Predictive History - The Story of "Civilization", "Secret History", "Game Theory" and more - Civilization #18 - The Great Pyramid as Ancient Egypt's Manhattan Project
Episode Date: October 7, 2025Civilization #18 - The Great Pyramid as Ancient Egypt's Manhattan Project ...
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So this would be a fun class today.
We are doing the Great Pyramid.
Okay.
So the Great Pyramid was built about 2,500 B.C.
That's 4,500 years ago, by a Pharaoh named Curfew.
And it was one of the seven great wonders of the ancient world.
the only one is still standing.
From 2,500 until 1,400 CE, which is about 4,000 years,
it was the tallest man-made building in the world.
Great Pyramid, the direction is true north,
meaning you can actually use the pyramids as a compass
to tell the directions.
Let's look at the architecture of the Great Pyramid.
So the center is something called the King's Chamber.
That's where the King's Mummy rests in the sarcophagus.
There's a grand gallery that gives you access to the King's Chamber
and then a slope, and then it's a pyramid structure.
And on the top of the pyramid is what is called the Bend Den,
or the pyrrion, the pyrrion, okay?
The pyrrion, okay?
And it is extremely significant culturally and religiously
in Egypt because in Egyptian mythology,
the religion, the creator god, Atom,
he's known as Atum, he's also known as Ra, the sun god,
first came into existence on the Ben-Bet.
So imagine a large, star,
ocean and there's nothing and then suddenly emerges a mound,
okay, called a Bend, then.
And that's where comes the critic god Atum, or Ra.
Okay, that's one legend.
The legend is from the dark ocean of space
comes down a bend-bed, and on top of it rests Atum, okay?
So this idea of the Pyromidian, the Ben-Ben,
it is central to the idea of creation in the Egyptian mythology.
So this is an extremely powerful and beautiful monument to Egyptian culture.
Architecturally, Napoleon, who visited the Great Pyramid,
he calculated that if you took all the stones from the Great Pyramid,
you could actually build a wall around the perimeter of France.
There's more material in the Great Pyramid except for two structures.
The first structure is the Great Wall of China.
There's more stone in the Great Wall of China, okay?
There's more stone, there's more material in the Great Gorgeous Dam, also in China.
Okay?
And it took them about 26 years to build this pyramid.
So today, in today's class, I'm going to look at three questions.
The first question is, how do they build this?
Because it's still with us today.
You can actually go to Egypt and visit the Great Pyramid.
Second question is, why did they build this?
What was the purpose?
And the third question is, why do they stop building the pyramids?
Okay, so those are three questions we're looking at today.
How was it built?
Why was it built?
and why did the Egyptians stop building the pyramids?
So how it was built is an extremely controversial question
that has plagued historians and Egyptologists
and archaeologists for hundreds of years.
And originally, a Greek historian by then Herodotus
proposed the idea the pyramid was built in steps.
So it was first a step pyramid,
and then used to the pyramid,
And then using polis, they pull the stones up.
And it was the accepted idea for the longest time,
because there's no better idea.
But architecturally, that has been disproven.
It can't work that way.
Then about 10 years ago, there was a French architect
named John Pierre Houdin, H-O-U-D-I-N-H-O-U-D-D-N-H.
And he's an architect.
He's never been to Egypt.
Doesn't speak Arabic, never study Egypt.
But his father and him were very interested
in how the great pyramid was constructed.
So he came up with this theory.
And they've run computer simulations
and discovered this to be true.
There's also a lot of physical evidence
to suggest this theory is true.
So this is how they build the great pyramid.
What they did was they first constructed an external ramp
in order to build a base.
So you will now have the base.
And then from the first,
base what they did was they built two structures okay and this is what they call
counterweight counterweight okay so these counterweights are like polis which
allows them pull the stones up to up high okay and then surrounding these two
structures is what they call a eternal spiral lamp okay to carry the stones up and so what
What they did was they basically built the pyramids from the inside out.
And then once they built the structure, they covered it up with limestone so that it reflects
in the sun.
If you actually were living back then and you saw the pyramids from a distance, you would
think it was the star that has come down on the planet Earth.
So that's how they built the pyramid.
But then this raises another interesting question is how they come up with this plan and
how were they able to do this without blueprints and about basically writing or modern
engineering techniques.
And the answer is if you think about it, what they did was they built a model right beside
the pyramid which allowed them to figure out how to build a building.
the larger pyramid, okay?
