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   THE SCULPTURE OF VIBRATIONS 1971   
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            | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | I |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | R |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 8 | 9 |  |  |  |  | 5 | 6 |  |  |  | 1 |  |  |  |  | 6 |  | 8 | + | = |  | 4+3 | = |  | = |  | = |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 8 | 9 |  |  |  |  | 14 | 15 |  |  |  | 19 |  |  |  |  | 24 |  | 26 | + | = |  | 1+1+5 | = |  | = |  | = |  |  
            | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | I |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | R |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |  |  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |  |  | 7 | 8 | 9 |  | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |  | 7 |  | + | = |  | 8+3 | = |  | 1+1 |  | = |  |  
            |  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |  |  | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 |  |  | 16 | 17 | 18 |  | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 |  | 25 |  | + | = |  | 2+3+6 | = |  | 1+1 |  | = |  |  
            | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | I |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | R |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | + | = |  | 3+5+1 | = |  | = |  | = |  |  
            |  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | + | = |  | 1+2+6 | = |  | = |  | = |  |  
            | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | R |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  | 1 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 1 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 1 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 2 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 2 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 2 |  |  |  |  |  |  | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 3 |  |  |  |  |  | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 4 |  |  |  |  | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  | 1+2 |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | 5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 5 |  |  |  | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  | 1+5 |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  | 6 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 6 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 6 |  |  | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  | 1+8 |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 7 |  | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  | 2+1 |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 8 | + | = |  | occurs | x | 3 | = |  | 2+4 |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 9 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + | = |  | occurs | x | 2 | = |  | 1+8 |  |  
            | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | I |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | R |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 4+5 |  |  | 2+6 |  | 1+2+6 |  | 5+4 |  
            | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | I |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | R |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | I |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | R |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |      
   
   
 
 
   
 
 
 
     
     
    
 
    
   
   
   A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z = 351 = Z Y X W V U T S R Q P O N M L K J I H G F E D C B A A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z = 126 = Z Y X W V U T S R Q P O N M L K J I H G F E D C B A A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z = 9 = Z Y X W V U T S R Q P O N M L K J I H G F E D C B A     ABCDEFGH I JKLMNOPQ R STUVWXYZ = 351 = ZYXWVUTS R QPONMLKJ I HGFEDCBA ABCDEFGH I JKLMNOPQ R STUVWXYZ = 126 = ZYXWVUTS R QPONMLKJ I HGFEDCBA ABCDEFGH I JKLMNOPQ R STUVWXYZ = 9 = ZYXWVUTS R QPONMLKJ I HGFEDCBA   
   
          
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 5 |  | 18 | 18 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 2 |  | 35 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 3 |  | 25 | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 4 |  | 5 |  | 76 | 22 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 4 |  | 48 | 21 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 6 |  | 55 | 28 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 2 |  | 2 |  | 27 | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 9 |  
            |  |  |  |  | 10 |  | 133 | 61 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 10 |  | 121 | 49 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 9 |  | 2 |  | 23 | 14 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 1 |  | 9 |  | 65 | 29 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | First Total  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 3+5 |  | 5+8 | Add to Reduce  | 9+9+5 | 2+6+6 | 5+9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 1+4 |  | 1+8 |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Second Total  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  | 1+3 | Reduce to Deduce  | 2+3 | 1+4 | 1+4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |      
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
   THE MAGIKALALPHABET   
          
            | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I |  
            | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |  
            |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = | = |  
            |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = | = |  
            | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R |  
            | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 |  
            | 1+0 | 1+1 | 1+2 | 1+3 | 1+4 | 1+5 | 1+6 | 1+7 | 1+8 |  
            | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |  
            |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = | = |  
            |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = |  = | = |  
            | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | I |  
            | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 9 |  
            | 1+9 | 2+0 | 2+1 | 2+2 | 2+3 | 2+4 | 2+5 | 2+6 | ME |  
            | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |  
            | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |  
            | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |  
            | = | ME | I | ME | I | ME | I | ME | 1 |  
            | 9 | 18 | 9 | 18 | 9 | 18 | 9 | 18 | 9 |  
            | = | 1+8 | = | 1+8 | = | 1+8 | = | 1+8 | = |  
            | = | 9 | = | 9 | = | 9 | = | 9 | = |  
            | I | ME | I | ME | I | ME | I | ME | 1 |  
            | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
            | I | ME | I | ME | I | ME | I | ME | 1 |      
          
            | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |  
            | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |  
            | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1+0 | 1+1 | 1+2 | 1+3 | 1+4 | 1+5 | 1+6 | 1+7 | 1+8 | 1+9 | 2+0 | 2+1 | 2+2 | 2+3 | 2+4 | 2+5 | 2+6 |  
            | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |  
            | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |  
            | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |  
            | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |  
            | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |  
            | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |      
   The Day the Earth Stood Still - Episode Guide - All 4 - Channel 4
 www.channel4.com › programmes › episode-guide
 (2008) Remake of the 1950s sci-fi classic.March 31st 2020
 Google resultsThe Day the Earth Stood Still
 About 9,990,000 results (0.42 seconds)
 14/FEBRUARY/ 2016
 11:09
    The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008) - Memorable quotes www.imdb.com/title/tt0970416/quotes Klaatu gives Helen a chance by going with her to see her friend, Professor Barnhardt (John Cleese) The Professor tries to reason with Klaatu, saying that all civilizations only change when they're at the precipice of a crisis. He says human will change, now that they are really at the edge of destruction.   
          
            |   YOU SAY WE'RE ON THE BRINK OF DESTRUCTION AND YOU'RE RIGHT. BUT IT IS ONLY ON THE BRINK THAT PEOPLE FIND THE WILL TO CHANGE. ONLY AT THE PRECIPICE DO WE EVOLVE. THIS IS OUR MOMENT DON'T TAKE IT FROM US   "You say we're on the brink of destruction and you're right. But it's only on the brink that people find the will to change. Only at the precipice do we evolve. This is our moment.  Don't take it from us, we are close to an answer".   |    "You say we're on the brink of destruction and you're right. But it's only on the brink that people find the will to change. Only at the precipice do we evolve. This is our moment. Don't take it from us,   
          
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            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 1 | 3 |  | 61 | 16 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 2 | 3 |  | 45 | 18 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 3 | 4 |  | 51 | 24 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 4 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 5 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 6 | 5 |  | 54 | 27 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 7 | 2 |  | 21 | 12 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 8 | 11 |  | 148 | 49 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 9 | 2 |  | 19 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 10 | 7 |  | 84 | 30 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 11 | 3 |  | 62 | 35 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 12 | 3 |  | 43 | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 13 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 14 | 2 |  | 28 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 15 | 4 |  | 66 | 21 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 16 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 17 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 18 | 5 |  | 54 | 27 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 19 | 4 |  | 49 | 13 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 20 | 6 |  | 69 | 33 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 21 | 4 |  | 33 | 24 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 22 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 23 | 4 |  | 56 | 20 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 24 | 2 |  | 35 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 25 | 6 |  | 38 | 29 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 26 | 4 |  | 66 | 21 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 27 | 2 |  | 21 | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 28 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 29 | 9 |  | 84 | 57 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 30 | 2 |  | 19 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 31 | 2 |  | 28 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 32 | 2 |  | 81 | 27 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 33 | 4 |  | 56 | 20 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 34 | 2 |  | 28 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 35 | 3 |  | 54 | 18 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 36 | 6 |  | 80 | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 37 | 4 |  | 53 | 17 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 38 | 4 |  | 37 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 39 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 40 | 4 |  | 52 | 25 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 41 | 2 |  | 40 | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | First Total  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 1+8+8 |  | 1+6+0 | Add to Reduce  | 1+9+6+3 | 7+7+5 | 1+9+0 |  |  | 1+4 | 1+8 | 1+2 |  | 4+2 | 2+1 | 3+2 | 4+5 |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Second Total  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 1+7 |  |  | Reduce to Deduce | 1+9 | 1+9 | 1+9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Third Total |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+0 | 1+0 | 1+0 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |    "You say we're on the brink of destruction and you're right. But it's only on the brink that people find the will to change. Only at the precipice do we evolve. This is our moment. Don't take it from us, we are close to an answer".     YOU SAY WE'RE ON THE BRINK OF DESTRUCTION AND YOU'RE RIGHT. BUT IT IS ONLY ON THE BRINK THAT PEOPLE FIND THE WILL TO CHANGE. ONLY AT THE PRECIPICE DO WE EVOLVE. THIS IS OUR MOMENT DON'T TAKE IT FROM US   
          
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            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 9 | 2 |  | 19 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 14 | 2 |  | 28 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 30 | 2 |  | 19 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 31 | 2 |  | 28 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 34 | 2 |  | 28 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 38 | 4 |  | 37 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 4 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 13 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 16 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 23 | 4 |  | 56 | 20 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 25 | 6 |  | 38 | 29 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 33 | 4 |  | 56 | 20 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 39 | 2 |  | 29 | 11 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 7 | 2 |  | 21 | 12 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 10 | 7 |  | 84 | 30 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 15 | 4 |  | 66 | 21 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 26 | 4 |  | 66 | 21 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 27 | 2 |  | 21 | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 29 | 9 |  | 84 | 57 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 8 | 11 |  | 148 | 49 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 19 | 4 |  | 49 | 13 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 41 | 2 |  | 40 | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 3 | 4 |  | 51 | 24 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 5 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 17 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 20 | 6 |  | 69 | 33 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 21 | 4 |  | 33 | 24 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 22 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 28 | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 1 | 3 |  | 61 | 16 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 12 | 3 |  | 43 | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 40 | 4 |  | 52 | 25 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 11 | 3 |  | 62 | 35 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 24 | 2 |  | 35 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 36 | 6 |  | 80 | 26 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 37 | 4 |  | 53 | 17 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 2 | 3 |  | 45 | 18 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 6 | 5 |  | 54 | 27 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 18 | 5 |  | 54 | 27 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 32 | 2 |  | 81 | 27 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  | 35 | 3 |  | 54 | 18 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | First Total  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 1+8+8 |  | 1+6+0 | Add to Reduce  | 1+9+6+3 | 7+7+5 | 1+9+0 |  |  | 1+4 | 1+8 | 1+2 |  | 4+2 | 2+1 | 3+2 | 4+5 |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Second Total  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  | 1+7 |  |  | Reduce to Deduce | 1+9 | 1+9 | 1+9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Third Total |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+0 | 1+0 | 1+0 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
            |  |  |  |  |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |    "You say we're on the brink of destruction and you're right. But it's only on the brink that people find the will to change. Only at the precipice do we evolve. This is our moment. Don't take it from us, we are close to an answer".     IT'S ONLY ON THE BRINK THAT PEOPLE FIND THE WILL TO CHANGE ONLY AT THE PRECIPICE DO WE EVOLVE THIS IS OUR MOMENT DON'T TAKE IT FROM US WE ARE CLOSE TO AN ANSWER   "You say we're on the brink of destruction and you're right. But it's only on the brink that people find the will to change. http://www.973-eht-namuh-973.com/Alchemy/ADVENT%202031.htm http://www.973-eht-namuh-973.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=16019   
                    
