole theory is centered on

524
00:26:27,359 --> 00:26:30,599
how the divine travelers are depicted. The ceiling shows the

525
00:26:30,640 --> 00:26:34,079
gods as ascended light beings traveling on their ships of eternity.

526
00:26:34,200 --> 00:26:36,920
Speaker 1: Ships of eternity. That's a highly suggestive phrase.

527
00:26:37,240 --> 00:26:41,720
Speaker 2: It is. Researchers analyzing this material propose that these images

528
00:26:41,799 --> 00:26:45,880
suggest the ancients knew about stargate and wormhole travel. They

529
00:26:45,920 --> 00:26:48,960
weren't just charting stars, they were depicting a method of

530
00:26:49,039 --> 00:26:53,440
traversal that suggested movement beyond the standard visible universe.

531
00:26:53,680 --> 00:26:57,000
Speaker 1: So these ships of Eternity aren't just flying through normal space.

532
00:26:57,240 --> 00:27:00,400
Speaker 2: The argument is that they're using a specialized high energy

533
00:27:00,440 --> 00:27:04,920
mechanism to traverse the cosmos, which conceptually aligns perfectly with

534
00:27:04,960 --> 00:27:06,200
the physics of a wormhole.

535
00:27:06,640 --> 00:27:09,559
Speaker 1: So if the emissaries from Sirius, the Beings of Light,

536
00:27:09,599 --> 00:27:13,480
the Dogon and Egyptian spoke of we're traveling through a wormhole.

537
00:27:13,079 --> 00:27:17,240
Speaker 2: Structure stabilized by exotic matter or some equivalent power.

538
00:27:17,039 --> 00:27:20,279
Speaker 1: Source, then the advanced knowledge they gifted to humanity would

539
00:27:20,359 --> 00:27:24,279
naturally include the mechanism for that travel, a mechanism that Einstein,

540
00:27:24,440 --> 00:27:28,039
perhaps through that cosmic download redrived millennia later.

541
00:27:28,279 --> 00:27:32,440
Speaker 2: That's the powerful synthesis. The source material proposes myth describes

542
00:27:32,480 --> 00:27:36,240
the destination serious and the result time dilation, while modern

543
00:27:36,279 --> 00:27:39,839
physics provides the mechanism wormholes and relativity.

544
00:27:40,119 --> 00:27:42,640
Speaker 1: That is a phenomenal link. It means the physics we

545
00:27:42,680 --> 00:27:46,359
struggle with today might just be us relearning a fundamental

546
00:27:46,359 --> 00:27:52,160
cosmic technology passed down by highly advanced visitors. So let's

547
00:27:52,240 --> 00:27:55,400
move from theory and myth to practice. Is anyone actually

548
00:27:55,400 --> 00:27:58,319
trying to build a machine to create these time loops?

549
00:27:58,640 --> 00:28:01,480
Speaker 2: Indeed, they are, and this takes us to our final section,

550
00:28:02,079 --> 00:28:05,839
the modern quest to loop time. We are talking about

551
00:28:06,039 --> 00:28:10,400
experimental physics attempting to make the theoretical possible, specifically the

552
00:28:10,440 --> 00:28:12,279
work of Professor Ronald Mallet.

553
00:28:12,359 --> 00:28:15,319
Speaker 1: Okay, the source details his prototype, which was demonstrated at

554
00:28:15,359 --> 00:28:18,880
the University of Connecticut, where he's a theoretical physicist, and

555
00:28:18,920 --> 00:28:22,799
he's using a large scale model that involves a specific device,

556
00:28:23,359 --> 00:28:24,160
a ring laser.

557
00:28:24,400 --> 00:28:27,240
Speaker 2: And the goal here is deeply ambitious, but it's grounded

558
00:28:27,400 --> 00:28:30,720
entirely in Einstein's general relativity. He wants to demonstrate that

559
00:28:30,759 --> 00:28:32,880
a circulating beam of light can be used to twist

560
00:28:32,920 --> 00:28:35,720
empty space inside it, forming a loop in time and

561
00:28:35,759 --> 00:28:37,759
thereby allowing backwards time travel.

562
00:28:37,799 --> 00:28:39,960
Speaker 1: Okay, let's get into the mechanics of that, because twisting

563
00:28:40,000 --> 00:28:42,640
space sounds pretty vague until you attach it to the physics.

564
00:28:42,799 --> 00:28:46,079
Speaker 2: Absolutely, the physics Mallet is trying to exploit is called

565
00:28:46,119 --> 00:28:50,960
the lens thirring effect or frame dragging. General relativity predicts

566
00:28:50,960 --> 00:28:54,680
that when a massive object spins, it literally drags the

567
00:28:54,680 --> 00:28:58,279
space time around it. Imagine dropping a marble onto a

568
00:28:58,319 --> 00:28:59,440
spinning sheet of rubber.

