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Proctor, Richard A.
The Great Pyramid: observatory, tomb, and temple — New York, 1883

DOI Seite / Zitierlink:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.15#0083

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THE RELIGION OP THE GREAT PYRAMID. 73

accident—is regarded by the pyramidalists as a
perfect triumph for their faith.

They connect it with another coincidence, viz.
that, assuming the height determined in the way
already indicated, then it so happens that the
height bears to half a diagonal of the base the ratio
9 to io. Seeing that the perimeter of the base
symbolises the annual motion of the earth round
the sun, while the height represents the radius of a
circle with that perimeter, it follows that the height
should symbolise the sun's distance. ' That line,
further,' says Professor Smyth (speaking on behalf
of Mr. W. Pétrie, the discoverer of this relation),
' must represent ' this radius ' in the proportion of
I to ι,000,000,000' (or ten raised to power nine),
'because amongst other reasons 10 to 9 is practi-
cally the shape of the Great Pyramid.' For, this
building ' has such an angle at the corners, that for
every ten units its structure advances inwards on
the diagonal of the base, it practically rises up-
wards, or points to sunshine ' {sic) ' by mne. Nine,
too, out of the ten characteristic parts (viz. five
angles and five sides) being the number of those
parts which the sun shines on in such a shaped
pyramid, in such a latitude near the equator, out of
a high sky, or, as the Peruvians say, when the sun
sets on the pyramid with all its rays.' The coinci-
 
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