           THE PEARLY GATES 
            OF CYBERSPACE
           Margaret Wertheim          
           1          
           999          
           HYPERSPACE.
           Page 187 (number omitted)
           Chapter Five
           Clearly. . . any real body must have extension 
            in four dimensions: it must have Length, Breadth, Thickness, and Duration. 
            But through a natural infirmity of the flesh, which I will explain 
            to you in a moment, we incline to overlook this fact. There are really 
            four dimensions, three which we call the three planes of Space, and 
            a fourth, Time.l
           Not unreasonably, one might imagine this encapsulation 
            of the idea of four-dimensional spacetime to be a quote from Einstein. 
            Yet it is not from any physicist; it was written in 1895, fully a 
            decade before the first paper on special relativity, by the science 
            fiction writer H. G. Wells. The statement is from the opening pages 
            of Wells' classic novel, The Time Machine, wherein the hero of the 
            story explains to his friends the concept of the fourth dimension 
            and the possibility of time travel. At a time when Einstein was still 
            at school dreaming about riding on light beams, Wells in his fiction 
            was already exploring the consequences of a fourth / Page 
            188 /  dimension. In addition to The Time Machine, 
              characters in The Wonderful Visit, "The Plattner Story," 
              and "The Remarkable Case of Davidson's Eyes" all venture into a mysterious extra dimension, there 
              to encounter phenomena impossible in the everyday space of our experience.Wells was by no means alone among late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century 
            writers in his invocation of other dimensions. "The list of prominent 
            figures" interested in the subject in-cludes Fyodor Dostoevsky, 
            who referred to higher dimensions in The Brothers Karamazov; 
            Joseph Conrad and Ford Madox Ford, whose novel The-Inheritors focused 
            on a cruel race from the fourth dimension; and Oscar Wilde, who made 
            this dimension the butt of his wit in The Canterville Ghost. 2
 Artists too were inspired by the notion of a "higher" 
                    dimension. Long before relativity filtered into public consciousness, 
                    Cubist theoretical writings abounded with references to a fourth dimension, as did the writing of the Russian Futurists. Marcel Duchamp, Kasimir 
            Malevich, and the American painter Max Weber-to name just a few-all 
            went through periods of intense interest in higher dimensional space. 
            So did the composers Aieksandr Scriabin and George Antheil. The fourth 
            dimension also provided impetus to philosophers and mystics. As art 
            historian Linda Dalrymple Henderson has noted, in the late nineteenth 
            century "the 'fourth dimension' gave rise to entire idealist 
            and even mystical philosophical systems."3 In fact, Henderson 
            says, by the year 1900 "the fourth dimension had become almost 
            a household word. . . Ranging from an ideal Platonic or Kantian realityor 
            even Heaven-to the answer 
            to all the problems puzzling contemporary science, the fourth dimension 
            could be all things to all people."4
 Although Einstein's name is the one now most often associated 
              with the idea of a fourth dimension, the concept originally emerged 
              in the mid-nineteenth century. The key impetus was the / 
            Page 189 / development of non-Euclidian geometry. 
            From the 1860s on, interest in tihis new geometry rapidly effervesced into a public fascinationl with higher 
            -than-three-dimensional space - what came to be called "hyperspace." First explored by writers, artists, 
              and mystically inclined philosophers, this seemingly fantastical concept 
              would eventually give rise to an extraordinary new scientific vision 
              of reality, one in which space itself would come to be seen as the 
              ultimate substrate of all existence. Here, we are not just talking 
              about the extra dimension of time, but also about extra spatial dimensions. In this chapter we explore the bizarre 
            story of higher-dimensional space, from its humble beginnings in the  mathematics bf the 
            nineteenth century to its culmination today with physicists' vision 
            of an eleven-dimensional universe.
 The bizarre potential of higher-dimensional 
                    space was evident from the beginning. As early as the 1860s, the great 
                    mathematical genius Carl Friedrich Gauss (founder of the new geometry) 
                    had begun to think about spaces with four or more dimensions. Significantly, 
                    Gauss specifically speculated about the possibility of higher-dimensional 
                    beings. Since one cannot imagine a'greater-than-three-dimensional 
                    world directly, Gauss used an analogy of beings in a two-dimensional 
                    world. Here, he envisaged beings "like infinitely attenuated 
                    book-worms in an infinitely thin sheet of paper" creatures that 
                    would possess only the experience of two-dimensional space.5 Now just 
                    as we can imagine such beings in a lesser-dimensional space 
                    than our own, so Gauss suggested that we might also imagine beings 
                    living in a "space of four or a greater number of dimensions." What would such a space 
            be like? What would be its properties? What would it be like to live there? Gauss wondered. Here were the seeds 
            of a science fiction writer's dream-and sure enough, before long the 
            literary responses came pouring in.
 One of the earliest and most charming visions of higher dimensional 
            space was penned in 1884 by the Englishman Edwin / Page 190 / Abbott. The theme of Abbott's 
              tale is immediately signaled by its wonderful title, Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions by 
                A "'Square. As the subtitle suggests, 
            the hero of Abbott's adventure is a  Square, 
            a being who lives in a two-dimensional space known as "Flatland." In the planar universe of Flatland, a rigid hierarchy reigns. Females, the lowliest beings, are mere straight lines. Males, 
            on the other hand, are regular polygons: 
              squares, hexagons, octagons, and so on. Among males, 
            the more sides one possesses, the higher one's social status. With 
            only fours sides, squares rank at the bottom of the pecking order. Circlesl who are infinitely-sided 
              polygons, stand at the top - they are the priests 
            of Flatland. Within 
            this two-dimensional world it is forbidden to talk about, or even 
            to think about, a third dimension, for the idea of anything "higher" 
            than a circle is heresy.
 On the plane of Flatland our humble quadrilateral hero is minding his own business, when one 
            night the quiet tenor of his
 life is shattered by the visitation 
                    of a being from the "Land of Three Dimensions." This 
                    magnificent creature is none other than a Sphere, a three-dimensional circle! Even in his 
                    own world, this paragon of perfection is a lord among his people. In order to demonstrate the inconceivable wonder of the third dimension 
            to the astonished Square, Lord Sphere lifts him 
            up into this higherdimensional world to see for himself. 
            What especially takes the Square's breath away is the glorious sight 
            of the Cubes he finds 
            there: three-dimensional versions of his own lowly form. So taken 
            is the Square with the 
            expansion of vision he encounters in the third dimension that he urges 
            Lord Sphere onward and 
            upward to higher dimensions still"
  
           
 
                
                  | 6 | SQUARE | 81 | 27 | 9 |  
                  | 7 | SQUARES | 100 | 28 | 1 |  
                  | 6 | SPHERE | 71 | 35 | 8 |  
                  | 7 | SPHERES | 90 | 63 | 9 |  
                  | 5 | WORLD | 72 | 27 | 9 |  
                  | 5 | ROUND | 72 | 27 | 9 |  
                  | 4 | BALL | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
                  | 3 | SUN | 54 | 9 | 9 |  
                  | 3 | GEO | 27 | 18 | 9 |  
                  | 7 | CENTRIC | 72 | 36 | 9 |  
                  | 10 | GEOCENTRIC | 99 | 54 | 9 |  
                  | 8 | GEOMETRY | 108 | 45 | 9 |  
                  | 6 | EUCLID | 54 | 27 | 9 |    
             Page 191
             "Take me to that blessed Region where. . . before my ravished eye a Cube, moving in some altogether new direction. 
                . . shall create a still more prefect perfection than himself. . . 
                . And once there, shall we stay our upward course? In that blessed 
                region of Four Dimensions, shall we linger on the threshold of the 
                Fifth, and not enter therein? Ah, no! Let us rather resolve that our 
                ambition shall soar with our corporeal ascent. Then, yielding to our 
                intellectual onset, the gates of the Sixth Dimension shall fly open, 
                after that a Seventh, and then an Eighth. . ."6
               
             
                
                  | 4 | REAL | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
                  | 4 | CUBE | 31 | 13 | 4 |  
                  | 3 | EYE | 35 | 17 | 8 |  
                  | 1 | I | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                  | 2 | ME | 18 | 9 | 9 |  
                  | 4 | EYES | 54 | 18 | 9 |  
                  | 3 | GEO | 27 | 18 | 9 |  
                  | 3 | EGO | 27 | 18 | 9 |  
                  | 10 | EGOCENTRIC | 99 | 54 | 9 |  
                  | 7 | REALITY | 90 | 36 | 9 |    
           Sadly, this "ascent" into higher-dimensional 
            space is not to be, for Lord Sphere is as adamantly opposed to the 
            idea of a fourth dimension as the Circles of Flatland are 
            set against the third. In indignation the Sphere flings the Square 
            back to his two dimensional world, where he is soon imprisoned for 
            his heretical stories of a third dimension.If Abbott's Square was unable to reach the fourth dimension, otller 
            fictional characters had better luck. In The Time Machine H. G. Wells 
            had equated the fourth dimension with time, but in other stories he 
            followed Abbott's example and imagined it as an extra dimension of 
            space. Just as a two-dimensional napkin can be folded within three-dimensional 
            space by bringing together two distant corners, so too within a four-dimensional 
            space two parts of three dimensional space can be "folded" 
            together. This "folding" of
 space was the device Wells used in his story "The Remarkable 
              Case of Davidson's Eyes." By judicious folding within fourdimensional space, the hero Davidson 
            is brought into contact with a faraway South Sea island, which he 
            is now able to observe while sitting at home in London. In another 
            of We lIs' forays into higherdimensional space, science teacher Gottfried 
            Plattner is blown away by an explosion and returns from the fourth 
            dimension with his body left-right reversed so that his heart is now 
          on the righthand side, his liver is on the left, and so on.7
 
          "For many writers, the fourth dimension 
            would become a / Page 192 / .place of liberation 
              and redemption, one with distinctly heavenly overtones. Such was the 
              vision of Wells' French disciple Gaston de Pawlowski. In Pawlowski's Voyage to the Country of the Fourth Dimension (1912), 
              he served up a ringing moral tale in which the ability to see and 
              comprehend a fourth dimension saves mankind from scientistic hubris. Within the novel, history was divided into three eras. Beginning 
                in the early twentieth century was what Pawlowski called the "Epoch 
                of Leviathan," an age of rampant materialism and positivism. 
                  According to the author this era would culminate during the late twentieth 
                  century with a "scientific period" full of nameless horrors. 
                  Finally, salvation would come when the fourth dimension was revealed, 
                  initiating the "epoch of the Golden Bird." In this "idealist 
                  renaissance" man would apparently "raise himself forever 
                  above the vulgar world" of three dimensions and find himself 
                  in a "higher" realm of wisdom and cosmic unity. As Pawlowski 
                  explained: "The notion of the fourth dimension opens absolutely 
                  new horizons for us. It completes our comprehension of the world; 
                  it allows the definitive synthesis of our knowledge to be realized. 
                  . . . When one reaches the country of the fourth dimension. . . one 
                  finds [one ]self blended with the entire universe."8
           Pawlowski's heavenly vision of the 
            fourth dimension and his belief in its salvific properties would be 
            widely reflected by others in the first decades of our century. 
            A whole brand of what Henderson terms "hyperspace philosophy" would spring up, giv-ing rise to all manner of curious blendings 
            of science and spiritu- ality. Ironically, the same kind of mathematics 
            that Einstein would later use in the general theory of relativity 
            has also served as a foundation for some of the most bizarre pseudoscientific 
            specula-tions of our age.Foremost among the new hyperspace philosophers was Englishman Charles 
            Hinton. As a professional mathematician, Hinton taught at Princeton 
            University and later worked for the / Page 193 / United States Naval 
            Observatory and the U.S. Patent Office, but parallel to this orthodox 
            professional life was a mystical under-belly in which he pursued a 
              spiritual approach to the fourth di- mension. In A New Era of Thought (1888) Hinton outlined 
                a system by which people could supposedly train themselves to be- 
                come aware of the true four-dimensional nature of space. At the core 
                of this system was a set of special colored blocks, the con-templation 
                of which would supposedly break down restricting "self-elements" 
                within the mind, thereby opening the doors of 
                  perception to the fourth dimension.
 Hinton dreamed of bringing forth "a complete system of four-dimensional 
                thought-mechanics, science and art,"9 but in truth he was interested 
                less in the practical applications of the fourth dimension than in 
                its spiritual and philosophical ramifica- tions. Here he was inspired 
                  by Plato's analogy of prisoners chained in a cave, doomed forever 
                  to see only the shadows of the "real" world outside.
 For Hinton, our normal experience of three-dimensional space doomed 
                    us to see only the "shadows" of the "rea1" reality, 
                    which is four-dimensional. By becoming aware of this extra 
                    di-mension, he believed that Plato's realm of the ideal would be re-vealed. 
                    As the realm of the noumenon, the fourth dimension could also 
                    be seen, in Hintons view, as Kant's "thing-in-itself"
 Hinton never realized his "complete system" of four-dimensional 
                    thought, but his philosophical interpretation of the fourth dimension 
                    would greatly influence later hyperspace thinkers. Among them was 
                    the Russian mystic Peter Demianovich Ouspensky. "In the idea 
                    of a spatial fourth dimension," says Henderson, "Ouspensky 
                    believed he had found an explanation for the 'enigmas of the world,' 
                    and with this knowledge he could offer mankind a 
                      new truth that would, like the gift of Prometheus, transform human 
                      existence."10
  
