Showing posts with label rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rock. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Baby You're a Firework

Patriot is from Middle French patriot, from Late Latin patriota, from Greek patriotes "fellow countryman [i.e., people residing within the same *father*land], from patrios "of one's fathers, patris "fatherland", from pater (genitive patros) "father".

People often show their patriotism by flying brightly colorful flags.

    Various Flying Flags, unites-states-flag.com

The flags or standards represent families, tribes and peoples. They may indicate a person's fatherland. In ancient Egypt the hieroglyph which was a flag on a pole was ntrneternetjernetter, meaning "divine", and the netjer were the gods, the divine ones (who stand tall, are bright, free, and finely woven together like flags). They were the ones who resided in the land of the dead, the  Duat/Tuat, i.e., the "afterworld," or netherworld (neterworld).

    ntr hieroglyph

parrot is a brightly colored flyer as well. The word parrot is thought to perhaps come from Middle French perrot, a variant of Pierre "Peter". The name Peter means "a rock, stone", which has connotations of being a secure foundation.
The LORD is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer, my God, my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold. Psalms 18:2
We call God our Father. But what is a father? A father is a begetter of his children. Our Father in this sense is our creator. Father is from Old English faeder, from Proto-Germanic *fader (Old Saxon fadarDutch vader [Darth Vader was Luke's father, but this is pronounced more like "father"], Old High German fater, German vater)from PIE *pǝter- (Sandskrit pitar, Greek pater, Latin pater, Old Persian pita). 

So this would remind us of ancient Egyptian god, Ptah ptḥ (Pee-tah), one of the netjeru (divine ones). Ptah was a creator (begetter) god of ancient Egypt. Here Ptah is shown finely arrayed in a feathered tunic, or we might say, phainopepla φαϊνοπέπλα "shinning robe" in Greek, like a parrot or Phainopepla ("shining robe," a passerine bird, i.e., from the order Passeriformes, from Latin passer "sparrow"). Feather is from PIE *pet-ra-, from root *pet- (also *petǝ-) "to rush, fly." Ptah is a pet-ra(feather) god, or perhaps we could say pet "flying/rushing" + ra "mouth/word; spell"[ancient Egyptian], he who conceived of creation in his heart and spoke it from his mouth. 

Ptah is a father god who is associated with the winged god of the dawning sun, i.e., Khepra and also the primordial mound (i.e., the rock [petra in Greek, keph in Aramaic]), as Ptah-Tatenen (ta meaning "land / earth" in Egyptian) who came out of Nun; the primordial waters.

   Feathered Ptah with Earth / Dome Looking Cap(Keph), from Tomb of Tutankhamun, Gilded wood, faience and glass., 1321-1343 BC, 18th Dynasty, Valley of the Kings

Ptah is also similar in concept to the god Khnum/Chnum who was also associated with Tatanen, and were both thought to be aspects of Ra, the sun god. Khnum is thought to be from root khnum ḫnm "to join, unite" and "build." Khnum was the divine potter (pater?) who was commonly depicted as a ram or a man with a ram's head. So Khnum also had a hard rocklike head (kephalé in Greek) like Ptah (Pee-tah, Peter = rock). Khnum was also associated with the "ba of Ra/Re". The ba was a part of the soul often depicted as a human headed bird near a mummy (not unlike a parrot), and ba was also the word for "ram". Khnum was the ram (ba) of Ra who helped him travel through the underworld each night on his Solar Bark. 

    The Sun God Ra as Khnum-Ra traveling on the Solar Bark[with paddles], from the House of Eternity of King Seti I, KV17, West Uaset, Diospolis Megale-Thebes 

Jacob, a.k.a. Israel, the patriarch, gave his favorite son, Joseph, a kethoneth (coat, garment, tunic) passim (literally the flat of the hand[palm] or foot[sole]), which can be translated in many ways, but in any case was some sort of long-sleeved (it reaches to the palm) ornate tunic of fine quality (maybe even befitting of a god, or like the shining bird robe, i.e., passer "sparrow" phainapepla "shining robe" of Ptah). When the father gave his son this "coat of many colors" it made Joseph's half bothers extremely jealous.