But,
Inotologists still believe this was not possible
because they believe that Egyptians
have the intellectual capacity
to imagine this to be true, okay?
And I'll show you later on that they actually did,
that we underestimate their imagination
in their intellectual capacity.
So that answers the first question pretty easily.
How is it built?
A more controversial question is
why was it built? And for the longest time, they accepted theory is this is a tomb.
Okay, a tomb. The reason why is Egyptians believed in the afterlife. And so the theory is, this pyramid is designed to ease the pharaoh's transition into the heavens where he would become a star or a sun.
And so the common phrase is this is almost a resurrection machine where the pharaoh goes up to the sky,
and then after a few centuries, he reincarnates inside the pyramid.
And the structure is meant to accomplish this.
And again, this is the generally accepted theory today.
But there are three major problems.
with this theory, which basically makes it,
which basically discounts it, okay?
The first major problem is there are about 100 pyramids
in Egypt, okay?
100 or more, we don't know, okay?
We have not found a mummy or a body
inside any sarcophagus inside the pyramids.
So this is a problem.
If this is a tomb, why is there no body?
We can't find the body.
So that's one problem.
Second problem is this.
For this to be a tomb, this implies that the Pharaoh,
because the pharaohs are divine, right?
They are basically the emanation of God on Earth.
This means that when they come to the planet Earth
and they become the pharaoh, their priority is to build their own tomb.
tomb right does that make any sense they come to earth and they're like okay well I'm
gonna die so I want I want to get out of here as soon as possible so let's
build that tomb right now the problem is that this would imply that the
Pharaoh sees the Egyptian people as his slaves right you exist in order for me to
live and so um but the problem is that
In Egypt's mythology, gods are considered ben factors of the human race.
So for example, atumra, he is the one who gave life to the world, but then his son,
his son, Osiris, another god, gave civilization to Egypt.
And then Horus, the son of Osiris, gave the institution of kingship to Egypt.
So these gods come to earth in order to help the human race develop in some capacity.
So it doesn't make any sense that the pharaoh's primary purpose when he's on earth is to create a tomb because that's a very selfish reason.
Okay? Does that make sense? And the third problem with this is just pure logic. If you're a pharaoh and your primary concern is the afterlife resurrecting yourself and the pyramid is a primary means of accomplishing this, and it takes about 26 years or 30 years to build a pyramid,
how can you be sure that you won't die before the pyramid is built right that's a
problem okay so these are three logical problems but again it's it's
it's it's autologists insist that it is a tomb okay primarily because of the
way that Egyptians understand the afterlife okay so here's some evidence to
suggest it is a tomb this is um considered
a writing of a pharaoh to his son about what the pyramid represents.
So this is what he says.
Make your grave well furnish and prepare thy place in the West.
The West is where they go off to die.
Look, death counts little for us.
We can conquer death.
Look, life is valued highly by us.
We want to become immortal.
The house of the dead, meaning the tomb, is for life.
Okay, so the pyramid is what will make us immortal.
All right.
So this is, again, highly debated today.
So, largely speaking, it doesn't make sense that the pyramids are a tomb,
but there's all of evidence to suggest it is a tomb.
And because of this debate, different theories happen proposed as to the purpose of the pyramid.
And there are lots of really strange theories out there, okay?
Lots of really strange theories.
One really interesting theory was proposed by a man named Nikola Tesla, the creator of electricity basically.
And his idea was this.
He studied the architecture of the pyramid, and he proposed the pyramid was a battery system,
in order to create free...
sorry to create free clean energy and the theory is this okay the theory is
first of all if you look at the king's chamber the sound frequency in it is
F sharp and F sharp is also the frequency of planet Earth okay so it seems like
the pyramid is a tune to the planet Earth second of all
If you look at where the pyramids are geographically, it's too north, okay?
It's put in a place that matches the directions of the Earth.
And so the theory is the direction of the pyramid is capturing the energy from the electromagnetic field that the Earth generates.
Okay?
And the third explanation is inside
the pyramid are granite stones and outside are limestones.
And this is a perfect way to trap and store energy.
So think of a solar panel where the sun and the moon reflects light onto the pyramids
and this energy stored inside the pyramid.
Okay?
And so this is a great theory.
And again, there are lots of people who believe in this
because this is actually much more plausible than the two of the two people.
than the tomb theory.
But the problem with this, of course, is it doesn't work scientifically.