           
                
                  | 4 | REAL | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
                  | 7 | REALITY | 90 | 36 | 9 |    "For Ouspensky, the fourth dimension 
            was none other than / Page 194 / time. 
              But according to him, in our everyday experience of this di-mension 
              we are deceived. In truth, Ouspensky declared, time is just another 
              dimension of space, and thus all motion is an illusion. According 
              to Ouspensky, the real reality is a changeless four-dimensional stasis. Not 
                just time and motion, but matter also is an illusion that people must 
                overcome by learning to "see" anew. Not everyone, 
              however, was mentally equipped for Ouspensky's four-dimensional vision. 
              Those who are so gifted constitute a race of "supermen" 
              with the power to realize what Ouspensky called "cosmic 
                consciousness." In this final state of evolution, the 
              new "supermen" will find themselves graced with "higher 
              emotion, higher intellect, intuition, and mystical wisdom."11 In this realm, ordinary laws of mathematics and logic will be superseded 
                by a new "logic of ecstasy." It was through just such an 
                "intuitive logic" that Ouspensky proposed to prepare future 
                supermen for the mys-tical revelation of the fourth dimension.In Ouspensky's vision of the fourth dimension de we not detect distinct 
                echoes of the medieval Christian Heaven? Just as in the Empyrean time 
                was negated, subsumed into an eternal bliss- ful stasis, so also in 
                Ouspensky's hyperspace realm we find our-selves in a state of ecstatic 
                stasis. Here too in the fourth dimension, we are promised "higher 
                emotion," "higher intellect," even "mys- tical 
                wisdom." In such early twentieth-century visions of a fourth 
                dimension we witness a recasting into scientific terms the old idea 
                of a transcendent, heavenly domain.
 
                Another 
                  hyperspace philosopher with even more overtly Christian leanings 
                  was the Rochester, New York, architect Claude Bragdon. It was Bragdon 
                  who organized the English translation of Ouspensky's work, and the 
                  two men immediately recognized kin-dred spirits in one another. 
                  In addition to Bragdon's more philo- sophical works, his oeuvre 
                  also included a curious littte religious title called Man the 
                    Square: A Higher Space Parable. Here, Brag-don used the 
                  analogy of a two-dimensional world (rather like / Page 195 / Abbott's 
                  Flatland), "to convey a message of love and harmony."12 As in Flatland, Bragdon's characters are 
                    also simple geo-metric figures living on a flat surface (see Figure 5.1).As the 
                    story unfolds, however, we learn that all these figures are really 
                    cross sec-tions of cubes, tilted at different angles to their two-dimensional 
                    planar world (See Figure 5.2). Seen from the "higher" 
                    reality of three dimensions, the beings are not flat figures 
                    but hearty, solid cubes. At the end of the story, this higher-dimensional 
                    reality is demonstrated to the flatlanders by a "Christos cube," 
                    which reveals its true cubic nature by folding down its six sides 
                    to form the shape of a cross. In the logic of the story, what brings 
                    about disharmony in the two-dimensional world is that the cubes 
                    of the flatlanders are all tilted at odd angles to their plane. 
                    To reinstate harmony, the cubes need to be aligned upright so they 
                    are all "square" with their plane. The moral of the 
                      tale (of course) was that we too need to get ourselves properly 
                      aligned in our own higher space dimen-sion-i.e., the fourth.
 Along with the supposedly philosophical and moral impli-cations 
                    of the fourth dimension, Bragdon was also interested in its aesthetic 
                    possibilities. "Consciousness is moving towards the con-quest 
                      of a new space," he wrote. "Ornament must indicate 
                    this movement of consciousness."13 To this end, Bragdon 
                    produced Projective Ornament, a book of images created by projecting four-dimensional figures onto two-dimensional 
                    surfaces. The result, as in Figures 5.3 and 5.4, was a kind of geometric Art Deco that was in truth, rather banal. Bragdon's imagery failed 
                    to precipitate the aesthetic revolution he was hoping for, but elsewhere 
                    real art- world heavyweights were looking to the fourth dimension 
                    for in-spiration. And some may even have taken cues from Bragdon's 
                work..."
 
                  Page 200                  
                   "That Cubists and other modernist 
                    artists should be inter-ested in higher-dimensional space is hardly 
                    surprising, for a pri- mary thrust of early twentieth-century 
                    art was to break with the tradition of perspective. If it turned 
                    out that physical space was not in fact three-dimensional, 
                    then the rules of linear perspective would simply be arbitrary. 
                    The possibility of higher-dimensional space thus served a powerful 
                    rhetorical function for the nascent modems. Recognizing this explicitly, 
                    Gleizes and Metzinger stated in Du Cubism that "If 
                    we wished to tie the painter's space to a particular geometry, 
                    we should have to refer it to the non- Euclidean scholars."17The painter who most seriously took up this challenge was Marcel 
                    Duchamp. Originally associated with the Cubists, Duchamp soon 
                    spun off onto his own peripatetic paths. Like Malevich, his most 
                    famous work was also inspired by the fourth di-mension. The 
                      Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even, often known as The Large Glass, is surely one of the most pondered-over
 works in the modem canon; and this time we have extensive notes 
                    by the artist detailing the process of genesis. Specifically, 
                    we know that in preparing for this work Duchamp embarked on a 
                    study of non-Euclidian and higher-dimensional geometries. The 
                    end result of these efforts was a complex work divided into two 
                    distinct halves: in the top half is the "Bride," and 
                    in the bottom half the "Bachelor Apparatus." According 
                    to Duchamp's notes the Bride is supposed to be a four-dimensional 
                    entity, while the bachelors are three- dimensional. Floating above 
                    her retinue, this higher-space spouse hovers enigmatically in 
                    a world of her own.
 
                  Page 201With all this artistic, literary, and mystical speculation 
                          about a fourth dimension, what delicious synchronicity when the 
                          theory of relativity suddenly;enshrined the concept in physical 
                            reality. Einstein's revelation of the fourth dimension seemed 
                          to many hy-perspace enthusiasts a confirmation of what they had 
                          known all along. The common thread running between the worlds 
                          of rela-tivistic physics and that of the writers and artists was 
                          of course the new mathematics of non-Euclidian geometry. Ironically, many of the new-math pioneers had themselves been 
                    driven to their radi-cal geometries by a scientific interest in 
                    the structure of physical space. To these men, Gauss included, 
                    their fantastical new geo-metries had originally evolved as tools 
                    for helping them to better understand the nature of the concrete 
                    physical world. Thus while they are generally remembered today 
                    as mathematicians, along with Einstein these men ought also to 
                    be recognized as pioneers in the physics of space.
 In fact, the whole development of non-Euclidian geometry that 
                    Gauss initiated emerged out of his work on the measurement of 
                    the earth. Given that the literal meaning of the word "geome-try" 
                      is "earth measurement," this was particularly 
                    apt. In its origi-nal incarnation, the science of geometry 
                    had emerged from ancient Egyptian surveying of the Nile Delta. 
                    This ancient (i.e., Euclidian) geometry had only dealt with flat space, such as the surface of this page. On a large scale, 
                    however, the surface of the earth is spherical, and hence curved. 
                    Thus a study of the earth's surface ultimately requires a geometry 
                      of curved surfaces. Gauss' seminal papers 
                    on curved-space geometry were inspired by his stint as scientific 
                    advisor to a geodetic survey of the region of Hanover. "Once 
                    again," says Max Jammer, "we see that histori-cally 
                    viewed, abstract theories of space owe their existence to the 
                    practice of geodetic work."18
 Humans had long known that the surface of our planet is curved, 
                    but what about the space in which our globe is embedded? / 
                    Page 202 / Might space itself be curved? For Newton and 
                    his contemporaries there had been no mathematical alternatives 
                    to Euclidian space so they had simply assumed that this was-the 
                    correct model for phys-ical space. But after Gauss' work on curved 
                    surfaces, he began to wonder if the assumption of a Euclidian 
                    universe was justified. In the early nineteenth century -long 
                    before Einstein was born- Gauss actually tried to measure the 
                    curvature of physical space. He did this by the ingenious method 
                    of surveying a triangle formed by three mountaintops. In Euclidian, 
                    or flat space, three angles of a triangle must add up to 180 degrees, but if the space is curved the angles will 
                    add up to something else. (To more than 180 if the 
                    space is "positively" curved, like a sphere, and less 
                    than 180 if it is "negatively" curved, like a 
                    saddle.) Since Gauss failed to find any deviation from 180 
                    degrees, he concluded that at least in the vicin- ity of the earth, 
                    space must be Euclidian.
 The later Russian mathematician, Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky, 
                    would try a similar experiment but on a much larger scale. Instead 
                    of mountains, Lobachevsky used distant stars, yet still he found 
                    no deviation from flat space. Both Gauss and Lobachevsky concluded, 
                    based on the evidence available to them, that our local area of 
                    the universe was Euclidian, but both realized there was no reason 
                    why this must be the case. As Gauss pre-sciently put it: 
                    "In some future life, perhaps, we may have other ideas about 
                    space which, at present, are inaccessible to us "19
 While Gauss and Lobachevsky pioneered the idea of curved space, 
                    later in the nineteenth century a brilliant young mathe-matician 
                    named Bernhard Riemann even considered the pos- sibility that 
                    gravity was a by-product of curvature in higher- dimensional 
                    space. While there is no doubt that Einstein thought up this concept 
                    for himself, it is worth noting that the idea had already been 
                    imagined more than half a century before. The young man responsible 
                    for this astonishing insight was a disciple of Gauss, and he remains 
                    one of the most underrated / Page 203 / 
                      visionaries in modern science. Today Riemann is generally re-membered 
                      as a pure mathematician, but what really interested this pathologically 
                      shy Austrian was the problem of how physical forces arise. Decades 
                      before Einstein's birth, Riemann became convinced that the explanation 
                      for gravity must 
                      lie in the geometry of space.
 Thinking about the problem of physical forces, Riemann imagined 
                      a world not unlike Abbott's Flatland, in which 
                      a race of two-dimensional creatures were living on a flat sheet 
                      of paper. Now what would happen, Riemann asked, if we crumpled 
                      the paper? Because the creatures' bodies are embedded in 
                      the paper, they would not be able to see the wrinkles - to them 
                      their world would still look perfectly flat. Yet Riemann realized 
                      that even if the space looked flat, it would no longer behave as if it were flat. He ar-gued that when the creatures 
                      tried to move about in their two - dimensional world they would 
                      feel a mysterious unseen "force" whenever they hit one 
                      of the wrinkles, and they would no longer be able to move in straight 
                      lines.
 Extrapolating this idea to our three-dimensional universe, Riemann 
                      imagined that our three-dimensional space was also "crumpled" 
                      in an unseen fourth dimension. Like the two-dimensional beings 
                      of the paper universe, he reasoned that al-though we could 
                        not see such "wrinkles" in the space around us, we too 
                        would experience them as invisible forces. From this 
                      bril-liant insight, Riemann concluded that gravity was "caused 
                      by the crumpling of our three-dimensional universe in the unseen 
                      fourth dimension."20 Having outlined his basic theme, this 
                      shy genius set about developing a mathematical language in which 
                      to express these ideas. The result of his labors was the new geometry 
                      that Ein-stein would eventually use in his general 
                      theory of relativity. "In retrospect," says physicist 
                      Michio Kaku, "we now see how close Riemann came to discovering 
                      the theory of gravity 60 years before Einstein."2l 
                In one way or other, speculations about the physics of Flatland have had profound consequences for us all.
 