 
      The Coat of Many Colors, For Madox Brown, 1867

The flats(flaps?) of the hands and feet are extremities of the body like wingsKanoph is "edge, extremity, wing" in Hebrew, but can also describe a corner or loose flowing end of a garment. It was also used to describe the appearance of the "wings" of cherubim and seraphim. So perhaps special garments such as the kethoneth passim (coat of many colors) were meant to emulate the beautiful otherworldly appearance of heavenly beings such as angels and the netjer "divine".

    The Palm or Flat(Flap, Wing) of the Hand, by Julie O. /chthonickore, the palm tells the whole truth/story of the body.
For upon his long robe the whole world was depicted… Wisdom of Solomon 18:24
Patriarch is from Greek patriarkhes "chief or head of family," from patria "family, clan," from pater "father" + arkhien "to rule"(arkhon "ruler," Latin archon), from PIE *arkhein- "to begin, rule, command." The patriarch is the strong protector and guide of the family, maybe a patrician, from Latin patricius "nobleman," the origin of the name Patrick

A nickname for Patrick is Paddy. Paddy is a lot like "paddle" and paddles/oars are used for power, direction, and protection of a boat (or bark, as above with Chnum[canoe?]) 

    Carlisle Paddle, Scout Canoe Paddle, North Shore Water Sports 

The bark (boat) is made curved like an arch in a bow/arc shape (and rocks back and forth like a rocking chair / rocker with have arc shaped bases) Arc is from Latin arcus "bow, arch", from PIE *arku- "bowed, curved" (same root as Old English earh, Old Norse or) So maybe like the primordial mound; the curved vault of the sky "air"[father sky] and the curved surface of the land/earth [mother earth]which is our (b)ark or ark (Old English earc) though space. The bark is primarily a place of refuge upon the waters. In Latin arca is "large box, chest", and that which is within the arca is arcanus "secret hidden, private, concealed," from arcere "close up, enclose, contain, from PIE *ark- " to hold, contain, guard"(cognate Greek arkos "defense," arkein "to ward off"). 

We might also say patriarch is "father (formost, first, primary) + ark." Arkhe is "rule, beginning" in Greek, and arch-  in English is "chief, principle"(as in archangel, archbishop, archenemy), a Latinized from the Greek prefix arkh-, arkhi, "first, chief, primeval." So a patriarch would be the first first, like Tatenen, the primordial earth, in this sense.

Staves are held by rulers and patriarchs as sign of their power.

Fireworks pack a lot of punch. They are the oldest form of rockets. Rockets look like a type of staff or javelin. Rockets are missiles, from Latin missilis "that may be thrown or hurled", from missus "a throwing, hurling." Late Latin missa, mass, "dismissal". 

   Coloring page, ActivityVillage.co.uk 

Rocket is from Itallian rocchetto "a rocket", literally a "bobbin", diminutive of rocca "distaff(Old High German rocko "distaf," old Norse rokkr, Proto-Germanic *rukkon-, from PIE *rug- "fabric, spun yarn".

    Lace bobbin Dutch c. 17th century(reproductions), from ilaria.veltri.tripod.com

racket or raquet is a "handled paddle," from Middle French rachette, requette "racket for hitting; palm of the hand." Rackets have a woven patterned hitting surface.


    Badminton Rackets(which look like paddles or even insect wings), c.1900, from the strong.org

Ratchet is from French rochet "bobbin, spindle." Wooden ratchets actually look like the netjer(divine, god) hieroglyph, or a flag. They make quite a racket as noise makers.


    Rosewood Ratchet, called from larkinam.com

A distaff, also called a rock, is a tool used in spinning, it is from Old English distaef (Middle Low Getman dise, Low German disse "a bunch of flax" [so it is a flaxstaff]) Disstaff is also used to describe the female side of the family, female authority in a family, and the female sex. So here again(as with mother earth our rock and rocker in space), rock is used to describe the feminine rather than the masculine.

    Russian Distaffs, Ferapontov Monestary, Wikimedia, 2009

Bedizen means "to dress, finely adorn" originally dizen "to dress (a distaff) for spinning", but maybe also finely adorn the distaff (as above) before it is dressed in its flax(linen). Linen is "cloth woven from flax". 

Flask is a "container, bottle", Germanic base *fleh-, corresponding to PIE *plek- "weave, plait." Latin plicare "to fold," which is the same root as flax. A flask actually looks like the shape of the Russian distaffs or a paddle.

