Astronomy
Overview
- Astronomy is the study of the stars, planets and other non terrestrial objects visible in the sky day and night. There are varying degrees of philosophical understandings of the phenomena.
The Slave at the Wheel
Every devout Waejiran knows the story of the slave at the wheel.
The Goddess Vorsha known to have a grand library containing all secrets and knowledge. A trove of information which she jealously guards, choosing when and to whom to dispense new discoveries or uncover a forgotten secret. Baileia, the goddess of travellers, roads and paths, lamented that the treahni who worshipped her had to struggle on foot and horseback on their long journeys. To fix the problem she tricked the god of the seasons, Qeisar, into stealing a bit of knowledge from Vorsha's library, something that could help the struggling travellers. Qeisar returned with the secret of the wheel, which was used to create conveyances, allowing the treahni to move at greater speeds, and carry larger burdens.
Naturally the theft was discovered, and the guilty party was punished. With a sense of irony the god Qeisar was yoked to a great ox-mill, upon which the sun rests. His eternal plodding in a circle turns the sun slowly on its pedestal, and as the colder backside swings to face Entorais the winters comes with shorter days and cold, and again in the spring as the sun revolves further, the warmer side again comes to face the world, bringing warmer and longer days.
- Dustias Qeisarus, Priest of Qeisar
- Mythological Viewpoint
- Qeisar is seen as a lesser deity, the god of the seasons, for all their intricacies, are often overlooked or misunderstood by many. Occasionally he stumbles and we receive unseasonable weather, but he is not be allowed to take a break. The wheel must turn. Of course Qeisar is unhappy with his lot, but he has accepted and will endure his punishment for the deed. The gods are fickle creatures and one day Vorsha may show mercy upon Qeisar, and punish the true instigator of the theft, but it hasn't happened yet.
Dance of the Rings
The planets are each suspended on invisible rings, like a single stone set upon a band of precious metal. The rings are all concentric, surrounding the sun, like the rings of a tree stump. The smaller rings spin much faster than the larger ones, due to the shorter circumference. As they spin the rings wobble, like a coins slowing down after being made to spin on a table. This up and down motion of the wobble accounts for the perceived changes in the height of the sun during the different seasons.
All this can be observed over time using fixed points of observation and keeping good records of the position of the sun, and other planets throughout the year.
- Bastaan Dar Ming, Third cousin, twice removed, of Alaric Dar Ming, the Khur of Iskander
- Astronomical Viewpoint
- This model of the movement of the planets, and the seasonal variance on our world was developed over time by many curious minds who took to observing the movements and changes. It was first put forth in a coherent argument by the philosopher Pozim Saulem, of Quzonia, in 254 YG. Explanations of the universe which are not direct actions of the Gods are seen as heretical by most religious types, but what they fail to understand is that explaining the mechanism by which the universe works is not a denial the hand of the Goddess in the design or operation of such. Some religions, and their followers, are more open minded than others.