And also you have the question of,
if they produce all this free clean energy,
what are they using it for?
Okay?
So this leads us with a big question.
Why did they build the Great Pyramid?
And today, I want to propose to you another solution.
Okay?
The solution is this.
My belief is the Great Pyramid was designed as Egypt's Manhattan Project.
The Manhattan Project, as you know, was a World War II project in order to build the nuclear bomb.
And you can argue nuclear bomb is humanity's greatest invention ever.
It took about 130,000 people over five to six years working in the United States, in Canada, and UK.
These are the best scientists in the world at this time, okay?
Working collectively in order to create the nuclear bomb.
And you can also make the argument that there are many working on the project who believe
the Manhattan Project was about bringing peace to Earth, eternal peace.
It was ultimately about mastering the secrets of the universe, channeling the power of God
in order to create eternal peace, to bring God on earth.
And you can also argue that because we've had no major war
after World War II, fingers crossed, they were right.
Okay?
So that's my argument to you.
The Egyptians conceptualized and created the Great Pyramid
in order to harness the power of God
in order to create the power of God in order to create
eternal peace on earth to bring an end to history to bring an end to pain suffering and death okay
so before I provide the evidence let me explain this theory in general okay and again
this is my theory it's speculation its imagination but I think it makes sense okay so
let me explain the theory to you the trick is the body of the feral
the mummy okay now if the Pharaoh was divine and his Jesus believed he was divine
then after his death the body would be sacred in the vine right but knowing that
you think about it after the Pharaoh dies he would ascend to the heavens to
become a star or a son right the body then becomes a portal or a mechanism for you
to communicate with the pharaoh while he's in the heavens. You can also argue the body, the
mummy, could be a mechanism for you to channel the pharaoh's powers on earth. Okay? So imagine this.
The other sarcophagus. The mummy is inside, okay? Okay, and then you have the grand gallery. And inside the
and gallery, what are people doing? They are there praying and worshipping the pharaoh,
which then draws the energy from the stars onto the earth. And then, because of the limestone,
this energy is reflected across Egypt. So the entire nation can bask.
in the divine energy of the pharaoh okay so nicolatea said that this was a battery in order to channel free clean energy
to power egypt well what if he changed this to divine energy instead the pyramid was a battery
to channel divine energy in order to power egypt right now let me discuss if you are a worshipper in the grand
gallery what are you experiencing okay well first of all you're experiencing the
collision the nexus of life and death right because the Pharaoh he's dead but he's
still alive for your faith even though you're your mortal you're now
communication for God okay so this is a nexus of life and death this grand
channel sorry this grand gallery if you actually have such visit it in Egypt okay
you'll you'll recognize that this almost looks like a womb okay all right so it's
almost like you're inside a dark space that's taking you back to the point of
your birth right but it's also you can also be seen as a tomb a place where
you're being buried. So this is also like another collision or conflation or nexus of being born
and dying. If you were outside and you just saw the pyramid, again, you would think of it as a
star that has landed on earth, right? So this is a conflation, a nexus of heaven and earth.
It's a collision, a nexus of myth and reality. You can also
make the argument that through divine worship, what you're really doing is you're reversing the
great bang, sorry, the big bang, you're reversing the big bang, you'll bring it into this one
space and you are creating oneness, wholeness, and completeness. You have achieved the union
and the unity of all things for your faith in the pharaoh.
which gives you divine energy to be born anew cleanse of your sins
and to cleanse others of their sins to create a moral Egypt.
Okay?
Doesn't make sense.
All right.
So that's a theory.
So now let me explain the idea of eternal peace.
Why would the pyramid create the idea of the idea of,
eternal peace. Well, the first reason is, even though Egypt was a empire, dynasty at this point,
it was still divided culturally. There were at least four different cultures scattered around
Egypt. And they all had their own mythologies, they had all their own religious practices,
they had their own faiths, right? So the point of this pyramid was to unite all these faiths
into one singular object in the worship of the Pharaoh.
If you were an Egyptian citizen, if you were in Egypt and you looked at the pyramid, you cannot
help but think this is God on earth.
This centers your faith and it forces your obedience and your submission to a higher authority,
which is the Therole.
That's the first reason, unity.
is the idea of all. So let's just say you're a powerful army and you're an enemy and you want to
conquer Egypt. Well, you send your scouts to Egypt and they see the pyramids, right? The great
pyramid. What are they seeing? They're seeing God on earth, okay? So you're not going to attack God on earth. You're going to run away. So it creates a sense of all around the world.