   Whiskey Flask, Kentucky Historical Society, c.1865

Other distaffs have more of a staff, traditional scepter, or javelin shape to them, rather than paddle/oar shape.

  The Virgin And Child with a Cross-shapped Disstaff [and spindle], Luis de Morales, St.Petersberg 

   Tip of a Freestanding Hasndcarved Disstaff(like a traditional scepter), knitspot.com

    La Rochelle, Spinner with spindle and (bedizen) distaf, William-Adolfe Bougeuereou, 1825-1905

It just goes to show that women are equally arch creators(begetters) and protectors of their families. Think of Callisto the mama bear / bear-mother of the Archadians and her son Arcus, who now reside in the night sky as the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor. Women are generally the ones who do the work of spinning and weaving throughout history. Don't mess with the ladies. Ladies rock!


    Women, non bedizen, jousting with bedizen distaffs, Bibliotheque Arsenal, Li queste del S. Graal, French manuscript, 1381

In the Egyptian and Greek mythologies goddesses associated with weaving were also war goddesses, namely Neith (Nit) and Athena. It is not surprising then that many instruments of war are modeled and named after spinning and weaving instruments.


    Wooden kherep scepter(with broken staff), Petrie Museum

This is an ancient Egyptian kherep / rp-scepter. It looks like a type of distaff. The hieroglyph with the same shape was used for three different types of scepters that were similar in appearance, the kherep / rp-scepter, aba-scepter and the sekhem / sm-scepter. According to some the kherep-scepter was "the controller," the aba-scepter "the commander," and the sekhem-scepter "the powerful." As a hieroglyph it expressed "power." Perhaps these types of Egyptian scepters were also based off of weaving instruments like distaffs, paddles, and bows. 


    Sekhem Scepter is like a shinny Oar. Or/Ore/Owr in Hebrew is "shine, light, enlighten, become light, dawn", as in, "Let there be light(or)". In English ore is "a metal-bering mineral or rock".

The shape of the rp might be representative of the bow shape of a vibrating harp string that produces a tone that has "control" over people's emotions. The aba scepter maybe like the powerful palm / hand / wing of an abba "father" who "commands," and the sekhem may be like the powerful energy produced from a vibrating plate made out of metal (ore). That kind of vibration can be a very penetrating energy and feel almost electric.

Osiris was called "The Great Sekhem." He had the power of regeneration and was Lord over death and resurrection. What would it feel like to come in contact with that kind of energy?

A woman who had had a flow of blood for twelve years and had spent all her living on upon physicians and could not be healed by anyone, came up behind him, and touched the fringe of his garment; and immediately her flow of blood ceased. And Jesus said, "Who was it that touched me?" When all denied it, Peter said, "Master the multitudes surround you and press upon you!" But Jesus said, "Some one touched me; for I perceive that the power (dynamin) has gone forth from me." Luke 8:43-46
Dynomite! 

    Sekhmet in hieroglyphics-  S(sekhem scepter) + kh / ḫ (round sieve; placenta + (bread loaf, feminine gender indication)+ Seated Goddess

Sekhmet/Sekhmet/Sakhmet/Sekhet/Sakhet (like a power socket?) was the lion headed warrior goddess of Upper Egypt closely associated with the Eye of Ra (Wadjet, the royal cobra [like the seraphim]). One of her symbols was red (desher in Egyptian, the color associated with the desert) linen, and she was sometimes called nesert "the flame," "Lady of flame."

    I've Got the Power, photo by Julie O. /chthonickore

What is this that Lego Cleopatra is holding? It is an iPhone charger or power chord, however it looks a lot like the sekhem-scepter "the powerful." Power can  be frightening when it is being used against you, but it is comforting when it is used for good, or working for you. Most of the power on earth comes from the sun (Ra / Re). The rays of the sun are taken in by plants and converted(spun into) to energy. Sekhmet was also a goddess of healing, medicine(made from plants) and menstruation, and was wife of the creator god Ptah, the rock, and that would make her rock-et, wouldn't it? So maybe that would make their baby a firework. 

Nefertem ("beautiful"+ tem) was the offspring of Sekhment and Ptah, he represented the blue lotus at the creation of the world, which we might call the Big Bang. Charge!

