The most likely reason that different groups and religions around the world have stories related to some sort of flood is that floods are natural disasters that occur almost everywhere from time to time and that larger, more damaging and deadly ones are capable of occuring in most places - especially where people make settlements; the only notable exceptions being those who live on mountains and the like. What's more is that - in earlier times before people had the kinds of luxuries we do in regards to safeguards against disasters and for preserving health - it doesn't take that big of a flood to destroy settlements and kill a sizeable amount of people..
I've definitely thought of these things from that angle. I am an atheist who has argued about that kind of stuff for a very long time.
This alignment is purely arbitrary. There is absolutely nothing to indicate that such things can have any impact. The best you can hope for is that a large enough object in space being within a certain distance of another will exert a certain amount of gravity depending on the distance between them.
Simply put - to illustrate the problem with this kind of ridiculousness - we can draw seemingly endless lines through stars, planets, galaxies, etc. and say they're alignments mean something.
that was what I actually said when I had first heard about this, and I had no idea they were talking specifically about the earth, sun, and the center of the galaxy all ligning up. However the astronomical coincedence of the timing of this right along happening at the same time as a solar peak and then again at the same time that the mayan calendar ends just seems so incredibly astronomical. It's like winning the lottery three times in a row.
The thing is that the center of the galaxy is the highest concentration of gravity in the entire galaxy. I'm no physics expert and I doubt any of us hereare, so were kind of left to take "their" word for it, and we know they wouldn't tell us.
The Mayan civilization died out ages ago, unexpectedly.
If they were able to predict a catastrophic event that would destroy the world, why couldn't they predict their own demise?
the two aren't connected. the U.S. government has the ability to calculate cellestial events, but we didn't see Great Recession of 2008, untill 2008. I'm not suggesting the Mayans were prophets or phychic. I was raising the possiblity that they descended from an advanced civilization that was wiped out ages ago. It would take very little technological advancement to know when this allignment would occur. Adcanced computers, mathmeticians, and telescopes. That's it. Humans today already know this alignment will occur. But WE DON'T KNOW WHEN OUR DEMISE WILL BE. Therefore the Mayans being un able to predict their own demise has no bearing or relevance to how signifigant anything else they believed should be regarded.
I'm not saying I believe this. I dismissed it originally as religous superstition. I compared the Mayans to NOstradomus and Pat Robertson who predicted the world would end in 1982. but after getting home from seeing th emovie last night, while channel flipping I saw something talking about solar cycles and we are going to experience a large increase in solar flares that year, which is so incredibly coincedental.
they said it would disrupt satelites, televisions, computers, cell phones, possibly the electrical grid etc. the show had nothing to do with the 2012 prophecy.
That was what got me thinking about the Noah's Ark story. It's almost identical to the movie.
This is just so many coincedences.