                  Page 204Einstein's "discovery"-of a fourth 
                    dimension must surely rate as one of modem science's most amazing 
                    findings. With this dis-covery, man was now in a position (like 
                    the Square in Abbott's tale) to see his world from a new perspective. 
                    But as the Square said to Lord Sphere, why stop at four dimensions? With our vision thus expanded, might we too not 
                    "resolve that our ambition [should] soar" onward and 
                    upward to higher dimensions still? And since human beings are 
                    as naturally curious as Squares, indeed it was not long before 
                    someone began to dream about a fifth dimension. In the 
                    1920s, a young Polish mathematician had the bright idea that if 
                    the force of gravity could be explained by the geometry of four-dimensional 
                    space, then perhaps he might be able to explain the electromagnetic 
                    force by the geometry of five- dimensional space. With this seeming 
                    science fiction fantasy begins one of the most curious episodes 
                    in the history of space.
 If Riemann was a maverick in the history of science, Theodr Kaluza 
                    was decidedly an oddity. An obscure mathematician at the University 
                    of Konigsberg (in what is now Kaliningrad in the former Soviet 
                    Union), Kaluza was convinced that Einstein's approach to gravity 
                    could be expanded and enhanced. In particular, he wanted to apply 
                    Einstein's approach to the electromagnetic 
                      force-the force responsible for electricity, magnetism, and, light. Along with Riemann, in fact, Kaluza believed that electromagnetism must also be the result of curvature 
                    (or ripples) in a higher-dimensional space. But the problem Kaluza 
                    faced was that there did not seem to be any more dimensions left. 
                    With three of space and one of time, nature's stock seemed to 
                    be exhausted.
 Yet Kaluza was not a man to be deterred by such prosaic 
                            objections. In an audacious move he simply rewrote Einstein's 
                            equations of general relativity in five dimensions. Lo and behold, 
                            when he did so it turned out that these five-dimensional equations 
                            contained within them the regular four-dimensional equations of 
                            relativity, plus an extra bit which turned out to be / Page 205 
                            / precisely the equations 
                              of electromagnetism. In effect, Kaluza's five-dimensional theory 
                              consisted of two separate pieces that fit- ted together like a 
                              jigsaw puzzle-Einstein's theory of gravity and Maxwell's theory 
                              of.-.electromagnetism (the field equations of light).
 Another way of understanding this "mathematical miracle," 
                              says physicist Paul Davies, is that "Kaluza showed that electro-magnetism 
                              is actually a form of gravity." Not 
                                the regular gravity of everyday physics, but "the gravity 
                                of an unseen [fifth] dimension of space."22 In 1919 Kaluza 
                                sent a paper on all this to Einstein. So stunned was the great 
                                physicist by the young Pole's radical addition of an extra dimension 
                                that like Lord Sphere in Abbott's Flatland, he was appalled. For 
                                two years Einstein apparently refused to an- swer Kaluza's letter. 
                                But the whole construction was so mathe-matically elegant he could 
                                not get it out of his mind, and finally in 1921 he became convinced 
                                of the importance of Kaluza's ideas and submitted the paper to 
                                a scientific journal.
 Ironically, it was the very beauty of Kaluza's construction that 
                                so shook Einstein, and many other physicists. Was this five- dimensional 
                                space of Kaluza's "just a parlor trick? Or numerology? Or 
                                black magic?"23 It was all very well to propose that time was a fourth dimension (for that, after all, is a real aspect 
                                of our physical experience), but what on earth was this supposed fifth dimension? If Kaluza's equations were to be taken 
                                seriously-and not just as mathematical chicanery-then the awkward 
                                question arose: Where is this extra 
                                  dimension? Why don't we see it?
 To this query Kaluza had a disarmingly simple answer. He declared 
                                that the extra dimension is so small it escapes our normal attention. 
                                The reason we don't see, he said, it is because it is mi-croscopic. 
                                To understand this proposal, again it is helpful to resort to 
                                a lower-dimensional analogy. Imagine this time that you 
                                  live on a line, what we might call Lineland, 
                                the one-dimensional sibling of Flatland. As a dot in this linear 
                                universe, you can travel up and / Page 206 / down your line, always 
                                remaining in a single dimension. Now suppose that one day a scientist 
                                in your Lineland announces she has discovered 
                                an extra dimension and that your universe is really two-dimensional. 
                                At first you think she is mad. Where is this other dimension? 
                                you ask. Why can't we see it? But then the scientist ex-plains 
                                that in fact you don't live on a line, but on a very thin hose. Each point of your line universe is not really a point, but 
                                a tiny circle, one so small that you never notited it. 
                                Taking this extra microscopic dimension into account, your world 
                                is not a line, but really a two-dimensional cylindrical surface.
 This was the essence of Kaluza's explanation for his fifth 
                                di-mension. According to him, every point in our three dimensions 
                                of space is actually a tiny circle, so that in reality there are four di-mensions of space, plus one of time, making a total 
                                of five. In 1926 the Swedish physicist Oskar Klein made improvements 
                                to Kaluza's theory which enabled him to calculate the size of 
                                this tiny hidden dimension. According to Klein's calculations, 
                                it was no wonder we had not observed the extra direction because 
                                it is ab-solutely minute. Its circumference was just 10-32 centimeters-a 
                                hundred billion billion (102°) times smaller than the nucleus 
                                of an atom!
 So small was Kaluza's dimension that even if we ourselves were 
                                the size of atoms we would still not notice it. Yet this 
                                tiny di-mension could be responsible for all electromagnetic radiation: light, radio waves, X rays, microwaves, 
                                  infrared, and ultraviolet. A powerful punch indeed 
                                for something so small. Unfortunately, the Kaluza-Klein dimension 
                                was so small there was no way of measuring it directly. Even our 
                                largest accelerators today still cannot measure things on such 
                                a minute scale. So what then are
 we to make of Kaluza's vision? Is this fifth dimension physically 
                                real? Or is it just an elegant mathematical fiction?
 Kaluza himself insisted that the beauty of his theory could not 
                "amount to the mere alluring play of a capricious accident."24
 
                  Page 207                  
                   He firmly believed in the reality 
                    of his fourth spatial dimension. He knew his tiny dimension could 
                    not be tested directly, so he de-cided instead to conduct an experiment 
                    of his own to test the gen-eral correspondence between theory 
                    and reality. The test case he chose was not anything from the 
                    realm of physics, but the art of swimming. As someone who could not swim, Kaluza 
                    decided he would learn all he could about the theory of 
                    swimming and when he had mastered that then he would test this 
                    theoretical framework against the reality of the sea. Giving himself 
                    over to the,project, he diligently studied all aspects of the 
                    aquatic art until finally he felt he was ready. Now, trunks in 
                    hand, the young Pole escorted his family to the seaside for the 
                    crucial test. With no prior experience, in front of the assembled 
                    Kaluza clan, Theodr hurled himself into the waves. . . and 10 
                    and behold he could swim! Theory had been born out by practice 
                    in the real world. Could the tiny dimension also be there 
                    in the real world?"
                     
                   
                        
