Sunday, April 27, 2014

When the Hebrews left Egypt " Egypt " was in Canaan

This recent finding in Israel of a Pharaoh's signet ring in Israel is increasing evidence adding to the claim I made in my book Leaving Home ... that the story of how the Jews left Egypt does not jive with modern archaeology and science , but that there must be a different interpretation of the reading than what we were taught in school. http://www.haaretz.com/archaeology/.premium-1.584757 As an artist , I always was perturbed by the fact that if we " see" something we can copy it. If so, why did not the early Hebrews copy the art of Egypt? Unless they were not in that part of Egypt when they left , but rather in the other part -the contested part - " the Land of Canaan part " Looking at signet rings and burial coffins , and coins , it is clear the early Hebrews could not draw a straight line. A straight line is a human invention and not in nature. The Egyptians knew how to draw a straight line. The straight line on Israeli coins only appeared after the Greeks captured Israel. Add to this the fact that there are no findings of the Exodus story in the Sinai or Egypt - that is because the Exodus story might have well happened in Egyptian controlled territory - Canaan and it's large area including the eastern Sinai where Kadesh Barnea is. Crossing the Red Sea might have actually been real- and not the Reed Sea .

Yesterday I gave a talk on long term EEG monitoring in the Neuro ICU for the New England Neurodiagnostic Society. It turns out that a research I did for my master degree in Rambam Medical Center in Haifa Israel was the first case of Density Spectral Array EEG recordings in the prognosis of Coma. Density Spectral Array, Evoked Potentials , and Temperature Rhythms in the Prognosis of Coma Brain Inj. 1993 May-Jun;7(3):191-208. Density spectral array, evoked potentials, and temperature rhythms in the evaluation and prognosis of the comatose patient. Alster J1, Pratt H, Feinsod M. Author information Abstract Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), density spectral array (DSA), EEG, BAEP and circadian temperature rhythm were studied in comatose patients in order to determine level of arousal and appraise the prognostic capability of these combined measures. Subjects were 29 comatose patients in the neurosurgical ICU at the Rambam Medical Center suffering from head trauma, vascular disorders or metastatic growth. Results show that best prognostic capabilities were for DSA, GCS and BAEP, in that order. As a single parameter physiological response to a sound stimulus (increase in EMG, change in EEG frequency and appearance of sharp waves or k-complex) was the single best predictor for outcome, with significant response rates for the good, deficit, vegetative and death outcomes at 83%, 57%, 37% and 18%, respectively. Rectal temperature was analysed for 24 h circadian periodicity. Daily acrophases were found to shift forward or backward on the level of about 2-7 h a day with fluctuations about a stable or unstable mean. The absence of 'free-running rhythms' associated with environmental isolation studies might reflect an ability to respond to environmental Zeitgerbers while unconscious. Temperature oscillations as well as 24 h rhythms were found even in the most severely brain-damaged patients, reflecting the resilience of the circadian oscillators in the brain to trauma. PMID: 8508176 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]