569
00:29:00,039 --> 00:29:02,599
Speaker 1: So instead of using a massive spinning planet, which is

570
00:29:02,640 --> 00:29:06,559
obviously impossible in a lab, Mallet is using energy, a

571
00:29:06,559 --> 00:29:09,599
circulating pattern of light to create the same effect.

572
00:29:09,759 --> 00:29:12,559
Speaker 2: Correct, the light itself is massless, but it's a form

573
00:29:12,559 --> 00:29:15,640
of energy, and E equals mc squared tells us that

574
00:29:15,720 --> 00:29:18,799
mass and energy are equivalent. Therefore, a massive amount of

575
00:29:18,839 --> 00:29:23,480
circulating light generates a tiny gravitational field. Gravitational vortex a

576
00:29:23,559 --> 00:29:27,160
circulating twisting field exactly. And since space and time are

577
00:29:27,200 --> 00:29:30,640
fundamentally connected, they are space time. The twisting of space

578
00:29:30,680 --> 00:29:33,480
will eventually lead to a twisting of time, and that's.

579
00:29:33,319 --> 00:29:36,119
Speaker 1: The critical leap. If time is normally a straight line

580
00:29:36,119 --> 00:29:39,559
from path to future, once you twist that line, what happens.

581
00:29:39,880 --> 00:29:44,160
Speaker 2: It creates a loop. If Mallet can twist space sufficiently,

582
00:29:44,599 --> 00:29:47,559
the source material states that the space will eventually twist

583
00:29:47,720 --> 00:29:50,480
time into a loop, and that twisting of time is

584
00:29:50,480 --> 00:29:54,880
where time travel is occurring. Mallet's breakthrough was recognizing that light,

585
00:29:55,160 --> 00:29:57,960
because of the mass energy equivalents, could be used to

586
00:29:58,000 --> 00:29:59,160
manipulate time.

587
00:29:59,240 --> 00:30:02,119
Speaker 1: And he stated his belief that even though this is

588
00:30:02,160 --> 00:30:05,359
just a prototype, with enough resources, he might be able

589
00:30:05,400 --> 00:30:08,000
to create a working time machine in as little as

590
00:30:08,039 --> 00:30:10,440
ten years as of the context in the source.

591
00:30:10,720 --> 00:30:13,079
Speaker 2: But he's not aiming to send a person back immediately.

592
00:30:13,160 --> 00:30:16,880
That's the far future goal. His immediate experimental goal is

593
00:30:16,960 --> 00:30:19,799
much more focused on just proving the principle. He wants

594
00:30:19,839 --> 00:30:21,759
to use the energy of the light beams to produce

595
00:30:21,799 --> 00:30:25,559
a gravitational field strong enough to drag a spinning neutron through.

596
00:30:25,400 --> 00:30:27,759
Speaker 1: Time, and how would he send the message. This is

597
00:30:27,799 --> 00:30:31,279
the elegant part of the experiment. The neutron message based

598
00:30:31,319 --> 00:30:32,440
on binary code.

599
00:30:32,519 --> 00:30:35,640
Speaker 2: It relies on the quantum mechanical property of the neutrons spin.

600
00:30:36,440 --> 00:30:39,079
He uses the spin of the neutron to encode information.

601
00:30:39,440 --> 00:30:41,480
If the neutrons spin is up, he defines that as

602
00:30:41,519 --> 00:30:44,119
a one in binary code. If the spin is down,

603
00:30:44,440 --> 00:30:45,200
that's a zero.

604
00:30:45,480 --> 00:30:47,920
Speaker 1: So you send a stream of neutrons spin up, spin up,

605
00:30:47,960 --> 00:30:50,960
spin down, spin up, and that sequence translates directly to

606
00:30:51,119 --> 00:30:53,720
binary code one one dash ear one.

607
00:30:53,759 --> 00:30:56,359
Speaker 2: Which can then be translated into a message, even a

608
00:30:56,400 --> 00:31:00,680
simple letter or symbol. By manipulating the gravitation field from

609
00:31:00,680 --> 00:31:04,160
the ring laser the hope is to send this specific pattern,

610
00:31:04,359 --> 00:31:07,000
this binary code message back in time to be received

611
00:31:07,039 --> 00:31:08,119
at an earlier point.