Right? The last thing is the domination of nature.
So through divine inspiration,
Egyptians are able to summon the Great Pyramid
and it shows the God's ability to control nature.
Why is this important?
Because the source of Egyptian wealth and power is the Nile River.
Okay?
The Nile River.
And basically it's the Nile River that has made Egypt
the wealthiest country in the world for thousands of years.
Okay?
So the thing about the Nile is,
If it's in a good mood, you live a very good life because now it just floods, just floods a banks and leaves this rich soil, and then you just throw some seeds in it, and then you can grow all these crops very easily, okay?
It's very easy life, and you can become very wealthy that way.
So if it's in good mood, then you are a very happy person.
But if it's in a bad mood, okay, for example, it doesn't flood, or it floods too much, you could die.
of salvation or of drowning, okay?
So it's very important for you to be able to control the moods of the gods.
And that's what the pyramid is meant to do.
The Egyptian word for Egypt is Kemet, which basically means black earth.
So the source of all life in Egypt is the soil, right, the black earth.
So let's go back to this quotation.
And now we can actually understand it in a different way, right?
Make your grape well furnish and prepare thy place in the West.
That's fine.
Now, look, death counts little for us.
We're gods, we're pharaohs.
We will never die, so we don't worry about death.
We don't worry about dying.
Okay?
Look, life is valued highly by us.
What is life?
Life are humans, the Egyptian people,
Our concern as Pharaohs is for the well-being of the Egyptian people.
So that's our primary responsibility.
Okay?
The house of the dead, the pyramid, is for life.
The pyramid is our legacy to the Egyptian people.
It is our benevolence.
It is our generosity.
It is how we will make Egypt eternal and stable and prosperous.
Okay?
So that's my theory of what the pyramid is.
It is really the Manhattan Project.
An attempt by the Farrell to bring eternal peace.
Any questions about this idea before I elaborate on it and present the evidence for it?
Any questions about this?
You don't find you, you guys don't find this controversial?
Are you confused by anything?
Do you want to challenge me before I present the evidence?
Okay.
So let me start presenting the evidence, okay?
So the first piece of evidence is, again, Egyptian mythology.
All right.
So in Egyptian mythology, and it's very different from other mythologies we'll study in the future,
like that of Mesopotamia, the gods give everything to the people.
The people don't really do anything.
Ra gives life.
Sars gives civilization, Horace provides the kingship.
So the Egyptian understanding of the relationship with the gods is basically, if they worship
the gods good at well enough, the gods will always reward them.
So the idea that the gods will make the people build tombs.
It doesn't really make any sense.
It makes more sense.
The Pharaoh is helping the Egyptians achieve
eternal peace by inspiring them to build the pyramid.
The second thing is the architectural quality of the pyramid.
Now there is a misconception, a myth.
The pyramids were built by slaves.
They just had slaves, they used slaves,
but they never used slaves for religious purposes, right?
Because slave, you can't really try,
Slave, you can't really trust slaves.
So it was tens of thousands of laborers who built the pyramid together.
And it's a complete mystery to people how they're able to achieve such a miraculous building.
And so the answer is this.
Let's think about for the past thousand years.
The most impressive buildings in the world are usually churches.
temples, mosques, right?
So that just demonstrates the power of religious devotion in the act of creation.
So if the Egyptians saw the pyramids as the ultimate temple, as bringing God on earth,
you can imagine every one of them would work very hard in order to do their best.
Does that make sense?
The third is the idea of the cult of the skull.
So around this time and throughout the world,
people practice ancestors of worship.
So the way they did that usually is
maybe they have an ancestor who was well regarded.
They would keep a skull around.
They would decorate with clay in ochre,
and they would use this skull
as maybe a portal into the outer world.
into the outer world, into the spirit world,
in order to draw inspiration, to draw good luck from this.
Okay?
So the idea that they would use the Pharaoh's body
as a portal into the heavens
is a very, would be a very common idea at that time.
All right.
And then you have cave paintings.
So remember way early in the semester,
we looked at Ice Age Cave paintings.
So these paintings inside caves.
And we discussed these paintings were a means of religious worship,
of bringing the spirit world into our world,
connecting the two, in order to separate life and hunting.
Then you have a place like Gobelag-Teple,
which is considered one of the earliest temples.
Remember, it is a really temple.
is a religious monument on top of a hill, which would be also another way for you to connect
our world with the heavens.