                          | 4 | REAL | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
                          | 5 | WORLD | 72 | 27 | 9 |  
                          | 7 | REALITY | 90 | 36 | 9 |    "Unfortunately, if in Kaluza's 
                    own mind the swimming experiment supported a general correspondence 
                    between theory and reality, 
                    few others were willing to embrace the idea of an unseen and unmeasurable 
                    fifth dimension. Sadly, after an initial flurry of interest, the 
                    physics community turned away. Yet the startling el-egance of 
                    Kaluza's equations raised an uneasy question: How many dimensions 
                    of space are there really in the world around us?As happens so often in the history of science, it was not in fact 
                    a new question. As long ago as the second century, Ptolemy had considered the matter and had argued that no more than three 
                    di-mensions are permitted in nature. Kant also had argued that 
                    three dimensions are inevitable. In this he could call upon the 
                    support a good deal of hard science. For instance it is 
                      well known that gravity and the electromagnetic force both obey 
                      "inverse square laws" - the strength of the force drops 
                      off according to the square of the distance. As early as 1747, 
                      "Kant recognized the deep con-nection between this law and 
                      the three-dimensionality of space."25
 Page 208
                 " It turns out that in anything 
                  other than three dimensions, problems quickly arise with inverse 
                  square forces. For example, in four or more spatial dimensions, 
                  gravity would be so strong that planets would spiral into the sun; 
                  they would not be able to form stable orbits. Similarly, electrons 
                  would not be able to form stable orbits around nuclei.26 Hence atoms 
                  could not form. It can also be shown that in four spatial dimensions, 
                  waves cannot propagate cleanly. From these physical facts, Kant 
                  and others had concluded that we must live in a universe 
                  with just three spatial dimensions.But all these arguments had assumed that any extra dimen- sions 
                  would be fully extended like the regular three. If an addi- tional 
                  dimension was tiny, however, it would not affect the regular 
                  functioning of gravity, electricity, and wave propagation. On the 
                  large scale, such a universe would operate as if there were just 
                  three dimensions; only on the microscopic scale would the 
                  extra one reveal itself. In other words, our universe could function 
                  prop-erly with five dimensions.
 If Kaluza was right, and such a thing did exist, it would 
                  pack a very potent punch. "Viewed this way, there [would be] 
                  no forces at all, only warped five-dimensional geometry, with particles 
                  me-andering freely in a landscape of structured nothingness."27 
                  It was a very beautiful idea, but for over half a century most physicists 
                  paid no more attention to Kaluza than to Hinton or Ouspensky, and 
                  the fifth dimension seemed little less than an oddity of math-ematical 
                  mysticism. Then suddenly in the 1980s that began to change when 
                  new developments in particle physics began to sug- gest that Kaluza 
                  might just be onto something.
 By the 1980s, two new forces of nature had been discovered. In 
                    addition to gravity and electromagnetism, there was now the weak 
                      nuclear force and the strong nuclear force. These forces 
                    are what holds atomic nucleirogether, hence they are responsible 
                    for keeping matter stable. With these nuclear powers, the basic 
                    "forces of nature" had expanded in number from two to 
                    four. Today physi-/ Page 209 / cists feel confident 
                      that this set-gravity, electromagnetism, the weak force, and the 
                      strong force - represent the full complement of our physical universe. 
                      But what really began to excite them was the idea that all four 
                      might be just different aspects of a single overarching force-a 
                      kind of unifying super-force.
 The idea of an underlying unity among all four forces of na-ture 
                  was so thrilling to many theoretical and particle physicists they 
                  were prepared to try anything to realize this vision. Many at-tempts 
                  were made to find a unifying theory, but after a decade of failure, 
                  they began to realize that desperate measures might be called for. 
                  At this point they began to look again at Kaluza. After all, he 
                  had been able to unify gravity and the electromagnetic force; perhaps 
                  his approach might be able to unify all four forces? Now, the idea 
                  of unseen hidden dimensions reared its head with a vengeance, for 
                  while Kaluza had been able to explain electro-magnetism by adding 
                  just one more dimension to Einstein's equa-tions, physicists 
                    found that in order to accommodate the weak and strong forces they 
                    had to add another six dimensions of space- bringing the 
                    total number of dimensions to eleven! As before, all these 
                    extra dimensions are microscopic-tiny little curled-up di-rections 
                    in space that can never be detected by human senses.
 The picture that has emerged over the past decade is thus of an 
                    eleven-dimensional universe, with four extant, or large, di-mensions 
                    (three of space and one of time), and seven microscopic space dimensions 
                    all rolled up into some tiny complex geometric form. On 
                  the scale that we humans experience, the world is four-dimensional, 
                  but underneath, say these new "hyperspace" physi-cists, 
                  the "true" reality is eleven-dimensional. (Or, according 
                  to some of the latest theories, maybe ten-dimensional.)
 Perhaps the most radical feature of this eleven-dimensional vision 
                  is the fact that it explains not only all the forces, but matter also, as a by-product of the geometry of space. In these extended 
                  Kaluza-Klein theories, matter too becomes nothing but ripples in 
                  / Page 210 / he fabric of hyperspace. Here, subatomic particles 
                  are also ex-plained by the properties of the seven curled-up dimensions. 
                  One of the major projects of theoretical physics over the past two 
                  decades has been to articulate precisely how the curling up of these 
                  extra spatial dimen~ions. occurs. Unfortunately there are an enormous 
                  number of possible topologies for a seven-dimensional space, and 
                  so far it has proved impossible to tease out which ones (if any) 
                  correspond to the real world we live in. Part of the prob- lem, 
                  again, is that all these dimensions are too tiny to be measured 
                  directly, so any such theories can only be tested indirectly-if 
                  at all. Nonetheless, hyperspace physicists are confident that they 
                  will find the correct one.
 We have looked at how the curvature of space can produce the effect 
                  of physical forces such as gravity; let us consider now the even 
                  more radicatidea that the curvature of space may also be re- sponsible 
                  for matter. Forces such as gravity and magnetism (which travel 
                  through thin air) have always, in a sense, been closely allied with 
                  space, but how could matter - the concrete stuff of our flesh and 
                  bones-arise from the non-substance of space?
 At first glance the whole notion seems absurd, but once again the 
                  idea of matter as ripples in space is actually quite old. As early 
                  as the 1870s Riemann's English disciple William Clifford de-livered 
                  an address to the Cambridge Philosophical Society "On the Space 
                  Theory of Matter."28 Taking Riemann's ideas further even than 
                  the master himself, Clifford put forward the view that particles 
                  of matter were just tiny kinks in the "fabric" of space. 
                  A more sophisticated version of the same idea arose early in our 
                  own century when physicists began to think about wormholes. Original 
                  interest in wormholes was not in the large-scale ones that would 
                  so excite science fiction writers, but in microscopic wormholes 
                  that might be associated with subatomic particles. A host of physics 
                  luminaries from Einstein to Hermann Weyl "wondered whether 
                  all fundamental particles might not actually be microscopic 
                  worm-/ Page 211 / holes."z9 In other words, just "the 
                  products of warped spacetime." Einstein in particular became 
                  obsessed with the notion that matter might be ripples in space, 
                  and he spent the last thirty years of his life trying to extend 
                  the equations of general relativity in this direction. He called 
                  this dream a "unified field theory" and his fail-ure to find such a theory was the greatest 
                  disappointment of his life. According to Kaku, "to Einstein 
                  the curvature of spacetime was like the epitome of Greek architecture, 
                  beautiful and serene."30 But he regarded matter as messy and 
                  ugly. He likened space to "marble" and matter to "wood," 
                  and he desperately wanted a theory that could transform ugly "wood" 
                  into beautiful "marble."
 Neither Clifford nor Einstein had the mathematical tools 
                        to achieve the difficult synthesis of matter and space-above all 
                        they were trying to work with just four dimensions. Today physicists 
                        know that if matter is to be incorporated into the structure 
                        of space, it must be achieved with a higher-dimensional theory. 
                        In such a theory, matter, like force, would not be an independent 
                        en- tity, but a secondary by-product of the totalizing substrate 
                        of space. Here, everything that exists would be enfolded into the 
                        bosom of hyperspace. Theories that attempt to do this are 
                  sometimes known by the modest nickname "theories 
                    of everything," commonly re- ferred to as TOEs. 
                  In a successful TOE, every particle that exists 
                  would be described as a vibration in the microscopic manifold of 
                  the extra hidden dimensions. Objects would not be in space, they
 would be space. Protons, petunias, and people - we would 
                  all be- come patterns in a multidimensional hyperspace we cannot 
                  even see. According to this conception of reality, our very existence as material beings would be an illusion, for 
                  in the final analysis there would be nothing but "structured  nothingness."
 With a hyperspatial "theory of everything" we thus reach 
                  the apogee of a movement that began in the late Middle Ages: The 
                  el-evation of space as an ontological category is now complete. 
                  As we / Page 212 / have seen, in the Aristotelian world picture, 
                  space was a very minor and unimportant category of reality-so 
                  unimportant that Aristo-tle didn't really have a theory of "space" 
                  per se but strictly speak-ing only a theory of "place." 
                  With the emergence of Newtonian physics in the seventeenth century, 
                  the status of space was raised so that along with matter and force 
                  it became one of three major categories of reality. Now, at the close of the twentieth century, space is becoming the only primary category of the scientific world picture. Matter 
                  and force, which in Newtonian physics were really above space in 
                  ontological status, have now been relegated to sec-ondary status, 
                  with space alone occupying the primary rung of the real. It is a 
                  little-remarked-upon feature of modem Western physics that one way 
                  of characterizing the enterprise is by the gradual as-cent of space 
                  in our existential scheme. The final triumph of this invisible, 
                  intangible entity to the ultimate essence of existence is 
                  surely one of the more curious features of any world picture.
 Hyperspace physicists' intensely geometric vision of reality also marks the final chapter of the saga begun by Giotto and the geometer-painters of the Renaissance. Here in TOE physicists' 
                  equations would be the ultimate "perspective" picture 
                  of the world, a vision in which everything is refracted through 
                  the clari-fying prism of geometry. If, as Plato famously declared, "God ever geometrizes," 
                    here would be the last word on divine action. As the apotheosis 
                    of Roger Bacon's "geometric figuring," a hyper-spatial 
                    "theory of everything" would be, quite simply, 
                  a twenty- first-century realization of a thirteenth-century dream.
 In another way also a "theory 
                    of everything" would be the ul-timate perspective 
                  picture of our universe, for this picture too has a single point from which the whole world-image originates. Physi- cists call it the big bang. According to hyperspace physics, at the 
                  initial split second of creation the entire universe was condensed 
                  into a microscopic point containing all matter, 
                    force, energy, and space. At this quintessential 
                  point, however,  matter, force, energy, / Page 213 / nd space were not yet separated from one another, but 
                  were united in a single hyperspace substrate. In other words, at 
                  the split second of creation everything was folded within 
                  the all-embracing oneness of "pure" eleven-dimensional 
                  space. From this point of hyperspatial unity, the universe then 
                  unfolded.
 As the single point from which the physicists' world picture originates, the big bang is a scientific equivalent of the perspective painters' 
                  "center of projection." It is the point at which all "lines" 
                  in the hyperspace universe converge. This is the place, then, where 
                  TOE physicists would dearly like to "stand." Just as the 
                  viewer of a perspective painting gets the most dramatic effect when 
                  standing in the place from which the artist constructed the image, 
                  so a hyperspace physicist could see his world picture most clearly 
                  if he "stood" at the cosmic center of projection-the big 
                  bang.
 It is in search of this particular "point of view" that 
                  physicists build ever larger particle accelerators. The higher the 
                  energy one can generate in an accelerator, the closer one gets to 
                  "melting" to-gether the four separate forces, and thus 
                  the more one can see of the underlying hyperspatial unity. In a 
                  very real sense, particle ac-celerators are tools for exploring 
                  higher-dimensional space, and the final goal with such machines 
                  is to glimpse once more the ini-tial point of "pure" eleven-dimensional 
                  hyperspace. Physicists speak about this initial period of hyperspace 
                  unity as the time when there was "perfect symmetry" between 
                  all eleven dimen- sions. What they want to do is to glimpse for 
                  themselves this orig-inal perfect symmetry. Ironically, while artists 
                  long ago abandoned Renaissance aesthetics, those classical ideals of beauty live on in physicists' 
                  dream of a "theory of everything." Like the Renaissance painters, TOE 
                    physicists also hold mathematical symmetry as the highest aesthetic 
                    ideal. It is their dream, their goal, and, it has even been said, 
                    their "Holy Grail."..."
   
                 
                    
                      | 4 | HOLY | 60 | 24 | 6 |  
                      | 5 | GRAIL | 47 | 29 | 2 |  
                      | 9 | - | 107 | 53 | 8 |  
                      | - | - | 1+0+7 | 5+3 | - |  
                      | 9 | - | 8 | 8 | 8 |  
                      | - | - | - | - | - |  
                      | - | - | - | - | - |  
                      | 1 | A | 1 | 1 | 1 |  
                      | 4 | HOLY | 60 | 24 | 6 |  
                      | 4 | GIRL | 46 | 28 | 1 |  
                      | 2 | IS | 28 | 10 | 1 |  
                      | 11 | Add | 135 | 63 | 9 |  
                      | 1+1 | Reduce | 1+3+5 | 6+3 | - |  
                      | 2 | Deduce | 9 | 9 | 9 |                   
                 
