helen99: A windswept tree against a starlit sky (Default)
[personal profile] helen99
This past year I've been looking into the ways in which the structure of timekeeping affects the way people think (chronopsychology?). This was the subject of much discussion and would have been a workshop if I'd been able to synthesize the information, but nothing gelled as of last June. Today I ran across this (bought myself a copy):



Aside from being very pretty, it may be useful for experimenting with differing methods of timekeeping. If nothing else, it's a very pretty calendar.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-19 11:43 pm (UTC)
ext_786: (Default)
From: [identity profile] rialian.livejournal.com
===It is simply stunning....I love it.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-19 11:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stonemirror.livejournal.com
Jose Arguelles writes a lot about this in the context of the Mayan tzolkin calendar. Interesting; not necessarily persuasive...

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-20 12:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dancinglights.livejournal.com
Can you do a workshop for the October gather?

Speaking of which I need to send Ri $$$ for Pod and myself. This is a self-reminder.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-20 01:55 pm (UTC)
ext_5300: tree in the stars (Default)
From: [identity profile] helen99.livejournal.com
Jade has a paypal link website (We have it but it's at home - I'll get it to you this evening).

I don't know if I can get something together by October or not... Maybe if everyone just brought their favorite weird calendar we could compare.. (it would be up to Jade if she thought that would be an ok workshop for her gathering). At the moment I don't have anything cohesive - the calendar in the above post is one way to go about it. Previously I was envisioning more of a circularly shaped calendar. Actually a rotating and slowly precessing, spherical one. One would probably need an 850-page manual to use it. It may not have been the best idea.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-20 02:07 pm (UTC)
ext_5300: tree in the stars (Default)
From: [identity profile] helen99.livejournal.com
Time cycles in my spherical, precessing, rotating calendar were based on the following excerpt from http://earlbakken.com/text.phtml?m=114 :

"Twice each lunar month, the sun and moon are in line — at the full and the new moon — and the sun's gravitational pull added to the moon's causes tides that are considerably bigger than average. Called spring tides, these tides take place every 15 days — year round. They result from the interaction of two environmental rhythms, the daily rotation of the earth on its axis and the 29.5-day rotation of the moon around the earth."

Decided to base it on the ebb and flow of algae (the bottom of both the food and oxygen chain), which depend on the spring tides for their existence...

This is about as far as I got though. I never actually fleshed the thing out... (I'm not sure it's possible).

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-20 02:09 pm (UTC)
ext_5300: tree in the stars (Default)
From: [identity profile] helen99.livejournal.com
"Many organisms that live between the tides have intrinsic rhythms that correspond to the 15-day spring tide cycle. The brown alga, Dictyota dichotoma, sheds its reproductive cells into the waters of a high tide on a roughly 15-day cycle. A marine midge, Clunio marinus, emerges, mates, and lays its eggs on the red algae growing at the lowest limit of the lowest tides. Since the algae are exposed only once each 15 days, the midge has but two hours or so to complete its entire adult life- a life cycle with a roughly 15-day rhythm that persists even under constant conditions in the laboratory"

And so on. It's a natural cornerstone of sorts...

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-20 05:49 pm (UTC)
ext_5300: tree in the stars (Default)
From: [identity profile] helen99.livejournal.com
Found the other article related to this - Chronobiology:
http://www.archaeusproject.com/chronobiology/default.shtml

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