If you thought the current Pandemic today is stirring up our daily lives into chaos. Just wait until you will know the theory of the Mayan Calendar which is also known as the “Armaggedon” calendar!
Speaking of the world ending this week, the Covid-19 crisis and global economic standstill are killing the planet. If that doesn’t sound much to you, then the world ending because of the Mayan Calendar prediction will shock you.
In 2012, we might able to recall the end of the world theory. It started when some folks calculated the Mayan Calendar ending. Those were crazy times, and to think that the world is speculated to end this week, amidst the current Pandemic, is even more insane.
Paolo Tagaloguin, a master’s student in Plant Sciences, made a conspiracy theory on Twitter. The Mayan calendar’s reading was [seemed] wrong; and the doomsday will happen sometime this week.
He said that while following the Julian Calendar, we were still in 2012. According to him, “The number of days shift into the Gregorian Calendar is 11 days, so for 268 years using the Gregorian Calendar (1752-2020) multiplied by 11 days, we get 2,948 days. If we convert it, 2,948/365 days per year is equivalent to 8 years.”
To sum it up for you, if he were right, then the doomsday would happen this week. Also, Phil Plait, an astronomer, backed-up this claim, which makes it even more intriguing.
Well, it’s not reasonable to assume that something can’t happen in the future because it didn’t happen in the past. Furthermore, there are plenty of reasons to believe that the Mayans were never really trying to tell us that the world is going to end because it could mean that it’s an end of a cycle, not the world. It’s just like when we try to replace our calendars after December and replace it with a new one.
But with modern-day math conversions, it could mean differently, especially for hard conspiracy theorists.
While this is somehow intriguing for the public, he immediately deleted his Tweet after it got so much attention. The reason for this is that he thought it’d be a great pun to add up from his other tweet. He even called it a “joke,” while saying that there’s no truth behind those words, which is why he deleted it.
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