Alexandr: Alright. Next question. In mythology, it is also mentioned that the seven days of the week are connected to celestial bodies, as well as to the seven colors of the rainbow. Is that correct?
Mystic-Old-Man: Yes.
Alexandr: The same analogy?
Mystic-Old-Man: Yes.
Alexandr: Alright. Then a question. Could there be more than seven?
Mystic-Old-Man: Well, that depends on the system. In another system – yes.
Alexandr: And in our system?
Mystic-Old-Man: In the defined system that is already established – no.
Alexandr: Alright, then which celestial body in the Solar System corresponds to the day “Sunday”? The Sun?
Mystic-Old-Man: Not necessarily. It could be anything, because they all participate.
Alexandr: Alright, next. Could the celestial bodies in our Solar System be seen as a single celestial body but at different points in time, like in different stages?
Mystic-Old-Man: Well, they all exist in different temporal stages, overlapping.
Alexandr: But essentially, it’s as if they are all the same thing, just at different times? Like, imagine a girl, a woman, a grandmother, right?
Mystic-Old-Man: Of course.
Alexandr: Then which celestial body in the Solar System is the youngest, and which is the oldest?
Mystic-Old-Man: The one that is in the stage of formation is the youngest. This happens when a certain group of meteorite clusters and coinciding objects begin to concentrate in one place, in one zone, rotating – let’s say, around Saturn’s rings – then losing those rings, organizing into a planet, moving beyond, detaching from that planet. It happens differently everywhere.
Alexandr: But do I understand correctly that all of this accumulation of celestial bodies can eventually lead to the formation of a planet?
Mystic-Old-Man: Of course. Saturn’s rings... Saturn is the closest planet where such formation is occurring, and nearby there is also Jupiter.
Alexandr: I see the same analogy in our system, the one we live in, if we compare peoples as systems, and how they, too, eventually form into gods. So, gods can be correlated with planets, meaning celestial bodies. Is that correct?