    Nefertem with Egyptian Lotus/Lilly Crown(flowers are clothed with petals[paddles, wings])
Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they neither toil nor spin; yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. Matthew 6:28-29
Fireworks usually make beautiful flowerlike shapes when they go off in the sky and they are a popular way of celebrating patriotism on Independence Day, the 4th of July, as well as flying flags.

    4th of July Fireworks, by Tom Schopper- flickr.com

Fireworks explode in the sky (pt in ancient Egyptian) when the wick is put to a flame (nesert). The h in Ptah/pth is the wick hieroglyph. Wicks are made out of twisted, woven, or braided fibers such as flax

Ptah- p(stool[i.e., a raised mat] or mat[woven]) + t(loaf of bread)+ h(wick)+ seated god

Here again the baby of Ptah (sky + wick) and Sekhert (flame) would be the firework. Fireworks shimmer and fade like standards of the night sky. Fireworks stand out during the night like waving billowing flags do during the day. A flag is also made out of woven cloth like a mat (p hieroglyph). So maybe that square shaped mat of Ptah is like a flag "square piece cut from turf or sod", i.e., a (woven material, fabric, woven flax, linen) + ta "land, earth", or a flag rock, flagstone "a flat square piece of rock," and flying flags are symbols for the fatherland (Ptah), a flag (turf) is a piece of the fatherland, and is the place of one's lineage (the line is made from the flax that is woven into linen). One's lineage can be shown through the types of material and clothes they wear.

    Linen Cloth

It is interesting that nes is "banner, standard, ensign, signal, flag, pole" in biblical Hebrew and nsr / neser  is "flame" in Egyptian hieroglyphic writing.

Dictionary of Middle Egyptian, by Paul Dickson [n + s + r brazier hieroglyph determinative]

A waving banner has the look of a flickering flame on a candle(wick). The flag / banner hieroglyph means "divine," and God told Moses to put a seraph on a nes Numbers 21:8 to cure the sickness of the Israelites when they were bit by "fiery serpents" in the desert. Moses made a bronze serpent and put it on a nes "pole" and the people were cured when they looked upon it. This would seem to undoubtedly be some sort of Sekhmet, who was called "Lady of Flame" nbt nsrt and "Eye of Ra" irt ra / Wadjet(the divine fiery serpent) ritual. Kind of strange to think; coming from a patriarch. God told Moses to make the fiery serpent on the pole(Goddess Sekhmet/Wadjet) to heal the people, but he had gotten supper pissed off when Aaron made a golden calf(the Goddess Hathor) for them to worship when they asked him to because they were worried that Moses was delayed on the mountain Exodus 32. When Moses came down he burned it up, grounded it into power, put it on the water and made the people drink it. One has to feel a little bit of sympathy for the poor idolatrous Israelites. 

    Adoration of the Golden Calf, by Nicolas Poussin, 1594-1665

Idolatry is not necessarily as clear cut as it may seem. It is more a state of mind than a certain action, as are many sins. The bronze serpent ended up having to be destroyed as well, because the people were worshiping it too 2 Kings 18:4  Idolatry is a sneaky subtle(like a snake) trap. However, people want to point the finger and say, "There! That is an idol(clear cut) and therefore those people who 'worship' it are idolaters." But really an idol is simply a God who is idle(not vital), and an idolater is someone who is happy to worship an idle(lifeless) God. In other words, you have no real relationship with that God. It is a fiction / imagination and is one sided between you and your worthless god who is really no god(power). That God does not preform or do anything, not like the God of Elijah who set Elijah's sacrifice ablaze notwithstanding the three measures of water poured over it. Elijah's God was not an idol. He proved that, but it took great  faith on the part of Elijah. Elijah trusted that his God would prove himself not idle(not an idol).

    Elijah with his altar to YHWH(the LORD), and the Four hundred and fifty devoted(notice how they cut themselves) prophets of Ba'al(the Lord), 1 Kings 18:20-40
And you call on the name of your god and I will call on the name of YHWH; and the God who answers by fire, he is God . . .  1 Kings 18:24
We don't see many folk with that kind of patriotism these days. But those Old Testament stories are just "idol" tales in any case, aren't they? Why should we take it to heart? We are rational! And what is rational happens to be, "my side (God/father/flag) is right (not idolatrous), and your side (God/father/flag) is wrong (idoloty)".

Wanna fight? Ready, aim, fire … um, no I don't want to fight. The battle can be with words and ideas, and it can be a friendly sport rather than a war. Let's just watch the fireworks instead. We can discuss differences over beer and hotdogs.




