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More on planetary resonances

🔗Paul H. Erlich <PERLICH@ACADIAN-ASSET.COM>

2/7/2001 1:06:25 PM

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/01/010131074431.htm

🔗jpehrson@rcn.com

2/7/2001 6:22:25 PM

--- In tuning@y..., "Paul H. Erlich" <PERLICH@A...> wrote:

/tuning/topicId_18430.html#18430

> http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/01/010131074431.htm

Actually, this made big news in the New York Times and other
places... The two planets weren't discovered right away, as the
article mentions, since they "covered each other up" to a degree...
or something like that...

________ ____ ____ _
Joseph Pehrson

🔗Alison Monteith <alison.monteith3@which.net>

2/10/2001 12:10:58 PM

"Paul H. Erlich" wrote:

> http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/01/010131074431.htm
>

There's something here that is very medieval in the sense that the study of music in the old
trivium and quadrivium was aimed at understanding the workings of the heavens - music of the
spheres and all that. I am fond of this broadening out of the study of music and of tuning and
would heartily support all the mathematicians on this list for putting science back into the
noblest of arts.