                    DICTIONARY OF SCIENCE Siegfried Mandel 1969  Page 350 "Van de Graaff 
                        generator: a particle accelerator; to obtain 
                        high voltage, static electricity is generated and picked up 
                        at one end of the machine by a rubber belt and carried to the 
                  other end where it is collected in a large sphere."    THE ROOTS OF 
                  COINCIDENCE Arthur Koestler 1972 Page 87 "Kammerere was particularly 
                    interested in temporal Series of recurrent events; these he regarded 
                    as cyclic processes which propagate themselves like waves along 
                    the time-axis of the space time continuum." "Einstein gave a favourable 
                    opinion of the book; he called it "original and by no means 
                    absurd".* he may have remembered that the non- Page 88 / 
                    Euclidian geometries, invented by earlier mathematicians more 
                    or less as a game, provided the basis for his relativistic cosmology.  2 Another great physicist whose thoughts 
                    moved in a similar direction was Wolfgang Pauli.At the end of the 1932 conference on nuclear physics in Copenhagen 
                    the participants, as was their custom on these occasions, performed 
                    a skit full of that quantum humour of which we have already had 
                    a few samples. In that particular year they produced a parody 
                    of Goethe's Faust, in which Wolfgang 
                      Pauli was cast in the role of Mephistopheles; his Gretchen was 
                      the neutrino, whose existence Pauli 
                      had predicted, but which had not yet been discovered.
   MEPHISTOPHELES (to Faust):
                   Beware, 
                    beware, of Reason and of ScienceMan's highest powers, unholy in alliance.
 You'll let yourself, through dazzling witchcraft yield
 To weird temptations of the quantum field.
 Enter Gretchen; she sings to Faust. Melody: "Gretchen 
                  at the Spinning Wheel" by Schubert.GRETCHEN:
 My rest-mass is zeroMy charge is the same
 You are my hero
 Neutrino's my name."
     DAILY MAIL Monday, August 18 2003 Front Page " 999 STORM" "Anger as police take 2 1/2 hours to answer desperate 
                  home owner's emergency call" THE 999 "system was under fire again last night 
                  after police took 2 1/2 hours to answer a call" "The case comes in the wake of a string 
                  of a string of appalling 999 delays "officers from the same force took 
                  three days to respond to a 999 call" Page 2 " police take 2 1/2 hours to answer 999 alert" "He rang 999 and was promised an immediate response" "I could have pushed the panic button 
                  on the phone it might have had a better result than dialling 999"     DAILY MAIL Thursday, October 7th  2004 Front Page WHY BOTHER DIALLING  999 Page 12 "Police receive two 999 calls" "asks for help more than 50 
                  times"  "64 minutes after the first 999 call" Page 13 "I dialled 999"   RAMAH 
                  II Arthur C. Clarke & Gentry Lee 
                  1989 Page179 "the Wakefield dossier" "and Wakefield" "Wakefield"   
                      THE SUN Saturday May 29th Page 93 SUPERDADChris is on  the March
 By Julie Stott Page 93 "CHRIS 
                    MARCH is getting shirty with twin sons Paul 
                      and David.Devoted father Chris has 
                    followed his sons' careers religiously but the identical 
                      twins, 24, have threatened to tear his 
                    loyalties down the middle since joining different clubs.
 So Chris has come 
                    up with the idea of having a two-way shirt espe- cially made for 
                    himself.
 One half is made up of David's  Wakefield Wildcats colours and the other half is Paul's Huddersfield Giants strip.
 And Chris will be 
                    wearing it tomor- row when Giants host the Wildcats at the McAlpine 
                    Stadium.
 Wildcats hooker and vice-captain David said: "Luckily we've 
                      both got the same squad number, so there is no problem 
                    there. Dad has the No 9 on the back and the name March above it and keeps us both happy."
 Paul said: "When we play against each other mum and dad don't 
                    know who to cheer for."
 "Dad 
                    has the No 9 on the 
                      back"     WAKEFIELD 
                    EXPRESSFriday March 5th 2004
 "ROOKIE officer PC999 Phil Jacobs met his' collar-number 
                    counterpart - and discovered they had the same surname too.
 In a bizarre coincidence 20-year-old Phil, of West Yorkshire Police, met PC 999 David Jacobs, who 
                    has been a North Yorkshire officer for more than 30 years, and realised they shared the same profession,  name and famous number.
 The veteran officer, who came to Wakefield to teach in the force's driver training school at Crofton, 
                    had a word of advice for his young namesake,
 "Hand the number in," David joked. , "I heard the same jokes over and over again. A popular one was, 'What 
                      are you doing with your phone number on your shoulder?'
 "Sometimes you just laugh it off and eventually your colleagues 
                    get sick of making jokes. But I stuck it for 30 years and they still remember me."
 David, 51, 
                    spotted Phil's picture 
                    in West Yorkshire Police's internal magazine The Beat.
 "I was snapped 
                    in an identical pose in the Police Review magazine as Phil was for his picture in The Beat almost 25 years later," he said.
 David was front-page 
                    news in the national papers in 1980 when his quirky number was noticed and recent recruit Phil hit the headlines in December when he was given his collar number.
 Phil, who will begin 
                    walking the beat in Wakefield next month after he finishes training, said: "It 
                      is such a coincidence and quite spooky that we both have the same 
                      name and unusual number. We're not related though."
   "...999..." 
                    "...999..."    IN MEMORIUM WAKEFIELD EXPRESSFriday March 5th 2004
 OBITUARY NOTICES
 DENISON , 
                          (Nee McTiernan)
 NORAH ; 
                            On February 28 in Hospital after a short illness 
                            aged 93 years. Wife of the late Ernest,
 beloved mother of Michael, David and John and a loving grandma and friend. Funeral Friday March 5th service at St Paul's Church, AIverthorpe at 9.45 am, followed by
 internment in Wakefield Cemetery. Grave number N 99
   NORAH DENISON Born 26 July 1910, died February 28th 2004 Rest In Peace GOODNIGHT AND GOD BLESS DEAR MOTHER     Service of Thanksgiving THE HOLY BIBLE Psalm 23 The LORD is my shepherd; I shall 
                    not want. 2He maketh me to lie down in green pastures:
 He leadeth me beside the still waters.
 3He restoreth my soul:
 He leadeth me in the paths of
 righteousness for his name's sake.
 4Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
 I will fear no evil; For thou art with me;
 Thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
 5Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies:
 Thou anointest my head with oil;
 My cup runneth over.
 6Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life:
 And I will dwell in the house of 
                    the LORD forever.
 Hymn
 O Lord my God! when 
                    I in awesome wonder Consider all the 
                    works Thy hand hath made, I see the stars, 
                    I hear the mighty thunder, Thy pow'r throughout 
                    the universe display'd: Then sings my 
                    soul, my Saviour God, to thee, How great thou 
                    art! How great thou art!  Then sings 
                    my soul, my Saviour God, to thee,  How great thou 
                    art ! How great thou art! When through the 
                    woods and forest glades I wander And hear the birds 
                    sing sweetly in the trees; When I look down 
                    from lofty mountain grandeur, And hear the brook, 
                    and feel the gentle breeze; And when I think 
                    that God His Son not sparing, Sent Him to die 
                    - I scarce can take it in. That on the cross 
                    my burden gladly bearing, He bled and died 
                    to take away my sin: When Christ shall 
                    come with shout of acclamation And take me home 
                    - what joy shall fill my heart! Then shall I bow 
                    in humble adoration And there proclaim, 
                    my God, how great Thou art!
 HOW GREAT THOU ART MY GOD HOW GREAT 
                    THOU ART OM AUMMANIPADMEHUM AZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZA   
                      
                        | 4 | REAL | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
                        | 7 | REALITY | 90 | 36 | 9 |  
                        | 6 | OXYGEN | 90 | 36 | 9 |  
                        | 7 | SILICON | 81 | 36 | 9 |  
                        | 7 | CARBONS | 72 | 27 | 9 |  The Natural 
                    Remedy For The Relief Of Arthritis Dr. Anton Robinson  Bodywell (no 
                    date) "The treatments active ingredient 
                    was a metal present in the soil, found almost everywhere on earth. 
                    In fact, silicon is the second 
                    most abundant element on the planet, after oxygen. The dioxide of silicon (SiO2), called silica, is an extremely 
                    hard solid that constitutes over half of the Earth's crust. That explains why clay, which is essentially composed of 
                    hydrated aluminum silicates, has been used to treat rheumatic 
                    and other types of joint pain since time immemorial."    LIVING AT THE END OF 
                    THE WORLD Marina Benjamin JOSEPH SMITHS KINGDOM Page 144 "Mormonism is currently the fastest-growing new religion in the modern world.Its 
                    subscribers number 10 million and rising, it continues to attract 
                    converts from across the globe at an astonishing rate of 900 per day"     BREWER'S  DICTIONARY OF PHRASE 
                    AND FABLE Ivor H Evans 1985 Page 785"Nihilism (ni' hil izm) 
                    (Lat. nihil, nothing). The name given to an essentially 
                    philo-sophical and literary movement in Russia which questioned and protested against conventional and established 
                    values, etc. The term was popularized by Turgenev's novel Fathers 
                      and Sons (1862) and was subsequently confused with a kind 
                    of re-volutionary anarchism. Although nihil-ism proper was basically 
                    non-political, it strengthened revolutionary trends. The term 
                    was not new having long been ap-plied to negative systems of philosophy..."
 
 Nile. The Egyptians used to say that the rising of the  Nile was caused by the tears of ISIS. The feast of Isis was 
                    celebrated at the anniversary of the death of OSIRIS, 
                    when  Isis was supposed to mourn for her husband..."
   
                      
                        
                          
                            | 4 | ISIS | 56 | 20 | 2 |  
                            | 6 | OSIRIS | 89 | 35 | 8 |  
                            | 10 | . | 145 | 55 | 10 |  
                            | 1+0 | . | 1+4+5 | 5+5 | 1+0 |  
                            | 1 | . | 10 | 10 | 1 |  
                            | . | . | 1+0 | 1+0 | . |  
                            | 1 | . | 1 | 1 | 1 |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | 4 | NILE | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                            | 4 | LINE | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                            | 8 | . | 80 | 44 | 8 |  
                            | . | . | 8+0 | . | . |  
                            | 8 | . | 8 | 8 | 8 |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | . | HALO | . | . | . |  
                            | 2 | HA | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                            | 2 | LO | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
                            | 4 | HALO | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
                            | . | . | 3+6 | 1+8 | . |  
                            | 4 | HALO | 9 | 9 | 9 |      BREWER'S  DICTIONARY OF PHRASE 
                    AND FABLE Ivor H Evans 1985 Page 785   "Nimbus (Lat., a cloud). In Christian 
                    art a HALO of light placed 
                    round the head of an eminent personage. There are three forms: 
                    (1) Vesica piscis, or fish form (cp. ICHTHYS), 
                    used in representations of Christ and occasionally of the Virgin 
                    Mary, extending round the whole figure; (2) a circular halo; (3) 
                    radiated like a star or sun. The enrichments are: (1) for our 
                    Lord, a CROSS; (2) for the Virgin, a circlet of stars; 
                    (3) for ANGELS, a circlet of small rays, and an outer circle 
                    of quatrefoils; (4) the same for  SAINTS and martyrs, 
                    but with the name often inscribed round the circumference; (5) 
                    for the Deity the rays diverge in a triangular direction. Nimbi 
                    / Page 786 / of a square form signify that 
                      the persons so represented were living when they were painted.The nimbus was used by heathen nations long before painters Introduced 
                      it into sacred pictures of saints, the TRINITY, and the 
                      Virgin Mary. PROSER. PINE was represented with a nimbus; the Roman 
                      EMPERORS were also decorated in the same manner because they were divi.  Cpo AUREOLE."
 
