High Tech in ''ancient'' texts - AUTOMATA

 

Automata—mechanical devices that move on their own, often designed to mimic life—appear frequently in ancient texts  such as Egyptian, Roman, Greek, Chinese.
These accounts range from mythical beings forged by gods (most likely AI robots) to technical treatises describing actual mechanical inventions

Egyptian Texts: Inscriptions from the Middle Kingdom (which is far older than they claim)  describe moving statues and miniature mechanical theaters used for religious awe and entertainment.

Homer's Iliad
: The earliest reference describes self-moving golden tripods created by the god Hephaestus that could wheel themselves in and out of the assembly of the gods. Homer also mentions golden handmaidens who were artificial women endowed with reason, voice, and strength.

Talos
:
Mentioned in Apollonius of Rhodes' Argonautica and by Hesiod,
Talos was a giant bronze robot powered by "ichor" (the blood of the gods) that patrolled the coast of Crete.

Hero of Alexandria: His book
Peri automatopoietikes
(
On Automaton-Making
) is a technical manual detailing how to build programmable mechanical theaters, automatic wine fountains, and singing birds powered by steam, water, and weights.


Archytas of Tarentum
:
Recorded by Aulus Gellius in Attic Nights, Archytas is credited with building a wooden dove that could fly using compressed air or steam


The Liezi
(Chinese): This Taoist text describes an artificer named Yan Shi
presenting King Mu of Zhou (10th century BC) with a lifelike mechanical man. The King was so convinced it was human that he became jealous when the automaton winked at his concubines, forcing Yan Shi
to dismantle it to show its gears and organs.

Buddhist Legends (Lokapannatti
): Indian texts recount an army of automata (guardians) built with "smuggled Greek knowledge" to protect the relics of the Buddha until they were eventually dismantled by the Emperor Ashoka.


Mahabharata & Ramayana
: These epics contain references to "synthetic swans," animated servants, and flying chariots



 

 

 

High Tech in ''ancient'' texts

Homer’s epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey (composed around the 8th century BC according to ''official data'' that is false), contain some of the earliest literary descriptions of automata—self-moving machines or artificial beings.

 AI, robots, automatic doors (Egypt had them), flying crafts, video conferencing (the ''magic mirror), etc. 

The evidence exists, it is consistently dismissed as ''myth'' (Ironically, MYTH is from MAT = Truth). 

HOM ER is from Hom + Re = Capricorn conjunct Orion/Gemini. 

AUTOMATA = ATI MAT = Star Spica conjunct MAT = ORION (Gemini is conjunct MAT, the WORD (mot in  some Romance languages). 

Spica is now at Libra 24. 

MAT/MATRIA is technically from Gemini 0 to 24 (See Dendera zodiac entries)

So Libra 24 conjunct a range from 0 to 24(or 30) Gemini.  Over 120 degrees of precession ago.

However, the name HOMER indicates that this tech existed 12,800 years ago. And yes, it did, because the pyramids were built with high tech c. 27.000 years ago. Plato, Aristotle, Hesiod and many others wrote about high tech.

And guess who tried to steal all the credit and claims he invented anything?  Ptah = Hephaistos = Freyr = Lucifer. 

Look up ''AUTOMATA in ancient texts''






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