And for your worship, draw divine energy from the heavens.
So this, in other words, there's a pattern of humans trying to connect the spirit world
with our world through religious worship.
the pyramid represents the ultimate temple.
Doesn't that make sense?
So the pyramid is a continuation of this sort of religious devotion and worship and religious practice.
All right.
Okay.
Any questions before I move on?
Okay.
So now the last question is, why did they stop in the pyramid?
there's a very good reason why they stopped in the pyramid because remember this
pyramid was about creating eternal peace pleasing the gods unifying the world
right that's a theory the problem is this theory doesn't work because in about
2200 BCE so the 4.2 2.2 kilo year event
happen. Think of this as a mini ice age where for about a hundred years there's a
drought in Egypt. Well that's a problem right because the entire point of the
pyramid what people sacrificed themselves so hard to work on the pyramid was to
prevent a drought in Egypt right it was to control the Nile and they failed. So
this creates first of all a crisis of faith. Okay, a crisis of faith
many now are forced to reject their faith in the pharaoh and now you see the rise of the priesthood
and other gods as well so the first major reason why they stop building the pyramids is a question of
faith second problem is in order to build the pyramids you need a pyramid economy okay a pyramid economy
and what the pyramid economy represents is centralized planning right centralization
The Pharaoh and his palace are able to coordinate all the resources of the state in order to create the pyramids.
We know that when you have a specialization, you have three problems.
The first is inequality.
So if you're part of this planned economy, you do very well for yourself, okay?
But if you're not, then you become poor.
So inequality is a huge issue.
But you also have a problem of corruption where people in the system they want to steal because it's just easier to do, okay?
And the third problem is just waste.
It's not very efficient.
So basically, the pyramid economy is just a complete waste of resources.
All right?
And the third problem is this, okay?
And this is actually a much more, okay?
This is a huge problem, okay?
This idea of a nihilistic religious belief.
What this religious saying is, life doesn't matter.
It's death that matters.
It's death that allows us to be like God, to be eternal.
In order to ensure our assent into godhood, one, we have to be close to the Pharaoh.
We have to be loyal to the Pharaoh, but two, we have to ensure we obtain a lot of wealth in our life.
Okay?
So basically what Egypt was doing during the pyramid economy was taking all its grain, all its resources, and then selling it overseas in order to bring back precious metals that they could put in their graves so that they could take these precious metals, gold, jewelry, into the afterlife with them.
Okay?
So basically, they were just taking all this tremendous wealth of Egypt, almost unlimited wealth of Egypt, and just squandering it, gambling away, basically, and the promise of an eternal afterlife.
And they really didn't care about the here and now.
They didn't care about building a great nation.
They really weren't concerned about ensuring everyone was well-off and prosperous and happy in a nation.
Okay, so you had an elite who was concerned about abusing the power in order to steal as much money as possible in order to ensure a good afterlife
Okay, and this is the three major major reasons why they stop building impairments okay?
One, because it's a question of faith doesn't really work second is the centralization creates
Inquality corruption in waste and third is the religion is the religious of faith doesn't really work
believe can only lead to the corruption of the state and tyranny.
Okay? So I answered those three questions. Any questions before I continue?
Okay? So yeah, that's a great point. Okay? So you actually write that even though they
stop building pyramids, this civilization would go on from the 2000 years. It was still for the majority of that, a very prosperous state.
nation that was basically the hegemon of the Western world okay so this is the
old kingdom that that's that's what they the old kingdom focused on building
the pyramids but then milking them and new kingdom would also have a lot of
glory as well so I don't mean to navigate the society okay I'm just putting out
some logical flaws in the society that will lead to their
because even though the old kingdom will collapse,
the society is very resilient.
So as I said, the old kingdom will be replaced
by the middle kingdom after a large civil war.
Also, they will make changes to society
that will make society much more stable.
And the major change is to take all the centralized powers
of the pharaoh and then devolve it into the priest
and creating a priest to bureaucracy,
which is very much like the Confucian bureaucracy in China.
And they will also start importing new ideas from overseas.
So I apologize if I'm implying that this is the end of Egypt, it's not.