 "Nimrod. Any daring or outstanding hun-ter; from the 
                      "mighty hunter before the Lord" (Gen. x,  9 , which the  TARGUM says means a "sinful 
                        hunting of the sons of men". Pope says of him, he was 
                      "a mighty hunter, and his prey was man" (Windsor 
                        Forest, 62); so also Milton inter-prets the phrase (Paradise 
                          Lost, XII, 24, etc.).
 The legend is that the tomb of  Nimrod still exists in Damascus, and that no dew ever falls upon it, even though 
                      all its sur-roundings are saturated..."
 Nine. Nine,  FIVE, THREE are mystical num-mbers-the DIAPASON, diapente, and dia-trion of the 
                    Greeks.  Nine consists of a trinity of trinities. 
                    According to the Pythagoreans man is a full chord, or eight notes, 
                    and deity comes next. Three, being the TRINITY,  represents a perfect unity; twice three is the perfect  dual; and thrice three is the perfect  plural. This explains why  nine is a mystical 
                    number.
 From ancient times the number nine has been held of particular 
                            significance.  DEUCALION'S ark was tossed about for nine days when it stranded on the top of Mount PARNASSUS. 
                    There were nine MUSES, nine Gallicenae or virgin priest-esses of the ancient 
                      Gallic ORACLE; and Lars Porsena swore by nine  gods.
 NIOBE'S children lay nine days in their blood 
                      before they were buried; the  HYDRA had nine heads; at the Lemuria, held by the Romans on 9, 11 , and  13 May, persons haunted 
                      threw black beans over their heads, pronouncing nine times the words: "Avaunt, ye spectres, from this house!" 
                      and the  EXORCISM was complete (see Ovid's Fasti).
 There were nine rivers of HELL, or, according 
                      to some accounts, the  STYX en-compassed the infernal regions 
                      in nine circles; and  Milton makes the gates 
                      of  HELL "thrice three-fold", "three folds were brass,  three iron, three of adaman-tine 
                      rock". They had nine folds, nine  plates, and nine linings (Paradise Lost, II, 645).
 VULCAN, when kicked from OLYMPUS, was nine days falling to the island of LEM- NOS; and when the 
                      fallen  ANGELS were cast out of  HEAVEN Milton says "Nine days they fell" (Paradise Lost, VI, 871).
 In the early Ptolemaic system of astronomy, before the  PRIMUM 
                        MOBILE was added, there were  nine SPHERES; 
                      hence Milton, in his Arcades, speaks of
 The celestial siren's harmonyThat sat upon the nine enfolded spheres.
  In Scandinavian mythology there were nine earths,  HEL being the goddess of the ninth; there were nine  worlds in  NIFL-HElM, and ODIN'S ring dropped  eight other rings every ninth night.In folk-lore nine appears 
                    frequently.
 The  ABRACADABRA was worn nine days, and then flung into a river; in order 
                    to see the  FAIRIES one is directed to put "nine grains of wheat on a four-leaved clover"; nine  knots are made on black wool as a charm for a sprained 
                    ankle; if a servant fmds nine green peas in a peascod, she lays it on the lintel of the 
                    kitchen door, and the fIrst man that enters is to be her cavalier; 
                    to see nine magpies is most un-lucky; a cat has nine lives (see also CAT 
                      O'NINE TAILS); and the nine of Diamonds is known as the CURSE 
                    OF SCOTLAND.
 The weird sisters in Shakespeare's Macbeth (I, ill) sang, 
                    as they danced round the cauldron, "Thrice 
                      to thine, and thrice to mine, and thrice again to make up nine"; and then declared "the charm wound up"; and we drink 
                    a Three- limes-three to 
                    those most highly hon-oured.
 Leases are sometimes granted for  999 years, that is  three times  three-three-three.
 Page 787 Many run for  99  years, the dual of a  trinity of 
                    trinities.See also the  NINE POINTS OF THE LAW below, and the  NINE WORTHIES under WORTHIES. There are nine orders 
                    of angels; in HERALDRY there are nine marks of cadency and nine different crowns recognized.
 Dressed up to the nines. See DRESSED.  Nine days' Queen. Lady Jane Grey. She was proclaimed queen in London 
                    on 10 July 1553; Queen Mary was proclaimed in London on 19 July.
 Nine  days' wonder. 
                    Something that causes a great sensation for a few days, and then 
                    passes into the  LIMBO of things forgotten. An old proverb 
                    is: "A wonder lasts  nine days, and then the puppy's eyes are open", alluding to dogs, 
                    which like cats, are born blind. As much as to say, the  eyes of the public are blind in aston-ishment 
                    for nine days, but then their eyes are open, and 
                    they see too much to won-der any longer.
  King: You'd think it strange 
                    if I should marry her. Gloster: That would be ten 
                      days' wonder, at the least. Clar.: That's a day longer 
                      than a wonder lasts.SHAKESPEARE: Henry VI, Pt. III, III, ii.
  The  Nine First Fridays. In the ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH the special observ-ance 
                    of the first  FRIDAY in each of  nine consecutive months, marked by receiv-ing the EUCHARIST. 
                    The practice derives from St. Mary Alacoque (see SACREDHEART under HEART), who held that Christ told her that special grace would be granted to those fulfilling 
                    this observ-ance.
 Nine  Men's Morris. See 
                            under MORRIS. Nine-tail 
                    bruiser. Prison slang for the CAT-O'-NINE-TAILS.
 Nine tailors make a man. See TAILOR.
 Nine times out of ten. Far more often] than not.
 Possession is  nine points 
                    of the law. It is every advantage 
                    a person can have short of actual right. The "nine points of the law" have been given as: (1) a good deal of money; (2) a good deal 
                    of patience; (3) a good cause; (4) a good lawyer; (5) a good ]
 counsel; (6) good witnesses; (7) a good jury; (8) a good judge; 
                    and (9) good luck. To look  nine ways. To squint.
 Ninepence. Commendation Nine-pence. See COMMENDATION.
 Nice as ninepence. A corruption 
                    of "Nice as nine-pins". 
                    In the game of nine- pins, 
                    the "men" are set in  three 
                      rows with the utmost exactitude or nicety.
 Nimble as ninepence. Silver ninepences 
                    were common till the year 1696, 
                    when all Unmilled coin was called in. These nine- pences were very pliable or "nimble", 
                    and, being bent, were given as love tokens, the usual formula of presentation being To my love, 
                      from my love. There 
                    is an old proverb, A nimble ninepence 
                      is bet-ter than a slow shilling.
 Ninepence to a shilling. 
                    An old rustic phrase in the West of England meaning that the person 
                    referred to is deficient in common sense or intelligence.
 Right as ninepence. Perfectly 
                    well; in perfect condition.
 Ninus. Son of Belus, husband 
                    of SEMI-RAMIS, and 
                    the reputed builder of Nineveh. 
                    It is at his tomb that the lovers meet in the PYRAMUS and This be trav-esty:
  Pyr.: Wilt thou at  Ninny's tomb meet me straight- way?This.: 'Tide life, 'tide death, I come without delay.
 SHAKESPEARE: Midsummer Night's Dream, V, i.
   
                    
                      | 5 | NIOBE | 45 | 27 | 9 |  
                      | 8 | TANTALUS | 108 | 18 | 9 |  
                      | 6 | LATONA | 63 | 18 | 9 |  
                      | 6 | APOLLO | 71 | 26 | 8 |  
                      | 7 | AMPHION | 76 | 40 | 4 |  
                      | 6 | THEBES | 59 | 23 | 5 |    Niobe (ni' o be). The personification of maternal sorrow. According 
                    to Greek legend, Niobe, the daughter of  TANTA-LUS and wife of AMPHION, King of THEBES, was the mother 
                    of fourteen chil-dren, and taunted  LATONA because she 
                    had but two)-APOLLO and DIANA.  Lato-na commanded 
                    her children to avenge the insult and they consequently de-stroyed Niobe's sons and daughters. Niobe, inconsolable, wept herself 
                    to death, and was changed into a stone, from which ran water, 
                    "Like Niobe, all tears" (SHAKESPEARE: Hamlet, I, ii).The Niobe of 
                      Nations. So BYRON styles ROME, the "lone mother 
                    of dead empires", with "broken thrones and temples"; 
                    a "chaos of ruins"; a "desert 
                    where we steer stumbling o'er recollec-tions" (Childe 
                      Harold, iv, 79).
 
   I i i i i i i i i  CASSELL'S ENGLISH 
                  DICTIONARY 1968 Page 775 "Nimrod (nim' rod) [the 
                  mighty hunter of Geo. x. 8-9], n. (fig.) A great hunter.nincompoop (nin' k6m poop) [etym. unknown], no A noodle, 
                  a blockhead, a fool.
 nine (nin) [A.-S. nigon (cp. Dut. mgen, G. neun, Icel. niu, L. novem, Gr. ennea, Sansk. navan)], a. Containing eight 
                        and one. n. The 
                          number com-posed of eight 
                            and one, 9, Ix; a 
                  card of nine pips. nine days' wonder: 
                  An event, person, or thing that is a novelty for the moment but 
                  ia soon for-gotten. nine times 
                  out often: Usually, generally. to the nines: 
                  To perfection, elaborately. the Nine: The Muses. nine-pins, n. A game with nine skittles 
                  set up to be bowled at, (Am. ten-pina). nine-tenths, n. (collq.) Nearly all. ninefold, a. Nine times repeated. nineteen, a. Containing one more than eighteen. n. The number representing this quantity, 19, xix. nineteen to the dozen: Volubly. nineteenth, a. nineteenth hole: (colloq. 
                    Golf) The clubhouse bar. ninety, a. Con-taining nine times ten. n. The number containing nine times 
                      ten, 90, xc; (pl.) the years between 89 and 100 in a century or a person's life. nine-tieth, a.
 ninny (nin' i) [perh. 
                  imit., cpo Sp. nino, It. ninno, child], n. A 
                  fool, a simpleton.ninon (ne' non) [F.~, no (Textiles) A aerni-diaphan- 
                  ous light silk material.
 ninth (ninth) [NINE, -TH], a. Next after 
                        the eighth. n. One of nine equal parts; (Mus.) an interval of an 
                  octave and a second. ninthly, adu.
 niobium (ni o' bi ium) [Niobe, daughter of Tantalus, 
                  -IUM], n. (Chern.) A metallic element occurring in tantalite etc. niobic (ni /I' bik), a. nioblte (ni' 6 bit), n. A niobic aalt; (Min.) a variety of tantalite.
 
 Page 943 RAMADAN (ramadan') [Arab.(cp. Pers. and Turk.Ramazan), from ramada, to 
                  be hot], The ninth month of 
                  the Mohammedan year, the time of the great annual fast   
                    
                      
                        
                          | 7 | RAMADAN | - | - | - |  
                          | 4 | RAMA | 33 | 15 | 6 |  
                          | 3 | DAN | 19 | 10 | 1 |  
                          | - |  | 52 | 25 | 7 |  
                          | - |  | 5+2 | 2+5 | - |  
                          | 7 | RAMADAN | 52 | 25 | 7 |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | 72 | 36 | 9 |  
                          | - |  | 7+2 | 3+6 | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | - | - | - |  
                          | 3 | M+O+H | 36 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | 3 | A+M+M | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | 2 | E+D | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | MOHAMMED | 72 | 36 | 9 |  
                          | - |  | 7+2 | 3+6 | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | - | - | - |  
                          | - | M+O | 28 | 10 | 1 |  
                          | - | H+A | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | M+M | 26 | 8 | 8 |  
                          | - | E+D | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | MOHAMMED | 72 | 36 | 9 |  
                          | - |  | 7+2 | 3+6 | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | - | - | - |  
                          | - | M | 13 | 13 | 4 |  
                          | - | O | 15 | 15 | 6 |  
                          | - | HA | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | M | 13 | 13 | 4 |  
                          | - | M | 13 | 13 | 4 |  
                          | - | E+D | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                          | - | MOHAMMED | 72 | 36 | 9 |  
                          | - |  | 7+2 | 3+6 | - |  
                          | 8 | MOHAMMED | 9 | 9 | 9 |    PEACE BE UPON HIM   
                        