612
00:31:08,319 --> 00:31:11,599
Speaker 1: This is truly revolutionary because it moves the discussion from

613
00:31:11,640 --> 00:31:14,839
the Chalkcoard theory of wormholes which need exotic matter, to

614
00:31:14,920 --> 00:31:18,640
the practical physical application of light manipulation to create a

615
00:31:18,680 --> 00:31:20,880
temporal loop. Right here on Earth.

616
00:31:21,240 --> 00:31:25,160
Speaker 2: Mallet is effectively attempting to construct a mini abim phenomenon.

617
00:31:25,440 --> 00:31:29,319
He's creating a localized displacement in space time using pure energy.

618
00:31:29,519 --> 00:31:32,519
Speaker 1: And of course, the ultimate possibility is scaling this technology up.

619
00:31:32,799 --> 00:31:35,039
If Mallet can prove light can twist time at the

620
00:31:35,079 --> 00:31:37,519
quantum level with a neutron, then the next step is

621
00:31:37,519 --> 00:31:40,599
applying those same principles to create a large scale gravitational

622
00:31:40,599 --> 00:31:43,079
field that can influence macro objects.

623
00:31:43,240 --> 00:31:46,160
Speaker 2: And that's the ultimate goal, which circles right back to

624
00:31:46,200 --> 00:31:50,160
the Einstein Rosen bridge and the idea of stargates. If

625
00:31:50,160 --> 00:31:53,480
we can master frame dragging using light, we might one

626
00:31:53,559 --> 00:31:58,079
day create a stable, massive gravitational field powerful enough to

627
00:31:58,160 --> 00:32:01,960
traverse a person through time, or more likely, to bend

628
00:32:01,960 --> 00:32:05,319
space so completely that we can travel from point A

629
00:32:05,599 --> 00:32:09,920
on Earth to point B somewhere else in the universe instantly, just.

630
00:32:09,880 --> 00:32:13,319
Speaker 1: As the Syrian emissaries might have done exactly. It's incredible

631
00:32:13,359 --> 00:32:16,200
to think that all these threads, from King Ravita traveling

632
00:32:16,200 --> 00:32:18,599
to Brahma and coming back hundreds of years later, to

633
00:32:18,720 --> 00:32:21,839
the theoretical math of wormholes and the analysis of Einstein's

634
00:32:21,880 --> 00:32:24,680
unique brain, to the practical attempts to twist light in

635
00:32:24,720 --> 00:32:28,240
a lab, they're all part of the same continuous human quest.

636
00:32:28,640 --> 00:32:32,079
Speaker 2: It demonstrates that the concept of manipulating time is this deep,

637
00:32:32,240 --> 00:32:35,880
continuous thread throughout human history. It's documented in our most

638
00:32:35,880 --> 00:32:39,480
sacred texts and our most advanced physics equations. The ancients

639
00:32:39,480 --> 00:32:42,279
observe the result of time travel, perhaps via these emissaries,

640
00:32:42,279 --> 00:32:45,799
and today we're struggling to reverse engineer the underlying mechanism so.

641
00:32:45,839 --> 00:32:49,240
Speaker 1: To synthesize everything we've uncovered. We started with the sheer

642
00:32:49,279 --> 00:32:52,880
emotional and physical shock of ton dilation documented in legends

643
00:32:52,880 --> 00:32:57,160
across the world Ravita, Taro, and Obim, each showing a

644
00:32:57,160 --> 00:33:00,960
small subjective time passage against to massive objective.

645
00:33:00,599 --> 00:33:03,559
Speaker 2: Jump, and we analyze that common thread of the traveler's

646
00:33:03,599 --> 00:33:06,839
loss and the physical event that precedes the jump. Then

647
00:33:06,880 --> 00:33:10,400
we moved into the cosmic source point serious which multiple

648
00:33:10,400 --> 00:33:13,720
cultures link to these divine emissaries who are responsible for

649
00:33:13,880 --> 00:33:15,240
educating humankind a.

650
00:33:15,200 --> 00:33:19,799
Speaker 1: Potential external, non terrestrial source for advanced knowledge. Then we

651
00:33:19,839 --> 00:33:23,200
saw how the very definition of genius embodied by Albert

652
00:33:23,240 --> 00:33:27,279
Einstein during his Anismerobolis seems to be tied to accessing

653
00:33:27,319 --> 00:33:30,160
this realm of advanced knowledge that allowed him to download

654
00:33:30,240 --> 00:33:33,119
universe altering concepts like e equals mc.

655
00:33:33,039 --> 00:33:36,720
Speaker 2: Squared, perhaps facilitated by his unusual brain anatomy, especially that

656
00:33:36,759 --> 00:33:40,079
higher concentration of glial cells and the wider parietal loads.