After the O kingdom, after they stopped in the pyramids,
you will have a new flourishing of creativity and innovation in Egypt.
that but but they stopped perceiving the pyramids as the end on beyond beyond whereas and the point
what the point to make is during the old kingdom they did perceive the pyramid as the Manhattan
project okay they really thought if we build this thing then there'll be eternal peace and you can also
make the argument the the Israelites in the bible make fun of make fun of them because
there's the power of the power of babel story right the tower of babel story
where the humans are erronely trying to build a tower up to heaven to be of God, right?
And you can argue that's what the pyramid is.
And God laughs at them and mocks them, and they never succeed,
and then God punishes them by making them speak different languages, okay?
All right?
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
So this is a good question.
question okay what did the Egyptians remember about the great pyramid so
Raradith was running about 400 BC you okay and this about 2,000 years after the
Great Pyramid and Haraldus travels around Egypt and he's a basically
historian he's a journalist who wants to know how they built the great pyramid
and what he discovers is these just don't know not only do they not know but
they don't even know how to rebuild one okay if you
If you're asked the Egyptian in 400 BC,
you build a pyramid, they've lost an expertise.
Okay?
And so, so, so, so, so, so, so, let me elaborate on this.
When I talk about the pyramid economy,
I'm talking about three things.
I'm talking about specialization, right?
Just massive specialization, including how to carve granite,
how to move granite, how to do measurements, okay?
You have specialization going on.
Then you have something called institutionalization.
which is basically creating the memory of this knowledge.
And you do that through, by passing this knowledge to your sons and your grandsons
and to maybe in a guild or workshop, okay?
And then you also have systemization, which is to say
you have to bring all these pieces together.
So the pyramid economy was extremely complex
because you did all three things to happen at the same time,
specialization, institutionalization, and systemization.
and systemization. You can also argue the man who created the system, the period of economy,
his name is Imhotat. And he's revered in Egypt as a divine figure. I mean, he was a
basically grand vizier to the pharaoh. He was royalty, but he was a man. But he was able to contribute
so much to Egypt that they defied him, basically. And you can argue, like, his major conclusion
was in creating this pyramid economy that are all three elements,
specialization, internalization, and systemization.
Because it's actually very hard to put the pieces together.
You need a writing system, you need a financial system,
you need a lot of elements, okay?
I'm making this sound a lot easier than it really is.
So that's the first thing, very complex.
Second thing is, remember for the Egyptian,
and for the pharaoh, the pyramids represented God on Earth, right?
So there has to be mystery and secrecy
around the building of the pyramid, right?
So as I said, what makes the most sense is
for them to build these models around the pyramid
so that these working teams would know where to go at what time, okay?
But after they build the pyramids,
it would make sense for them to destroy our records
in order to maintain a sense of development,
divinity and inspiration right they're trying to create all and fear and inspiration so
they would not want for people to like know how to build the pyramids they would
think this has to be a gift from God from the Pharaoh okay does that make sense okay
but that's a great question thanks okay any more questions before I move on
that's a great question where was the mummy of the Pharaoh okay so
So in this theory, you have to understand what matters is at the pyramid.
What matters is the body, the pharaoh, right?
Because it's a pharaoh's body that's sacred in the vine.
So if it's sacred in the vine, then you need a priesthood, a cult of the pharaoh,
to secure and take care of the body.
Okay?
Does that make sense?
So in other words, there have to be a team taking care of the pharaoh's body, the mummy.
and they have to ensure, first and foremost, it's safety, okay?
So the Great Pyramid was part of a complex, called the Giza Complex.
So there are actually two other pyramids.
And then around the pyramids are these tombs of people who worked for the pharaoh,
but who were not divine, okay?
And you can make the argument, what they're trying to do is create a constellation, right?
Because when you look at the sky, stars don't travel by themselves.
They travel in constellations.
So it makes sense for the son and the grandson to be buried alongside curfew, but as lesser diaries, as lesser pyramids, to show the issue of people the harmony, balance, and order of the system.
Okay?
And what's great about the system is it ensures loyalty of people working for the Pharaoh because you're loyal, you're granted a tomb.
around the pharaoh which guarantees your ascension into the eternal afterlife so you
could be eternally with the pharaoh okay so this is a system of morality
basically so this is fine because there's lots of protections for the pharaoh
right he's surrounded by many different systems but when the system was
breaking down it was clear that Egypt was
breaking the Civil War, then the cult of the Pharaoh
had a responsibility to take the body
and place it somewhere that no one could find it.
Because again, what matters in this system
is at the pyramid, what matters is the body.
The body is what gives the pyramid's energy and power.
So they have to protect the body by body at all costs.