Saturday, May 10, 2014

You're My Everything

   eXtreme Deep Field, 10 yrs. of NASA Hubble Spactelescope photographs from a patch of sky at the center of the origional Hubble Ultra Deep Field(an area about 1/10 the angular diameter of the moon as viewed from Earth), released Sept. 25, 2012 

Our visible universe is a sphere with a diameter of approximately 92 billion light years. Just that part, what is visible, is awesomely huge. Because of the enormity of this space it is easy to snuggle down in the middle and not have to think about the nature of the reality we are a part of. Regardless of how unfathomably gigantic the universe is, the question remains, "What is just beyond the edge of the universe? What happens at the end?"

   Truman Show, 1998, Truman at the Edge of his World

Wouldn't there have to be a boundary? How could it be possible for the physical universe to be infinite? Is there a wall there? Is the universe an enormous dome? an egg? or a torus? What if you got to the edge and you found a stairway that led to a door? What would be on the other side of that door? It is easy to get caught up in the distractions of everyday life and not conscider the ultimate questions. Contemplating the boundaries of space is like contemplating death. Someday you will die, but it's not now… it is in the enigmatic future. Someday you will reach the edge of the universe as well, if you travel there in your mind, and you will have to walk up those stairs and see what is on the other side of that door… and there is no turning back.

     Flammarion Wood Engraving, artist unknown, first published 1888

Universal is from Latin universalis "of or belonging to all," from universus "all together, whole, entire." The noun usage universum "all things, everybody, all people, the whole world" is where we get the word universe, it is from unus "one" + versum "turned", said to be, literally "turned into one."  This explanation, however, is a bit perplexing. We say that the universe is everything there is. It is all space and matter(at least on this plane of reality) existing as a whole. And the sense of being universal is to be one. So where does this notion of turning fit into the word? In other words why did the Latin universum come to mean "all things, everybody, all people, the whole world" in the first place? Why not just uni-totum "all one" or something like that?

We might think universe to be more like one + verse, "verse" as in, "writing arranged in a a rhythmic pattern." The Word was spoken and the universe came into being along with its order and laws of nature. Not only does versus in Latin have the meaning of "turn toward or against," a form of vertere "to turn, turn back, be turned, convert, transform, translate, be changed", from PIE *wer-(2) "to turn, bend," versus also has the meaning of "a turn of the plow, a line, row, line of verse" as a noun. So couldn't we say the universe is the one verse? Maybe the hymn of the creator? But what does this "verse" have to do with turning either? A verse is a row of poetry, like a plowed line in a field. The soil is turned and it is then ready to take seed and produce growth. The thing about verse is that it seeks to produce more than what is simply written down. It is meant to be fertile ground for the reader or hearer of the poetry to grow the fruit of emotion and experience which the writer of the verse hopes to share.


    A Child's Garden of Verses, by Robert Louis Stevenson 1969 edition

When I was sick and lay a-bed,
I had two pillows at my head,
And all my toys beside me lay,
To keep me happy all the day.

And sometimes for an hour or so
I watched my leaden soldiers go,
With different uniforms and drills,
Among the bed-clothes, through the hills;

And sometimes sent my ships in fleets
All up and down among the sheets;
Or brought my trees and houses out,
And planted cities all about.

I was the giant great and still
That sits upon the pillow-hill,
And sees before him, dale and plain,
The pleasant land of counterpane.


This word "verse" is connected to words for growth, as in, anniversary which has the meaning of an annual return, the literal spinning/turning of a cycle, and birthdays(a year of growth). Vertex and vertical are from vertere as wellProduce is grown in rows(verses), their growth is often vertical and they are green, or vert / verte in French. Vert is Old French "foliage, greenery," from Latin viridis. Spring, the time of spiraling growth, begins at the time of the vernal equinox. So the turning has to do with cycles and growth. But what of the meaning "versus", as in us vs. them? And the word advert "turn away"? In Latin versus has the meaning of "turn toward or against." 

When the ground is turned isn't it a violence to the ground? However, this adversity is what makes it fertile. Turning is change and change can be perceived as good or bad, i.e. as a growth upward like a plant, or an encounter with a foe which can create heroes, or victors in a match. Often it is the opponent who motivates a person to grow their talents and get better.

