If we could only unlock poor Photoshop skills to demonstrate the imaginary Incan power of two suns.
I’m reminded of a quote from an old Tom Scott video. He’s visiting a modern reconstruction of a Neolithic long barrow. Tom points out that the sun lines up with the entrance on the summer solstice, then it cuts to the owner who says
I think a lot of people would assume that getting the alignments of a monument like this… would involve complex calculations, a sharp pencil, and computing power. But in fact, you can do it just as easily by getting up at the right time with some sticks.
terrifying precision
Wait until this person gets a load of the Michelson-Morley experiment in the 1880s to measure the speed of light in all directions, opening the door for Einstein to formulate Special and General Relativity.
Let alone what they’re doing now with entangled laser photons, beam-splitting crystals and mirrors that fluctuate in attoseconds.
Or what they’re doing with non-entangled lasers and mirrors to detect gravitational waves in the very fabric of space-time, ripples one thousand times smaller than the width of a single proton.
Now that’s terrifying precision right there. Although I’d prefer to use the term exquisite, I’d even go so far as calling it a miracle of science and engineering.
This is so frustrating because yeah, it’s impressive how advanced the architecture and construction are in many ancient sites. And it’s entirely possible that the Inca believed that the sunlight on a specific day had special power. But the ability to make a building a certain way doesn’t mean they were right about the sunlight, any more than Notre Dame makes the Christian god real.
THIS IS NOT SOME WHIMSICAL NOTION!