KA: A Handbook of Mythology, Sacred Practices, Electrical Phenomena, and Their Linguistic Connections in the Ancient Mediterranean World
Author: H. Crosthwaite
Introduction by: Alfred de Grazia
Year: c. 1983
Series: Quantavolution & Catastrophe
Local Files
| File | Type | Words | Size |
|---|---|---|---|
../ka.txt | Plain text | ~85,766 | 483 KB |
Source: https://grazian-archive.com/quantavolution/QuantaHTML/plaintext/ka.txt
Synopsis
KA is a comparative mythological handbook written by H. Crosthwaite and published as part of the Quantavolution series with an introduction by Alfred de Grazia. The title refers to the ancient Egyptian concept of the Ka — the vital force or double — but Crosthwaite traces this concept across Mediterranean, Near Eastern, and Indo-European cultures as a convergent term for electrical, plasma, or luminous phenomena associated with the sky.
The book functions as a reference work: each chapter examines a mythological motif, divine name, or sacred practice and traces its electrical or plasma interpretation across multiple cultures. Crosthwaite draws on ancient Greek, Latin, Egyptian, Hebrew, Phoenician, and Sumerian sources to demonstrate that sacred language encoded literal observation of electrical sky events.
It is the most systematic linguistic and mythological reference in the Quantavolution corpus, and an essential companion to de Grazia's A Fire Not Blown.
Key Themes
- The Ka as a cross-cultural electrical/plasma concept
- Sacred names and divine epithets as plasma phenomenon descriptions
- Ritual practices (fire, bull sacrifice, temple architecture) as electrical reenactment
- Lightning, serpent, bull, and wheel symbols as plasma archetypes
- Convergent evidence from unrelated Mediterranean cultures for shared catastrophic sky events
See Also
- Author Index
- A Fire Not Blown — companion linguistic study by de Grazia
- Chaos and Creation — foundational cosmological framework
- Divine Succession — gods as celestial plasma bodies