    David and Goliath, Edgar Degas, c. 1863, Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge, UK

This brings us back to the "turned"(versum) in universe. What was the ancient notion of this one(unum) thing which they saw as the dome of the night sky? Everything in the heavens appeared as if it were revolving around them. 

Turning has the sense of creating, as in the turning of clay upon the potters wheel to make a pot(which is green until it is fired). Pushing against the clay, i.e., hand vs. clay, on the lathe causes the growth of the pot. Maybe the universe was thought to be one thing, as in one fashioned thing, like a pot that is turned on a wheel. When the clay is being turned(being formed on a wheel) and thus turned into a pot, it grows up vertically and out with the motion. Maybe the universe is "one  turned" in this sense, it is one vessel or pot, we might say a uni-vas/vassa "container, vessel".

The Uni-vase 


Here is a depiction of the ancient Egyptian gods(neteru) IsisNut and Nun from the Valley of the Kings. Above the heads of the gods are their hieroglyphic representations / names. 

    Isis, Nut, and Nun from the House of Eternity, Valley of the Kings, reign of Seti I- Ramses II, 1290-1213 BC

The first on the crown of Isis(iSt) is st  meaning "seat, throne, place, abode, tomb, room." On the head of Nut is a nu "pot" with "bread loaf"(feminine gender indication) and the platform indicating pt "sky". So Nut is nu + t + pt(not pronounced in her name), nevertheless this would make her Nut, Pot (of the sky) visually, and she is in fact the womb or vessel(pot) from which Ra, the sun, was reborn each morning from the platform of the pt "sky." The last figure is Nun/Nu, his hieroglyph is three nu's "pots" on a pt. The tripling is meant to indicate many, and nu was "pot", as in, a container of the waters. His name sometimes has the hieroglyph for "waters" with it as well which is also made of a triplet of three horizontal wavy lines(the wavy line "water" indicating the letter "N" in hieroglyphs as well). 

"Nun" = nu nu nu + [ pt + n n n

So he is the many waters, Nu nu nu. Maybe even the big no no no, being too big to contemplate.

Nu / Nun was the ancient Egyptian god/concept of the primordial waters or abyss from which the first land appeared. Nun was what continued outside of the bounds of the created universe, but was also present in the water upon the Earth. Nun is sometimes depicted as a frog or a man with a frog head, as one of the Ogdoad ("the Eightfold" Gk.) of Khmun(Hermopolis), four male gods(depicted as frogs during the Late Kingdom) and four female gods(depicted as snakes), Nu and Nunet(the primordial waters), Amun and Amunet(air or invisibility, hidden one), Kek and Kekut(darkness [the primordial darkness/chaos, also related to transitions between light and dark, called "bringer-in-of-the-light"), and Ḥeḥ and Hehet(infinite space, infinity, eternity. These were the forces from which creation arose.

The sun rises from the mound of creation at the beginning of time. The central circle represents the mound, and the three orange circles are the sun(ra') at different stages of its rising. At the top is the "horizon" hieroglyph with the sun appearing atop it. At either side are the goddesses of the north(Neith?, right) and south(Anuket?, left), pouring out the waters that surround the mound. The eight stick figures are the gods of the Ogdoad, hoeing the soil(turning verses). - 21st Dynasty, c.1075-945 BC, from the Book of the Dead Khensumose 
In the beginning neteru created the heavens and the earth. Ḥeḥ was without form and void, and Kek was upon the face of NunAmun was moving over the face of Nun. 
And Seker cried out, "ḥ'r wr!(Horus the Great [Light])"; and there was the first great light of dawn. 
Genesis 1:1-3 [my own trans-concept translation] - the first day / revolution / turn
Turn is from Old English turnian "to rotate revolve," also Old French torner "turn away or around; transform, change; turn on a lathe, both from Latin tornare "polish, round, turn on a lathe," from tornus "lathe", Greek tornos "lathe". When certain matter is turned it is made into something through revolution and applied pressure. 

