Home :: Books :: Religion & Spirituality  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality

Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Mayan Prophecies: Unlocking the Secrets of a Lost Civilization

The Mayan Prophecies: Unlocking the Secrets of a Lost Civilization

List Price: $24.95
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting conclusions, poor reading
Review: Eschatology buffs and astronomers will probably find this book interesting. Although I found the conclusions of the book interesting, I thought the author took an extremely long time getting to the point. I found his journey a little boring and wish he would have spent more time explaining the consequences of the main point.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Very dissappointing
Review: It was implied that the earth's magnetic field reversed 3K years BC. This caused Atlantis to sink and new lands to appear. This scenario would make sense. What doesnt make sense is that according to a geographic magazine (scientific fact), the last time the earth's magnetic field reversed was 780,000 years ago. Moreover, its occurrence is random and not in some sequence deciphered by the Mayan calendar. Assuming the Mayan calendar was true, then what would happen in 2012? The facts are that the sunspots activity align with the Mayan calculations. In a period of years before and after 2012, there will be instances of very few or no sunspots occuring. This will effect fertility and weather patterns but mostly in the equator area. Hence, Mexico, India, Southeast Asia, Africa will be affected. The only reason the rest of the world will be affected is due to the side effect of us polluting the world with CO2 from too much cars and waste dumping, thereby melting the polar ice caps. The sunspot event before and after 2012 will just make things worse. So the doomsayers would come out and point to the Mayan prophecy as applicable to the whole world. As you can see if we did not pollute, North America would not be affected.

I give this book 1-star for the first chapter and explanation of the Mayan number system. I dont agree with the chapter about how images came up when Pacal's tomb cover were superimposed. The fact is that one can superimpose any drawing or try even Michaelangelo's fresco's. By careful delineation, one would come up with weird forms as what the author found in Pacal's about a jaguar? a bat?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Mayan prophecies
Review: Starting off I knew nothing of native Central Americans. This book has taught me a lot about the Mayans, Aztecs, Olmecs, and Toltecs. If you have an interest in this subject, I say give the book a try.

The main focus of the book is a prophecy the Mayans made about a worldwide catastrophe that is supposed to come about in 2012, what their basis for this prediction is, and if there's any scientific knowledge to back this prediction up. You may not be a person into end of days predictions, but the book still offers a lot of knowledge about many different aspects of Central America. The book covers things such as how Central American knowledge and beliefs could be tied to the lost continent of Atlantis (why some people think Atlantis existed), how the Aztec and Mayan calendars work, what gods they worshiped, what events they celebrated and feared, their accurate astronomy, ties they could have to Europe, one of the reasons they may have declined, a possibility as to why the serpent is so prevalent in their culture, how the Central American rattlesnake cult could have come about, how sunspot cycles affected the Mayans, how and why sunspots are tied to the Mayan prophecy. Another aspect of the book I liked is the author's willingness to take a serious look a little known archeological theories presented by people that do not have a big name is the field.

The one annoying thing I found in this book is how the authors used this book to point out how some authorities refuse to believe them, or even listen to them. That certain museums and magazines may not be totally scientific and concern themselves only with mainstream ideas that are satisfying to the establishment. Another thing you have to keep in mind is that a lot of this book in theoretical, and thought the ideas may make sense, they may not be reality.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Mayan prophecies
Review: Starting off I knew nothing of native Central Americans. This book has taught me a lot about the Mayans, Aztecs, Olmecs, and Toltecs. If you have an interest in this subject, I say give the book a try.

The main focus of the book is a prophecy the Mayans made about a worldwide catastrophe that is supposed to come about in 2012, what their basis for this prediction is, and if there's any scientific knowledge to back this prediction up. You may not be a person into end of days predictions, but the book still offers a lot of knowledge about many different aspects of Central America. The book covers things such as how Central American knowledge and beliefs could be tied to the lost continent of Atlantis (why some people think Atlantis existed), how the Aztec and Mayan calendars work, what gods they worshiped, what events they celebrated and feared, their accurate astronomy, ties they could have to Europe, one of the reasons they may have declined, a possibility as to why the serpent is so prevalent in their culture, how the Central American rattlesnake cult could have come about, how sunspot cycles affected the Mayans, how and why sunspots are tied to the Mayan prophecy. Another aspect of the book I liked is the author's willingness to take a serious look a little known archeological theories presented by people that do not have a big name is the field.

