A convergence of science and spiritual tradition
Posted: 05 May 2026, 03:11
I read for the first time yesterday, on May 4, 2026, that the Maya people view “history as cyclical rather than linear.”
The source of this observation are the spiritual leaders of the Maya people.
I am very humbled after reading the cyclical rather than linear teaching that past events provide a basis for predicting future fate.
I am humbled because I have suggested in a peer reviewed journal paper that future is a human construct of a moment in space and that the cyclical nature of the moment in space can be used for predicting meteorological variability.
I uncovered this novel idea in the course of studying the impact of climate change on water resources. It was an academic exercise of attributing climate change to natural variability and manmade causes.
Two peer reviewed journal papers, one published in the U.S. and the other published in the U.K., have come out of the academic exercise.
Interested researchers who have the resources to continue this academic exercise may find these peer reviewed journal papers, which are linked below, helpful.
Step toward a Deterministic Solution of the Paradoxical Hydrological Stationarity Problem
Validation of predicted meteorological drought in California using analogous orbital geometries
The source of this observation are the spiritual leaders of the Maya people.
I am very humbled after reading the cyclical rather than linear teaching that past events provide a basis for predicting future fate.
I am humbled because I have suggested in a peer reviewed journal paper that future is a human construct of a moment in space and that the cyclical nature of the moment in space can be used for predicting meteorological variability.
I uncovered this novel idea in the course of studying the impact of climate change on water resources. It was an academic exercise of attributing climate change to natural variability and manmade causes.
Two peer reviewed journal papers, one published in the U.S. and the other published in the U.K., have come out of the academic exercise.
Interested researchers who have the resources to continue this academic exercise may find these peer reviewed journal papers, which are linked below, helpful.
Step toward a Deterministic Solution of the Paradoxical Hydrological Stationarity Problem
Validation of predicted meteorological drought in California using analogous orbital geometries