In ancient Egypt , when somebody died they went to the underworld after being turned into a mummy in the real world. In the underworld, the person's heart is weighed against an ostrich feather (from the god maat who wears it on her head) and if they are even then you will go to heaven, but if the heart is heavier then the heart will be eaten by the great swallower.
not a person. It's the feather of truth
Ma'at is most commonly associated with, and often symbolized by a feather, specifically the Feather of Truth
The feather generally represents truth and balance. It is most often associated with Ma'at, the goddess. Upon your death, your heart was weighed against a feather. Those who's hearts weighed less than the feather were granted passage to the afterlife. The feather itself is usually tipped down at the top under it's own weight in artistic representations. When in the context of written work, as shorthand, it is not.
The God of the dead was called Anubis, Anubis is the one who put the heart on the scales with the feather of truth.
Weighing of the heart is part of the Egyptian belief in the afterlife. It refers to the judgment of a deceased person's heart against the feather of Ma'at, the goddess of truth and justice. If the heart is found to be lighter than the feather, it means the person lived a virtuous life, and they are allowed to enter the realm of the afterlife. If it is heavier, it suggests a life filled with wrongdoing and the heart is devoured by a demonic creature.
In Egyptian mythology, the goddess Maat wore a feather of truth on her head. This feather of truth was a symbol of justice, as she was the goddess of justice and morality.
not a person. It's the feather of truth
Ma'at is most commonly associated with, and often symbolized by a feather, specifically the Feather of Truth
both white and the feather often symbolize truth. white is a kin to purity and therefor truth and the feather blows away with just a puff of the wind, the idea is that truth is just as fleeting and easily frightened as a feather in the wind. which brings us to another idea the feather may represent and that is the freedom of humans to move between worlds. That representation is namely from wicca but the other two have many suggestions and ties to their meanings in many cultures throughout history.
The feather of truth
Feather
Feathers symbolize lightness, truth, and flight. A purple feather symbolizes deep spirituality, mystic insight, and bring a higher connection to the universe.
They thought your heart was weighed against the feather of truth by Anubis.
The feather generally represents truth and balance. It is most often associated with Ma'at, the goddess. Upon your death, your heart was weighed against a feather. Those who's hearts weighed less than the feather were granted passage to the afterlife. The feather itself is usually tipped down at the top under it's own weight in artistic representations. When in the context of written work, as shorthand, it is not.
Feathers have different meanings to different people. In heraldry a white feather, most commonly an ostrich feather meant willing obedience and serenity. To others it means truth. A grey feather is sometimes used to stabilise a disruptive or disturbed personality. It is also used to slow down reckless persons or situations.
Ammut, the Devourer, was part crocodile, hippo and lion and he ate the heart if it weighed heavier or lighter than the Feather of Truth. There are quite a few ways some resources have spelled his name: Ammut, Ammat, Ammet...
yes you can by taking a lie detector test