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Out of Africa The Ancient Egyptian Connection is a book about two journeys: the soul's journey from spiritual sleep to awakening and its journey within this awakening. The first of these has been well-documented, the latter equally significant, is rarely mentioned -- perhaps because most of us have little or no experience with it. It eludes ordinary comprehension. In this two-volume work, Dr. Moore (PhD, Princeton 1978) attempts to reconstruct the nature of those journeys from the fragmentary evidence left behind in two sources -- the so-called Book of the Amduat inside the tombs of Thutmosis…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Out of Africa The Ancient Egyptian Connection is a book about two journeys: the soul's journey from spiritual sleep to awakening and its journey within this awakening. The first of these has been well-documented, the latter equally significant, is rarely mentioned -- perhaps because most of us have little or no experience with it. It eludes ordinary comprehension. In this two-volume work, Dr. Moore (PhD, Princeton 1978) attempts to reconstruct the nature of those journeys from the fragmentary evidence left behind in two sources -- the so-called Book of the Amduat inside the tombs of Thutmosis III and Ramses VI and the less well-known Book of the Two Ways duplicated inside the lids of thousands of coffins of Ancient Egyptian nobles. Standing on the shoulders of two giants of Egyptology -- Alexandre Piankoff and Richard Faulkner-- Dr. Moore takes the unprecendented and daring step of mapping onto the sacred texts themselves the schema of the cartoon-like stick figures depicted on the tomb walls. Enigmatic until now, the text and images suddenly become transparent, voices can be heard. And then as if this were not radical surgery enough, the author identifies and decodes the voices. Nothing so controversial in its implications has been done before.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Moore is a trained economist, with a BA from Stanford in Math and History and a PhD in Economic History from Princeton University (1978), he taught economics and statistics successively at the University of Texas, Harvard, MIT, and Morehouse College before quitting university teaching in 1990 for Silicon Valley. Over the years Dr. Moore has also become an amateur Egyptologist, learning how to slowly decode the ancient texts with dictionaries, visiting the Valley of the Kings, Giza and the temple ruins at Luxor several timesand becoming a little curious. He asked: Is 6,000 /- years all there is to this amazing experiment we call Ancient Egypt? Being an avid chess player himself, he started looking more carefully at the possible prehistoric connections between chess, Senet and mancala and discovered traces of a few. Dr. Moore enjoys composing improvisational pieces for singing and for the keyboard, playing chess and writing plays. He has a wife, 2 children and 3 cats.