So the reason why we can't find the body is
they made sure we cannot find the body, right?
because the body is the mechanism, the portal by which the pharaoh will resurrect himself.
If we have that, then we control the pharaoh.
We control God.
Does that make sense?
So they must have a secret caves or places where they put these bodies,
and the purpose is to ensure they can never be found.
Okay, so great question. Thank you.
Any more questions before I finish the class?
Okay.
So what's inside the pyramid?
So first of all, the parents have been around
for about 45 hundred years.
And tomb rating was a huge problem, right?
So what was actually in the pyramids,
we can't be sure about, right?
Because of time, because of tomb rating, okay?
We didn't find that much inside the pyramid.
pyramid, okay? There were no pictures, artwork, there were very few hieroglyphics inside the Great Pyramid.
There are hieroglyphics and paintings and other pyramids, okay? But inside the Great Pyramid, we haven't found that much.
Which I think gives even more credence to my theory that this was meant to be a temple of worship.
And this is also why people believe it's a tomb, because there's so few artwork.
If it was, if it were a temple instead, you would imagine there would be a lot of artwork.
Okay, any more questions before I finish the class?
Are you guys clear so far?
All right, so I want to finish the class with a different question, which is, why is it,
like my interpretation is so radically different from the mainstream academic interpretation?
And I want to propose the way that our minds work today are radically different from the way that the minds of the minds of the
of people like the Egyptians worked, okay, for three reasons.
Today, the Egyptian people had a pre-literate mind.
They also had a pre-science mind,
also pre-capitalistic.
So let me explain.
Pre-literate is very simple.
It just means they didn't read and write.
They just spoke.
And we are taught the literate mind
is more powerful than the oral mind.
But that's not true, okay?
If you think about it, the oral mind works through imagination.
The oral mind is capable of tremendous memory,
because back then, in order to do anything,
they have to memorize a lot of information.
Now we can just go online, right?
So their minds, even though were prelituate,
they were much more imaginative than we are.
today and their memories were stronger that's why they were able to build a
great pyramid because everyone was able to memorize the model and figure out his
or her place inside the structure they were also able to imagine in their heads
the great pyramid remember Homer and Virgil the way that children learn
Homer and Virgil is by memorizing them okay and you can do that there are
people today who memorize the Quran and who memorize the Torah okay it takes some
time but you're able to do that so back then they were able to build the
pyramid because they were able to visualize the pyramid in their minds and you
can do that with a pre-literate mind okay second is the idea of pre-science so
in today's world we science is our God okay so in
In school, you're taught the scientific method, which is basically you collect information,
then you synthesize it, then you write your thesis.
It's a step-by-step logical process.
But if you're a pre-scivic mind, then where do you get your ideas from?
You get your ideas through divine inspiration, through God, right?
So you can make the argument, like back then, they were capable of these grand ideas that
we're not capable of today because we're locked in by the discipline of science.
The other problem of science is it's very materialistic, meaning we're focused on the here and now.
We're focused on what we can see as opposed to what we feel or what we believe.
Right?
So when we look at the pyramid, we're always about what was built instead of like, what were they feeling when they were building this.
And that's a huge difference.
And the third difference is pre-capitalistic.
Today we do things to make money.
We come to school because we want to get a job,
because we want to make money and they'll buy things.
It's a very utilitarian mindset.
But for most of human history,
most civilizations were not capitalistic.
They were religious.
They were focused on community.
They were focused on what they could contribute
to the betterment of the people.
around them they were concerned about their relationship with God they were
concerned about how to create peace in the world they're asking big questions like
what is good and what is evil what is justice what is fairness what is
justice and so they were much more focused on building a pyramid as a way to
build community and peace and eternity on earth okay so in
In other words, what's interesting is, even though we are much more ten dollars to be advanced,
we're much wealthier than the Egyptians, we don't have the imagination, we don't have the will
to build something like the Great Pyramid again.
And that's why I think, even today, the Great Pyramid captures the imagination of so many
people around the world because it's really beyond our own imagination.
It really shows the limitations of our own imagination.
Okay, that's it.
Any questions?
Okay, let's all be, let's all be intuitive in free science here, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so this begins a Bronze Age, okay?
This is part of the Bronze Age.
Egypt is the greatest civilization of a Bronze Age.
Next class, we'll look at Mesopotamia and the Innes Valley civilization.
So there are three great Bronze Age civilizations, Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Inis Valley.
