Message from @Thuis001
Discord ID: 626712170150756353
Not going to waste time on you.
you dont seem to be taking this seriously
Me?
mhm
Well I genuinly don't understand
and I am trying to
But the theory you're suggesting is very unclear
Where do you think the infinity sign came from?
I can make up a list of stuff I don't understand about it
@Seeker of Truth Snake?
remember you have to be able to think in 2D and 3D
How do you know it's from there?
And not from the snake biting itself
There is always more to the story.
Different symbols can be used to multiple things or the same thing.
All depends on perspective.
Though symbolism isn't really scientific proof if you get what I mean
Perhaps that is a good thing, given how many lies mainstream scientism religion presents to us daily.
orobus symbol (n.)
early 15c., "creed, summary, religious belief," from Late Latin symbolum "creed, token, mark," from Greek symbolon "token, watchword, sign by which one infers; ticket, a permit, licence" (the word was applied c.250 by Cyprian of Carthage to the Apostles' Creed, on the notion of the "mark" that distinguishes Christians from pagans), literally "that which is thrown or cast together," from assimilated form of syn- "together" (see syn-) + bole "a throwing, a casting, the stroke of a missile, bolt, beam," from bol-, nominative stem of ballein "to throw" (from PIE root *gwele- "to throw, reach").
The sense evolution in Greek is from "throwing things together" to "contrasting" to "comparing" to "token used in comparisons to determine if something is genuine." Hence, "outward sign" of something. The meaning "something which stands for something else" first recorded 1590 (in "Faerie Queene"). As a written character, 1610s.
hi
Hi
hi!
the serpent youre mentioning is the orobus
Yea
Though I just googled it and apparently it's a deviation from the green omega
The meaning "something which stands for something else"
>>> The shape of a sideways figure eight has a long pedigree; for instance, it appears in the cross of Saint Boniface, wrapped around the bars of a Latin cross.[1] However, John Wallis is credited with introducing the infinity symbol with its mathematical meaning in 1655, in his De sectionibus conicis.[1][2][3][4] Wallis did not explain his choice of this symbol, but it has been conjectured to be a variant form of a Roman numeral for 1,000 (originally CIƆ, also CƆ), which was sometimes used to mean "many", or of the Greek letter ω (omega), the last letter in the Greek alphabet.[5]
taken from the etymology of the word symbol
It's pretty interesting
Hoewever symbolism isn't really proof tbh
hi
did i call it proof?
Just because emojiis are yellow it doesn't mean that the perfect human being is yellow
i said the orobus you mention is a symbol, and showed the etymology of the word
neither is NASA's Hollywood style trickery and paintings
Alright ok I am an outsider I don't know which one is true
yes, well there's tonnes of proof of fakery
However your theory just does not really sound solid
Test the globe.