The one annoying thing I found in this book is how the authors used this book to point out how some authorities refuse to believe them, or even listen to them. That certain museums and magazines may not be totally scientific and concern themselves only with mainstream ideas that are satisfying to the establishment. Another thing you have to keep in mind is that a lot of this book in theoretical, and thought the ideas may make sense, they may not be reality.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: improve your new-age knowledge reading about Mayan
Review: This book is a valuable work in the understanding of the ancient mayan civilization. Gilbert and Cotterell starts from few fragments which weren't destroyed by Spanish "conquests", and give an interpretation about the Stone of Palenque. Goin' trough the outrageous mayan numeric system, and their practical applications like calender and astronomy, this book drives the reader to discover how Mayans was so scientifically and spiritually advanced. Applying mayan timing mode to modern sunspots observations, and the studies about the solar magnetic fields and its interactions with our planet, they give an alternative key to redesign human development, myths and Astrology. The conclusion is outrageous : Mayans knew many things more than we, when they preview that the world we live today it is about to change. This will occur at the end of 2012. If you want to add some ancient wisdom of the Mayans to your knowledge, don't hesitate to read this book. -Peace and love to everyone -

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Nonsense
Review: This book is about coincidences. The authors notice a similarity between certain large numbers in the Maya calendar cycle and their own astrological theories about sunspot cycles. The numbers don't match, but from this "coincidence" the authors conclude that the Maya warned of a cosmic disaster for the year 2012.

The book could have stopped there, but instead it digresses into a sort of personal log of the authors' visits to Mexico, then revisits old material on transatlantic contact, Atlantis mythology, Edgar Cayce, Velikovsky, and other nonsense. Some of the historical material about Mexico is interesting and well written, but is clearly taken from other sources.

Some of the claims are bizarre, such as that the crystal "skull of doom" was used as a magnifying glass in a fire ceremony. Or that the "loops" on the Palenque sarcophagus represent magnetic field lines on the sun, something the Maya couldn't possibly have known about.

The authors' contempt for those with other points of view is annoying. The book that derides Von Daniken, astrologists, and professional archaeologists all at the same time.

The sloppiness about numbers is also annoying, especially since their entire case rests on numbers. The authors cite a "remarkable correlation" between the dates given for the great flood by Plato (9500 B.C), Cayce (10,500 B.C.), and the Maya (11,205 B.C.) These dates differ by over 1700 years, a variation of 15% relative to the present day. Considering that one of the authors claims to be an engineer and a scientist, this is inexcusable.

The Maya civilization is a fascinating and impressive one, and no doubt there is much wisdom we have yet to learn from them. You won't find it in this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Stirs the curiosity
Review: This well written, very readable book is the most compelling I have read on the mythology and religion of the Maya. I'm not much into mathematics or arithmetic but found the ideas very interesting, especially as related to nature (the cross motif from the skin of the rattlesnake and the sun-spot cycles). Not everything here is new, Von Daniken already popularised some of these concepts two decades ago - but it is cohesively presented in the right context with a wealth of figures, maps, and the most beautiful colour plates. Ties in with the work of Graham Hancock and Robert Bauval.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: WELL WRITTEN, BEAUTIFUL BOOK
Review: This well written, very readable book is the most compelling I have read on the mythology, religion and what is known of the history of the Maya. I'm not much into mathematics or arithmetic but found the ideas very interesting, especially as related to nature (the cross motif from the skin of the rattlesnake and the sun-spot cycles). Not everything here is new, Von Daniken already popularised some of these concepts two decades ago - but it is cohesively presented in the right context with a wealth of figures, maps, and the most beautiful colour plates. It makes a worthy contribution to the terrain that Graham Hancock, Robert Bauval etc, are bringing to light. Extensive appendices, a glossary, bibliography and index ensure this will remain a valuable reference work for years to come. As for 2012, I don't believe in scaremongering (many books claimed that Nostradamus predicted a world war for 1999) so I am content to believe that date will signal a change (improvement) in consciousness.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Title somewhat misleading
Review: When seeing the title of the book for the first time, I expected something a little broader in focus than just the end of the present world age. As far as the prophecies go, everything seems to revolve around this "end of the world" scenario. Having said that, I found the book fascinating and the discriptions of the authors' travels of discovery interesting. Having come to this book via Graham Hancock's writings, the whole picture, I think, would be disturbing, at least.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Quantum Leap in the understanding of the Mayan Mythology
Review: Without question there are unknowns regarding the origins, spirituality and disappearance of the Mayan civlilization. What record thereof not destroyed by Spanish conquerers has mostly been locked away from public evaluation by fear-ridden western scholars, still clinging to the Christian based perspective that the Mayans, as well as other spiritually advanced civilizations, were simply barbaric. In The Mayan Prophecies, Gilbert and Cotterell use what I would call anthropological probability theory to synthesize the tremendous amount of abstract information to decode the complex Mayan cosmology. Did the Mayans communicate with the Gods? Did the entire civilization die or simply transcend dimensions? Did they leave behind a message to inform us "blinded ones" us of the dawn of a new age? While remaining relatively objective, Gilbert and Cotterrell, apply recent scientific discoveries in astrogenetics and sunspot cycles with ancient myths and astrology, to! ! draw the reader to several possible answers to these questions. Although scientifically inconclusive, these speculations indicate a very strong probability that the Mayans knew something that we don't, and that the world as we know it is about to change. If you are at all interested in applying the ancient wisdom of the Mayans to your data-base of knowledge concerning the new-age energetic (or if you just want to read a cool book) I would highly recommend The Mayan Prophecies. --Peace and love to those on the search --


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates