How Did the Dogon Allegedly Know About Sirius B?

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In summary: Some people say the Dogon may have known of Sirius B from early European explorers who traveled to their land and incorporated information into their religion. Others say the Dogon's tools depict the star's orbit without explicitly mentioning it, and that the knowledge may have come from sources other than European explorers. It is possible that Egyptian astronomers brought knowledge of Sirius with them when they moved from their more advanced land. Regardless of the source, it is still unclear how the Dogon came to possess such knowledge.
  • #1
phoenix:\\
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Recently I've been reading into ancient knowledge of the solar system, and it led me to the Dogon and the Sirius mystery. From the sparse research I've done, these people knew of the location of Sirius B without (to my knowledge and other researchers) tools for locating such a star. They also built tools that describe the star's orbit pictured below. They incorporate most of this knowledge into their religion. It is claimed, within their religion, their god came down and gave them this knowledge and that it came from that region. I am not particularly speculating on the aspect of a "god" in the sense of immaterial, rather what seems to me to be a depiction of an extraterrestrial being.

I've become increasingly interested in this story as of late and because of that I've been looking into possible debunking theories for their knowledge. From the accounts debunking the Dogon, one of theories is stated as, "they must have heard it from astronomers in the 1800s that traveled to that part of the land and from there, incorporated most of those accounts into their religion". The problem I have with that is, that their tools directly contradict such a notion, Sirius B was discovered in the 1900s, however their tools depicting the orbit were made, what claims to be, hundreds of years before the 1800s.

My question here is, w/out the necessary mathematics to understand this system, is there another way to discover such a star without the utilization of math?

The other question, is it more probable that these ancient people created tools to discover such a star but the tools were lost over the years? It has been noted they moved from Egypt because of a difference in religion. So, I am looking more towards aspects of plausible explanations rather than immediately going for, "extraterrestrial beings".

The tool:

sirius19.gif
 
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  • #2
Before I would have anything to say at all about this, I would wish to verify what exactly the claim is, and verify the ... veracity ... of the claim. (as opposed to a "Some people say..." claim.)
...these people knew of the location of Sirius B...
Who claims they knew the location?
Is it explicit in their scriptures that they are indeed referring to that specific star and a companion, or is it an interpretation? If the latter, who did the interpretation?

...They also built tools that describe the star's orbit pictured below...
Who says what this diagram is meant to describe?
Again, is it explicit in their scriptures that they are indeed referring to that specific star and a companion, and that this is a map of its orbit or is it an interpretation? If the latter, who did the interpretation?

Without answers to those questions, there's nothing yet to base any further speculation on.
 
  • #3
The Egyptian connection is one I'd look into. What do we know about Egyptian astronomy, and could they have brought knowledge of Sirius with them from the, presumably, more mathematically advanced land of Egypt?
 
  • #4
phoenix:\\ said:
My question here is, w/out the necessary mathematics to understand this system, is there another way to discover such a star without the utilization of math?
It would seem some people think so:
Noah Brosch postulates that the Dogon may have had contact with astronomers based in Dogon territory during a five week expedition, led by Henri-Alexandre Deslandres, to study the solar eclipse of April 16, 1893. Robert Todd Carroll also states that a more likely source of the knowledge of the Sirius star system is from contemporary, terrestrial sources who provided information to interested members of the tribes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogon_people#Dogon_and_Sirius
 
  • #6
phoenix:\\ said:
http://chandra.harvard.edu/chronicle/0400/sirius_part2.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogon_people#Dogon_and_Sirius

I more-so would like others to help me analyze their religion and to how this all came to be. But the claim from those studying these people is, "they possessed advanced astronomical knowledge that it took modern technology to catch up to their knowledge". That would be my claim as well from what I do know now.
I think Dave might be right. The wiki article says:

More recently, doubts have been raised about the validity of Griaule and Dieterlein's work.[23][24] In a 1991 article in Current Anthropology anthropologist Walter van Beek concluded after his research among the Dogon that,

"Though they do speak about sigu tolo [which is what Griaule claimed the Dogon called Sirius] they disagree completely with each other as to which star is meant; for some it is an invisible star that should rise to announce the sigu [festival], for another it is Venus that, through a different position, appears as sigu tolo. All agree, however, that they learned about the star from Griaule"[25]

In order to arrive at the "mystery" you have to select, by confirmation bias, a version of the Dogon's tale that is the most mysterious.
 
  • #7
I honestly have a problem with that conclusion as a means of invalidating the Dogon though. Their religious ceremony, "the Sigui", occurs every 60 years, and the basis of the ceremony is taken from the masks they use in conjunction with it. The masks date back far before European astronomers were noted of being within the land.

Source: http://www.mysteriesofsirius.com/downloads/Sudanese_Sirius_System_Griaule_and_Dieterlen.pdf

Also, the disagreeing with the star bit is something that isn't exactly factual as it has been debated that the Dogon more than likely suggest it as an invisible star, so I'd take that with a grain of salt.
 
  • #8
I remember seeing this years ago:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGQMjXOt7Lg

I loved this series when I was ~10. Years later, I happened to catch a rerun and discovered it was just pseudoscience and woo. I died a little that day...
 
  • #9
phoenix:\\ said:
I honestly have a problem with that conclusion as a means of invalidating the Dogon though. Their religious ceremony, "the Sigui", occurs every 60 years, and the basis of the ceremony is taken from the masks they use in conjunction with it. The masks date back far before European astronomers were noted of being within the land.
The religious ceremony had nothing to do with Sirius.

Dogon religion is defined primarily through the worshiping of the ancestors and the spirits whom they encountered as they moved across the Western Sudan. The Awa society is responsible for carrying out the rituals, which allow the deceased to leave the world of the living and enter the world of the dead. Public rites include funerary rites (bago bundo) and the dama ceremony, which marks the end of the mourning period. Awa society members are also responsible for planning the sigui ceremonies, which commence every sixty years to hand on the function of the dead initiates to the new recruits. All of these rites involve masking traditions and are carried out only by initiated males who have learned the techniques needed to impersonate the supernaturals.

http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/dogon.html

Also, the disagreeing with the star bit is something that isn't exactly factual as it has been debated that the Dogon more than likely suggest it as an invisible star, so I'd take that with a grain of salt.
Some background information.

http://www.skepdic.com/dogon.html
 
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  • #10
phoenix:\\ said:
Recently I've been reading into ancient knowledge of the solar system, and it led me to the Dogon and the Sirius mystery. From the sparse research I've done, these people knew of the location of Sirius B without (to my knowledge and other researchers) tools for locating such a star. They also built tools that describe the star's orbit pictured below. They incorporate most of this knowledge into their religion. It is claimed, within their religion, their god came down and gave them this knowledge and that it came from that region. I am not particularly speculating on the aspect of a "god" in the sense of immaterial, rather what seems to me to be a depiction of an extraterrestrial being.

I've become increasingly interested in this story as of late and because of that I've been looking into possible debunking theories for their knowledge. From the accounts debunking the Dogon, one of theories is stated as, "they must have heard it from astronomers in the 1800s that traveled to that part of the land and from there, incorporated most of those accounts into their religion". The problem I have with that is, that their tools directly contradict such a notion, Sirius B was discovered in the 1900s, however their tools depicting the orbit were made, what claims to be, hundreds of years before the 1800s.

My question here is, w/out the necessary mathematics to understand this system, is there another way to discover such a star without the utilization of math?

The other question, is it more probable that these ancient people created tools to discover such a star but the tools were lost over the years? It has been noted they moved from Egypt because of a difference in religion. So, I am looking more towards aspects of plausible explanations rather than immediately going for, "extraterrestrial beings".

The tool:

sirius19.gif

Several decades ago I read a book called 'The Sirius Mystery' by one Robert Temple iirc, on this very subject of the Dogon. It was heavy on the ET influence aspect, etc, and appeared to me at that time, quite fascinating .. quite plausible.

Years later I also read a skeptics view, and I recall the book described as a seminal work of bad archeology.

Anyway, I say, never undersetimate the human potential - past, present and future. If the Dogon did have such knowledge, it could only be through human effort and ingenuity.
 
  • #11
alt said:
Anyway, I say, never undersetimate the human potential - past, present and future. If the Dogon did have such knowledge, it could only be through human effort and ingenuity.

I agree with this sentiment. In fact, Robert Temple himself much more recently wrote a book, The Crystal Sun, which would also agree, and possibly solve his own mystery.

In the Crystal Sun, which I have read, it is demonstrated in photos, measurements and tests of artifacts found in world museums that lenses were crafted by humans going back to at least to the Old Kingdom, far earlier than recognized by archeologists of the day (or since? Dunno.) Solid evidence is supplied that certain well known miniature works could not have been accomplished without the use of lenses. The bold hypothesis is that ancient humans were able to hold two lenses in front of them and discover the telescope effect. Since the telescope would have been used as an advantage in warfare, the enforcement of this technology as secret by ancient princes would be axiomatic.

Respectfully submitted,
Steve
 
  • #12
Dotini said:
I agree with this sentiment. In fact, Robert Temple himself much more recently wrote a book, The Crystal Sun, which would also agree, and possibly solve his own mystery.

In the Crystal Sun, which I have read, it is demonstrated in photos, measurements and tests of artifacts found in world museums that lenses were crafted by humans going back to at least to the Old Kingdom, far earlier than recognized by archeologists of the day (or since? Dunno.) Solid evidence is supplied that certain well known miniature works could not have been accomplished without the use of lenses. The bold hypothesis is that ancient humans were able to hold two lenses in front of them and discover the telescope effect. Since the telescope would have been used as an advantage in warfare, the enforcement of this technology as secret by ancient princes would be axiomatic.

Respectfully submitted,
Steve

Hi Steve;

I've not heard of The Crystal Sun, but a quick search just now, reveals from Temples own site ..

http://www.robert-temple.com/articles/crystalSunFreemansonryToday.html

Technology is forbidden when it is not allowed to exist. It is easy to forbid technology to exist in the past because all you have to do is to deny it. Enforcing the ban then becomes a simple matter of remaining deaf, dumb, and blind. And most of us have no trouble in doing that when necessary.

Well, sounds like book selling sensationalism to me, particularly in light of the fact that as you say, he solves his own mystery created in his earlier book.

But, that notwithstanding, I wouldn't close my mind to the possibility - probability maybe, that ancient folk did know more than what we think they knew .. the Antikythera mechanism being a good example ..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism
 
  • #13
From Evo's link:

Griaule's account may reflect his own interests more than that of the Dogon. He made no secret of the fact that his intention was to redeem African thought. When Walter van Beek studied the Dogon, he found no evidence they knew Sirius was a double star or that Sirius B is extremely dense and has a fifty-year orbit.

Knowledge of the stars is not important either in daily life or in ritual [to the Dogon]. The position of the sun and the phases of the moon are more pertinent for Dogon reckoning. No Dogon outside of the circle of Griaule's informants had ever heard of sigu tolo or po tolo... Most important, no one, even within the circle of Griaule informants, had ever heard or understood that Sirius was a double star (Ortiz de Montellano).*

According to Thomas Bullard, van Beek speculates that Griaule "wished to affirm the complexity of African religions and questioned his informants in such a forceful leading manner that they created new myths by confabulation." Griaule either informed the Dogon of Sirius B or "he misinterpreted their references to other visible stars near Sirius as recognition of the invisible companion" (Bullard).

This sentence: "When Walter van Beek studied the Dogon, he found no evidence they knew Sirius was a double star or that Sirius B is extremely dense and has a fifty-year orbit." kind of explodes the whole thing. Rather than figuring out how they might have acquired this knowledge, it turns out, like Dave said, the first thing to check is whether they actually have this knowledge, and it doesn't seem they do.
 

Related to How Did the Dogon Allegedly Know About Sirius B?

1. What is Sirius B and the Dogon Mystery?

Sirius B is a white dwarf star that orbits the brighter and larger star Sirius, which is also known as the "Dog Star." The Dogon Mystery refers to the belief of the Dogon people of Mali, Africa, that they have knowledge of Sirius B and its orbit, despite the fact that it was not officially discovered by scientists until the mid-19th century.

2. How did the Dogon people supposedly have knowledge of Sirius B?

The Dogon people have a creation myth that includes the knowledge of Sirius B and its orbit around Sirius. It is believed that this knowledge was passed down through oral tradition and was eventually recorded by French anthropologists in the 1930s. However, there is no concrete evidence to support this claim and it is often considered a myth or legend.

3. Is there any scientific evidence to support the Dogon's knowledge of Sirius B?

No, there is no scientific evidence to support the Dogon's knowledge of Sirius B. In fact, the Dogon's knowledge of Sirius B and its orbit is not consistent with current scientific understanding. The Dogon's belief that Sirius B has a 50-year orbit does not match with the actual orbital period of 50.09 years.

4. What are some possible explanations for the Dogon's supposed knowledge of Sirius B?

There are several theories that attempt to explain the Dogon's supposed knowledge of Sirius B. Some suggest that the Dogon may have had contact with ancient civilizations that had advanced astronomical knowledge. Others propose that the Dogon's knowledge may be a result of coincidence, mistranslation, or misinterpretation of their creation myth.

5. What impact did the Dogon Mystery have on the scientific community?

The Dogon Mystery sparked a lot of interest and debate in the scientific community, with some scientists believing that it was evidence of extraterrestrial contact or advanced ancient civilizations. However, the majority of scientists dismiss the Dogon's knowledge of Sirius B as a myth or legend, and do not consider it to have any significant impact on our understanding of the universe.

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