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Rating:  Summary: Tarot as Cosmological Capacitator Review: Earth Under Fire further develops La Violette's observations that the tarot deck has encoded within the Major Arcana cosmological processes, which he began in his book Genesis of the Cosmos. While I had trouble with some of the science he expounds, I certainly welcomed his courageous efforts to break free of the consensual bias that materialist science and its henchmen still promote. His take on astrology as also encoding cosmological phenomena is worth some serious scrutiny indeed and could pave the way for new ways to use our natal charts. I highly recommend this and his previous book as well in hopes that it will spark a much needed dimensional transformation in the sciences.Jaye Beldo: Netnous@Aol.Com
Rating:  Summary: VERRRRRY INTERESTING!! Review: One of the most interesting books I've read in a LONG TIME! Paul A. LaViolette is truly a Renaissance Man when it come knowledge. His never-ending curiosity has put together astronomy, astrology, tarot, mythology, hard-core science, legends, and a few hunches of his own . . . and out came a truly revolutionary theory on the periodic and cyclical extinctions that have occurred on our planet. It's been handed down to us in all of the above mentioned forms . . . but most of mankind chooses to ignore it. Paul has some REALLY good arguments for his theories. We need more people who choose to question the status quo instead of blinding believing what is set before them by the educational and religious community. GO, PAUL, GO!!
Rating:  Summary: Got to learn the secret handshake first Review: Rather than just leave monuments all over the world saying, "hey, this is what is about to happen to us, and the same will eventually happen to you", an advanced civilization 10,000 years ago decided to leave the warning in such a cryptic way, using astrology adjusted for precession, etc, that no one in their right mind would take it seriously. To me that says that no such message was left, and is merely the product of a living imagination. Yet another book which takes catastrophe and tries to get it to behave by making it periodical and predictable.
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