657
00:33:40,160 --> 00:33:42,279
Speaker 1: And finally we closed the loop. We show that the

658
00:33:42,279 --> 00:33:46,119
theoretical tools Einstein gave us the wormhole requiring the energy

659
00:33:46,119 --> 00:33:49,240
calculation of equals mc squared, are the very mechanisms that

660
00:33:49,240 --> 00:33:51,359
would allow the instant travel discussed.

661
00:33:50,960 --> 00:33:54,119
Speaker 2: In the myths, and that physicists like Mallet are actively

662
00:33:54,160 --> 00:33:58,480
trying to generate the necessary gravitational effects using fram dragging

663
00:33:58,519 --> 00:34:02,000
and ring lasers to rag particles through time and prove

664
00:34:02,039 --> 00:34:03,880
that Tepora loops are physically possible.

665
00:34:04,240 --> 00:34:07,160
Speaker 1: What really stands out to me is this persistent claim

666
00:34:07,240 --> 00:34:10,719
from the sources that some of the greatest minds may

667
00:34:10,760 --> 00:34:15,039
have received their universe altering knowledge from an external, potentially

668
00:34:15,119 --> 00:34:19,599
cosmic source linked to star systems like Sirius. We always

669
00:34:19,639 --> 00:34:22,760
celebrate genius as a purely human achievement, but what if

670
00:34:22,800 --> 00:34:25,239
the most significant leaps in civilization.

671
00:34:24,679 --> 00:34:28,000
Speaker 2: Were assisted If the greatest advancements are not purely internal,

672
00:34:28,239 --> 00:34:32,519
driven only by terrestrial effort and labor, but are assisted downloaded,

673
00:34:32,519 --> 00:34:35,960
if you will, into these neurologically receptive minds, then what

674
00:34:36,000 --> 00:34:39,039
does that imply about our capacity for future discovery? It

675
00:34:39,079 --> 00:34:41,639
shifts our understanding of our true place in the cosmos.

676
00:34:41,840 --> 00:34:45,199
We go from being isolated discoverers to active recipients of information.

677
00:34:45,360 --> 00:34:47,280
Speaker 1: It raises such an important question about the role of

678
00:34:47,320 --> 00:34:51,039
human intellect versus the potential role of cosmic intervention in

679
00:34:51,079 --> 00:34:55,000
the history of science. Were the ships of Eternity on

680
00:34:55,079 --> 00:34:58,920
the Dinderi ceiling just mythological or were they depicting a

681
00:34:59,000 --> 00:35:03,280
technologically anst reality that we're only now starting to mathematically

682
00:35:03,360 --> 00:35:04,280
prove as possible.

683
00:35:04,360 --> 00:35:06,039
Speaker 2: And if you look at the high cost of time

684
00:35:06,079 --> 00:35:08,760
travel and the ancient legends the loss of everything known

685
00:35:08,800 --> 00:35:11,880
to the traveler, it suggests that perhaps the emissaries who

686
00:35:11,880 --> 00:35:15,719
brought this knowledge did so knowing the immense, irreversible temporal

687
00:35:15,719 --> 00:35:16,760
price of their journey.

688
00:35:17,079 --> 00:35:19,239
Speaker 1: So we want to leave you with this final propagation,

689
00:35:19,800 --> 00:35:23,679
considering that ancient legends, biblical accounts, and modern physics all

690
00:35:23,719 --> 00:35:27,960
contain these consistent mechanisms for instantaneous, high stakes time travel.

691
00:35:28,440 --> 00:35:30,480
Do you believe that the mastery of time is an

692
00:35:30,480 --> 00:35:34,159
achievement yet to come, something Mallet might invent in the next.

693
00:35:34,000 --> 00:35:37,320
Speaker 2: Decade, or is it a technology already possessed by beings?

694
00:35:37,400 --> 00:35:40,559
Perhaps those early human civilizations that had contact with the

695
00:35:40,599 --> 00:35:43,880
Syrian emissaries, who have simply left the evidence behind in

696
00:35:43,960 --> 00:35:46,639
myth and ancient architecture, just waiting for us to finally

697
00:35:46,639 --> 00:35:47,159
catch up.

698
00:35:47,320 --> 00:35:49,760
Speaker 1: We encourage you to reflect on the stories of King

699
00:35:49,840 --> 00:35:53,639
Ravena and Ibm. If they experience that kind of rapid

700
00:35:53,679 --> 00:35:57,119
shift in time. What personal price would you be willing

701
00:35:57,159 --> 00:35:59,559
to pay to access the secrets of the cosmos?

702
00:36:00,320 --> 00:36:02,320
Speaker 2: What stands out to you most in this deep dive?

703
00:36:02,400 --> 00:36:03,679
Speaker 1: Let us know we'll see you next time.