Nun was sometimes combined with the god Ptah whose name means "create", patron of craftsman, as Ptah-Nun, father of the sun god Atum Ra. In this passage, the heavens, i.e., the dome of the universe, is described as Ptah's potter's wheel, i.e., his turn(versus) table, or tornos.
The Potter's wheel is the wheel of the revolving heavens; and Ptah is addressed in a form which agrees very well with the idea that the perpetual gyration of the wheel generates all things: "O God, Architect of the World, thou art without mother, being born through repetition of thyself." -Creation Records Discovered in Egypt [Studies in the Book of the Dead], by George St. Clair, 1898, ch. VIII, pg. 116
The one-versum(turned), i.e., universe seems to be Nut, the one pot(nu) of water, or womb which turns about the heavens, the space of creation, from out of Nun, and it was believed that one day creation would return back to Nun, the watery chaos.

Back to none?

None is from Old English nan "not one, not any," from ne "not"+ an "one", analogous to Latin non "not, by no means, not at all, not a", from Old Latin noenum "not one".

So maybe we could call Nun, Mr. "no one", or Mr. Nobody. But Nobody is not necessarlily inconsequential, as the Cyclops, Polyphemus, can attest to.  

    Odysseus Blinding Polyphemus, Italian, early 16th century
Then in his turn from out the cave big Polyphemus answered: Friends, Nobody is murdering me by craft. Force there is none. But answering him in winged words they said: If nobody harms you when you are left alone, illness which comes from mighty Zeus you cannot fly. But make your prayer to your father, Lord Poseidon. OdysseyBook 9, ln. 455
Odysseus, passing himself off as Nobody, put out the eye of the cyclops "circle-eyed" and escapes imprisonment in the cave with his remaining men. Put is from Old English related to pytan "put out, thrust out," from a Germanic stem(related to Old Norse pota "to poke"). Pytan "put out," is perhaps like Ptah-ing[like a potter]. When a potter creates a pot[a pota, a thing poked?] he does poke and push out the clay. Ptah is the potter or poker of the pt "sky".

Poseidon, the father of Polyphemus, is god of the sea, not unlike Nun, therefore, watery and enigmatic, a Mr. Nobody, known as "Earth-shaker". Poseidon is from Poseidaon/Poseidewanos in Mycenaean, and in Aeolic is Potaidaon, Doric Poteidon/Poteidaon/Poteidas, said to be perhaps from PIE *potis "husband, lord". The second element is debated as to whether or not it is related to the word for "earth" da in Doric, from of ge(meaning "earth" as in Gaia), or from Doric dawon "water", as in either "Husband/Lord of the Earth" or "Lord of the Water". This combination of earth and water is a bit like the combination of the two Egyptians gods Ptah and Nun. Perhaps there is a bit of truth in both. Ptah-Nun/Potaidaon the divine potter of the waters of the universe.
[This is also in concept like the Sumerian god called Enki "Lord of Earth" / in Akkadian called, Ea "House of Water," god of crafts, fresh water, seawater, wisdom. As opposed to the a Sumerian, Enlil "Lord of Wind"(like the Egyptian Amun), and the Sumerian, An "sky", like the Greek Uranus/Ouranus, personification of the sky.]


   Horses of NeptuneWalter Crane, 1893

Poseidon was also known as Poseidon Hippiosthe god of horses. As a horse he pursued Demeter Δημήτηρ / Damater [Doric] Δαμάτηρ (possibly from da "earth"+ metēr "mother"). She turned herself into a mare and tried to conceal herself in a heard of horses, however, Poseidon turned into a stallion and raped her. Demeter bore Desponia ("Lady / Mistress of the House") and the swift immortal horse Arion.

Neptune is the Roman counterpart of Poseidon. Neptune is said to be probably from PIE *nebh- "cloud", related to Latin nebula "mist, vapor, fog, smoke," Greek nephele, nephos "cloud." Neptune was also associate with horses under the name of Neptunus Equester.



    Horsehead Nebula, DownUnder Observatory, Freemont, MI., by Terry Hankock

So Neptune is the nebh "cloud/mist of heaven"+ tune. The "tune" of the nebula forms stars and produces the music of the spheres. Tune is a variant of "tone", from Latin tonus "a sound, tone, acent", literally stretching, as in stretching, tightening, making a string taught, related to teinein "to stretch". When the right tuning occurs, solar systems and worlds are formed. So maybe it is not a stretch to connect this teinein with the Egyptian god Ta-tenen "risen land", the primordial mound, the rock(petros), that "streached" out of Nun. Ta-Tanen is combined with Ptah(Pee-tah/"Peter") in the Old Kingdom(c.2649-2150 BC) as Ptah-Tatenen. So if we substitute this Ptah "create" for tune, this would make Neptah out of Neptune. 

