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Who Built the Moon? cover art

Who Built the Moon?

Written by: Christopher Knight, Alan Butler
Narrated by: Shaun Grindell
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Publisher's Summary

The authors of Civilization One return, bringing new evidence about the Moon that will shake up our world.

Christopher Knight and Alan Butler realized that the ancient system of geometry they presented in their earlier breakthrough study works as perfectly for the Moon as it does the Earth. On further investigation, they found a consistent sequence of beautiful integer numbers when looking at every major aspect of the Moon - no such pattern emerges for any other planet or moon in the solar system. In addition, Knight and Butler discovered that the Moon possesses few or no heavy metals and has no core - something that should not be possible.

Their persuasive conclusion: If higher life only developed on Earth because the Moon is exactly what it is and where it is, it becomes unreasonable to cling to the idea that the Moon is a natural object. The only question that remains is, who built it?

©2015 Christopher Knight and Alan Butler (P)2018 Tantor

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    3 out of 5 stars

Who built the builders of the moon? :-)

Interesting book but it is a little bit hard to retain/absorb the information because it contains a lot of numbers and ratios. Overall, it is a good listen/read.

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Lost and found myself

The start motivated to go further. However, the next I could remember is everything but related to what book I am listening to. Middle chapters as unnecessary and I dragged myself as if I have to listen, if not it is a punishable offence. Suddenly 3/4th down the road there is now something interesting.
Overall, I stretched to give a rating of 3. The voice must be definitely changed. I had a hard time understanding the stresses on the words. The variation in pitch was so much that I had to increase the volume 2X to hear the end of the word and sentences. Terrible listening in the car while driving despite top class speakers on high volume. Good experience and some learning, not zero but change in the Reader is a Must.

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  • GC
  • 2021-08-07

Unexpectantly, Very Interesting

Bought this as a "tongue in cheek" sort of book but was very surprised at the information it provided.
I have been a land surveyor for 30 years plus, taught heavily in the field of astronomy, motion of the stars in relation to us and always pondered about the moon and it's size Always said the the size of the moon in the sky being the same size of the sun in the sky would almost appear to be aesthetic, meaning if you were going to build a moon and put it in orbit around earth, how big would you make it appear....same as the sun would be my answer lol
There are many mysteries out there in space, as on earth, too bad the academics have lost their sense of imagination, or more mysterious things would be solved by now, imagination is the key to problem solving, not the perpetual story we all hear in school, and most of what academics believe in is just that, a story in which they all like
If it fits the story, it's in, if it doesn't fit the story, it's out. Has nothing to do with science
Great book, loved it
Thank you for the effort

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