
The Great Pyramid has been the subject of many outlandish claims and theories for centuries. The Great Pyramid has been associated with pyramid power, curses, Atlantis, Mexican pyramids, Stonehenge, Nazca, the Bermuda Triangle, Biblical prophecy, Martian faces, advanced civilizations, space aliens, cavity resonators, and even levitation. It is not surprising that some who have proposed such theories have been dubbed "pyramidiots".
It is time for a rational explanation of the Great Pyramid--an explanation that relies on nothing extraordinary, technologically advanced, paranormal, supernatural, mystical, psychic, or extraterrestrial.
What did the architect have in mind when he designed the Great Pyramid? The Great Pyramid's aesthetic beauty, its geometrical shape, its complex system of internal features, and the precision of its construction beckon us to search for a design scheme. It seems unlikely that the builders would have undertaken such a "monumental" construction project without a comprehensive plan.
Unfortunately, no records, plans, blueprints, or direct accounts of the Great Pyramid's construction have survived. The Great Pyramid contains no inscriptions or texts, and the name of the architect is unknown. Therefore, we have only the surviving exterior and interior architecture of the Great Pyramid itself from which to make our determination.
Regardless of its purpose, the Great Pyramid's construction obviously must have been directed by at least one intelligent and knowledgeable individual who possessed considerable design, engineering, and construction expertise. The accuracy of its construction leaves no doubt that the Great Pyramid was a brilliant architectural concept engineered to near perfection.
By the nature of his work, the architect was both engineer and artist, so we might expect him to have incorporated some "higher" significance in his life's work.
Our task, therefore, is to discover the original design specifications for
the Great Pyramid and present them in some logical context, thereby
demonstrating these specifications were, in fact, what the architect had in
mind.
Courtesy: http://www.primenet.com/~kjohnson/
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