In Norse mythology the spring Hvergelmir "roaring kettle / bubbling boiling spring" is the source of the eleven rivers and was the origin of the causes of creation. 
This seems to be similar in concept to Nun(primordial waters of the universe). Its forces flowed south from Niflheim (from nifil "mist," cognate with Gk. nephele "cloud" heim "home", similar to the abode of Neptune and Poseidon) to Ginnungagap "mighty gap" called the Yawning Void. Ginnungagap was the vast primordial void prior to the creation of the manifest universe. Ymir, the first proto-giant came to be from the interaction between the nebulous realm of primordial cold, ice, and fog to the North, Niflheim, and the realm of fire to the South, Muspellheim, in this mighty gap. 

Audhumla, the gigantic cow, uncovered the first man, Buri, in this void by licking the salty stones around Ginnungagap. Ymir was nourished by Audhumla, and in the Poetic Edda it states that the world was eventually made from the body of Ymir. 
From Ymer's flesh, in the dawning of time, was made
The earth, and from his blood the raging sea,
The rocks from his bones, and from his hair 
the trees, and plants; his skull became the vaulted heaven;
And Midgard, from his fringed lids, the gods
Kindly have fashioned for the sons of men;
And from his brain, the clouds that dress the sky
Of Summer, or dart their lightnings in the storm,
Their first substance had. - The Song of Grimner, C.P. 1851

    18th Century Icelandic Manuscript, Danish Royal Library- Adhumla licks the salty stones around Ginnungagap and Buri emerges.

Nut is also sometimes portrayed as a great cow of the sky, as well as in her other forms(a sycamore tree, starry sky lady, sow). Hathor was commonly portrayed in the form of a cow. Nut and Hathor personified the appearance of the Milky Way in ancient Egypt.  
She[Hathor] was originally a personification of the Milky Way, which was considered to be the milk that flowed from the udders of a heavenly cow (linking her with Nut, Bat and Mehet-Weret). Hathor, Ancient Egypt Online
Nut, Nwt means "[night]sky" and Hathor, wt hr, "House of Horus"(the abode of the ḥr.w "sky"; "one who is above / Falcon" god, Horus). So they are similar aspects of the same archetype.

This gives some context to the term, galaxy, which is from Late Latin galaxias "Milky Way," from Greek galaxies kiklos "milky circle", from gala(galaktos genitive) "milk". 



    The Milky Way, from The Center for Planetary Science, Photo from NGC.

Cosmos is the Latinized form of the Greek kosmos meaning "order, good order, orderly arrangement." Pythagoras was first to use it for "the universe." Kosmos does have a secondary meaning of "ornaments on a woman's dress, decoration" like the starry mantle of Nut perhaps. We might say someone is "put together," kosmos, when they dress in a fine clothes and have their hair done(kosmokomes "dressing the hair") and all is in good order and neat arrangement.

    Our Lady of Guadalupe looking stellar in her Cosmic Cloak, 1531

Kosmein had the meaning "to dispose, prepare", especially with the meaning of "order and arrange(troops for battle), to set (an army) in array". God is one who orders(kosmein) the CosmosThey are not a random bunch of gasses and rocks strewn around the universe. 
Lift up your eyes on high and see: who created these? He who brings out their host(army) by number; calling them all by name; by the greatness of his might, and because he is strong in power not one is missing. Isaiah 40:26
Why would one be "missing" unless they were in a particular order for a particular purpose? And why would the stars be named unless they had a particular purpose and nature?

The saying, "You look stellar," takes on new meaning. The universe is cosmic. Like the most intricate amazing arrangement to produce life and variety while still being ordered to a good end.


    A Cosmic Looking Image of a Border Feature Inside the Mandelbrot Set, by Binette228, Wikimedia

We imagine that here on Earth we stand on solid ground and the great oceans are supported by the land. And so it is the case in a sense. But actually our precious Earth is just a giant starship in the fathomless ocean of space. The vastness of space, time and existence can be scary to contemplate. We might feel as if we will get lost or swallowed up. However, we can take comfort in the fact that no matter how far we travel either in or out, the cosmos is well ordered and we will be at home in it. Let's not be afraid to explore. Engage!


You're Everything.