                          | 10 | NAMES OF GOD | 99 | 45 | 9 |  
                          | 7 | MANKIND | 66 | 30 | 3 |      KEEPER OF GENESIS A QUEST FOR THE HIDDEN 
                    LEGACY OF MANKIND Robert Bauval Graham Hancock 1996 Page 254"...Is there in any sense an interstellar 
                    Rosetta Stone? We believe there is a common language that all technical 
                    civilizations, no matter how different, must have. That common language 
                      is science and mathematics. The laws of Nature are the 
                    same everywhere:..." Page 255 " In addition, though 
                  the monuments are enabled to 'speak' from the moment that their 
                  astronomical context is understood, we have also to consider the 
                  amazing profusion of funerary texts that have come down to us from 
                  all periods of Egyptian history - all apparently emanating from 
                  the same very few common sources5 As we have seen, 
                    these texts operate like 'software' to the monuments' 'hardware', 
                    charting the route that the Horus-King (and all other future seekers) 
                    must follow. We recall a remark made by Giorgio 
                  de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend in Hamlet's Mill to the effect 
                  that the great strength of myths as vehicles for specific technical 
                  information is that they are capable of transmitting that information 
                  independently of the knowledge of individual story-tellers.6 In other words as long as a myth continues to be told true, it will 
                    also continue to transmit any higher message that may be concealed 
                    within its structure - even if neither the teller nor the hearer 
                    understands that message."   
                    HARMONIC 288Bruce Cathie
 1977
 Page 95 ( Eight) THE MEASURE OF LIGHT
 "The search for this particular value was a lengthy one and 
                      the clue that led me finally to a possible solution was a study 
                      of the construction of the Grand Gallery. The height of the Gallery 
                      was the first indication that it was not just an elaborate access 
                      passage. Previous measurements made by scientific investigators 
                      pointed to some interesting possibilities."
 "The value that I calculated 
                  for length was extremely close to that of the one published in Davidson 
                  and Aldersmith's book, their value being  1836 inches,"
 Page 95/97 "A search of my physics books revealed that 1836 was the 
                      closest approximation the scientists have calculated to the mass 
                      / ratio of the positive hydrogen ion, i.e. the proton, to the electron."   
                    JUST SIX NUMBERSMartin Rees
 1
 999
 OUR COSMIC HABITAT
 I  PLANETS STARS AND LIFE Page24" A proton is 1,836 times heavier than an electron, and the number 1,836 would have the same connotations to any 'intelligence' "  Page 24 / 25 "A manifestly artificial signal- 
                      even if it were as boring as lists of prime numbers, or the digits of 'pi' - would imply that 'intelli-gence' 
                      wasn't unique to the Earth and had evolved elsewhere. The nearest 
                      potential sites are so far away that signals would take many years 
                      in transit. For this reason alone, transmission would be primarily 
                      one-way. There would be time to send a measured response, but 
                      no scope for quick repartee!Any remote beings who could communicate with us would have some 
                      concepts of mathematics and logic that paralleled our own. And 
                      they would also share a knowledge of the basic particles and forces 
                      that govern our universe. Their habitat may be very different 
                      (and the biosphere even more different) from ours here on Earth; 
                      but they, and their planet, would be made of atoms just like those 
                      on Earth. For them, as for us, the most important particles would 
                      be protons and electrons: one electron orbiting a proton makes 
                      a hydrogen atom, and electric currents and radio transmitters 
                      involve streams of electrons. A proton 
                        is 1,836 times heavier than an electron, and the number 1,836 
                        would have the same connotations to any 'intelligence' able and motivated to transmit radio signals. All the basic forces 
                      and natural laws would be the same. Indeed, this uniformity - 
                      without which our universe would be a far more baffling place 
                      - seems to extend to the remotest galaxies that astronomers can 
                      study. (Later chapters in this book will, however, speculate about 
                      other 'universes', forever beyond range of our telescopes, where 
                      different laws may prevail.)
 Clearly, alien beings wouldn't use metres, kilograms or seconds. 
                      But we could exchange information about the ratios of two masses 
                      (such as thc ratio of proton and electron masses) or of two lengths, 
                      which are 'pure numbers' that 
                      don't depend on what units are used: the statement that one rod 
                      is ten times as long as another is true (or false) whether we 
                      measure lengths / in feet or metres or some alien units"
     THE TUTANKHAMUN 
                    PROPHECIESMaurice Cotterell
 1 999 Page 195 "Anderson's Constitutions of the Freemasons 
                    (1723) comments:. . . the finest structures of Tyre and Sidon could not be compared 
                    with the Eternal God's Temple at Jerusalem. . . there were employed 3,600 Princes, or 'Master 
                    Masons', to conduct the w,ork according to Solomon's directions, 
                    with 80,000 hewers of stone in the mountains ('Fellow Craftsmen'), 
                    and 70,000 labourers, in all 153,600, besides the 
                    levy under Adoniram to work in the mountains of Lebanon by turns 
                    with the Sidonians, viz 30,000 
                    being in all 183,600."
 "being in all 183,600." 
                          THE TUTANKHAMUN PROPHECIESMaurice Cotterell
 1 999 Page 190 BEHIND THE WALL OF SILENCE "The holy number of sun-worshippers 
                      is 9, the highest number that can be reached before becoming 
                      one (10) with the creator. This is why Tutankhamun was entombed in nine layers of coffin. This 
                      is why the pyramid skirts of the two statues, guarding the entrance 
                      to the Burial Chamber, were triangular (base 3), 
                      when the all-seeing eye-skirt of Mereruka contained a pyramid 
                      skirt with a base of four sides. The message concealed here 
                      is that the 3 should 
                        be squared, which equals 9"   "The message 
                          concealed here is that the 3 should be 
                            squared, which equals 9"     THE JUPITER EFFECTJohn Gribbin and Stephen Plagemann
 1977
 Page 122
 "Seventeen 'major historical earthquakes' are referred 
                      to in the report all of which occurred since
 1836"
     
                    STEPHEN HAWKING Quest for a theory of everything Kitty 
                      Ferguson 1991  Page  103 "The square root 
                      of 9 is three. So we know that the third side.' (line 
                        ends)   There 
                          are  13 words and the 
                          number  9 in the 33rd line down of page  103    THE BIOLOGY OF DEATHLyall Watson
 1974
  Page 49"As long ago as 1836, 
                      in a Manual of Medical Jurisprudence, this was said: 'Individuals 
                      who are apparently destroyed in a sudden manner, by certain 
                      wounds, diseases or even decapi-tation, are not really dead, 
                      but are only in conditions incompat-ible with the persistence 
                      of life."
 
                     THE 
                    OTHER MAN                    
                     continues, weaving the thread of the gossamer web
                     
                    
                     
                      
                        |  | HORUS | 81 | 27 |  |  
                        |  | VENUS | 81 | 18 | 9 |  
                        | 3 | SUN | 54 | 9 |  |  
                        |  | JUPITER | 99 | 36 |  |  
                        | 7 | ORIONIS | 99 | 45 | 9 |  
                        |  | SAGITTARIUS | 144 | 45 |  |                      
                                         
                     GOD OF NAMES 99 NAMES 
                    OF GOD                    
                     
                     
                      
                        |  | QUETZALCOATL | 153 | 45 |  |  
                        | 13 | SETI-MER-EN-PTAH | 153 | 72 | 9 |  
                        | 14 | PHARAOH 
                          + PYRAMID | 153 | 81 | 9 |  
                        | 14 | ALBERT 
                          + EINSTEIN | 153 | 63 | 9 |      THE EGYPTIAN HEAVEN 
                      AND HELL E. E. Wallis Budge 1857-1934 Page 59 "CHAPTER OF COMING FORTH BY DAY AND OF MAKING A WAY THROUGH 
                      THE AMMEHET." "SETI MER EN PTAH"   
                      
                        | 13 | SETI-MER-EN-PTAH | 153 | 72 | 9 |  
                        |  | ALIVE+DEAD | 63 | 36 |  |  
                        | 11 | DYING+RISING | 135 | 72 |  |  
                        | 9 | LIGHT+DARK | 90 | 45 |  |  
                        | 16 | POSITIVE+NEGATIVE | 198 | 81 | 9 |  
                        | 10 | MIND+MATTER | 117 | 45 | 9 |  
                        | 13 | MAGNETIC+FIELD | 1O8 | 45 | 9 |  
                        | 9 | ATOMS 
                          +MIND | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                        |  | KNOW | 63 | 18 |  |  
                        |  | REAL | 36 | 18 |  |  
                        |  | REALITY | 90 | 36 |  |  
                        | 4 | GODS | 45 | 18 | 9 |  
                        |  | LOVE | 54 | 18 |  |  
                        |  | DIVINE | 63 | 36 |  |  
                        |  | THOUGHT | 99 | 36 |  |    GODS JUDGEMENT GODS  DIVINE 
                      LAW ISISISISISIS LAW DIVINE   
                      
                        |  | THE 
                          HOLY WORD | 81 | 27 |  |  
                        | 3 | THE | 33 | 15 |  |  
                        |  | HOLY | 60 | 24 |  |  
                        |  | WORD | 60 | 24 |  |  
                        |  | HOLY 
                          THE WORD | 153 | 63 |  |  
                        | 1+1 | - | 1+5+3 | 6+3 | - |  
                        | 2 | THE 
                          HOLY WORD | 9 | 9 | 9 |    WHATEVER THOU SOWETH THOU 
                      REAPEST   GOD WITH US AND US WITH GOD   
                      
                        | 3 |  | 26 | 17 |  |  
                        | 4 |  | 60 | 24 |  |  
                        | 2 |  | 40 | 4 |  |  
                        |  | Add to Reduce  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+2+6 | 4+5 | 1+8 |  
                        |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |    "The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel" (which means "God with us"). “Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel” (which means, God with us). Matthew 1:23 "The virgin will conceive and give birth to a ... biblehub.com/matthew/1-23.htm   
                      
                        |  | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        | G | = | 7 |  | 3 |  | 26 | 17 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        | W | = | 5 |  | 4 |  | 60 | 24 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        | U | = | 3 |  | 2 |  | 40 | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  | 1+5 |  |  | Add to Reduce  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  |  |  |  | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+2+6 | 4+5 | 1+8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  |  |  |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |      
                      
                        |  | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | - | - | - | - |  | - | - | - |  |  |  |  |  |  | - | - | - |  |  
                        |  | = | 7 |  | 1 |  | 7 | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 6 |  | 1 |  | 15 | 6 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 4 |  | 1 |  | 4 | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 5 |  | 1 |  | 23 | 5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 9 |  | 1 |  | 9 | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 2 |  | 1 |  | 20 | 2 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 8 |  | 1 |  | 8 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 3 |  | 1 |  | 21 | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 1 |  | 1 |  | 19 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  |  |  |  | GOD WITH US |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  | 4+5 |  |  |  | 1+2+6 | 5+4 | 4+5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  |  |  |  | GOD WITH US |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |      
                      
                        |  | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | - | - | - | - |  | - | - | - |  |  |  |  |  |  | - | - | - |  |  
                        |  | = | 5 |  | 1 |  | 19 | 10 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 7 |  | 1 |  | 20 | 2 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 3 |  | 1 |  | 21 | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 7 |  | 1 |  | 4 | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 5 |  | 1 |  | 23 | 5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 3 |  | 1 |  | 15 | 6 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 5 |  | 1 |  | 7 | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 5 |  | 1 |  | 8 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  | = | 3 |  | 1 |  | 9 | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  |  |  |  | GOD WITH US |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  | 4+5 |  |  |  | 1+2+6 | 5+4 | 4+5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                        |  |  |  |  |  | GOD WITH US |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |    GOD WITH US 123456789 987654321 US WITH GOD   GODS PEACE BE UNTO YOU CHILDREN OF THE RAINBOW LIGHT SALUTATIONS AND GOODWILL THOUGHTS OF LIGHT AND LOVE GODS LOVE AND LIGHT UPON YOU AND UPON ALL SENTIENT BEINGS     
                      
                        | 4 | GODS | 45 | 18 | 9 |  
                        | 6 | SPIRIT  | 91 | 37 | 1 |  
                        | 4 | IRIS | 55 | 28 | 1 |  
                        | 4 | ISIS  | 56 | 20 | 2 |  
                        | 6 | OSIRIS | 89 | 35 | 8 |  
                        | 6 | VISHNU | 93 | 30 | 3 |  
                        | 5 | SHIVA | 59 | 59 | 5 |  
                        | 7 | KRISHNA | 80 | 35 | 8 |  
                        | 7 | SHRISTI | 102 | 39 | 3 |  
                        | 5 | RISHI | 63 | 36 | 9 |  
                        | 4 | ISHI | 45 | 27 | 9 |  
                        | 6 | CHRIST | 77 | 32 | 5 |    ...... SECRETS OF THE PYRAMIDS REVEALED Robert K. Moffett 1976 Page 153 "Maat can be defined loosely as Truth (definately capitalized) or "right order" "Maat" "Maat" Page 154 "In the pursuit of Maat,"   9 I AM AT MAAT AM  AT MAAT MAAT AM AT MAAT ISISIS ISISIS MAAT ISISIS IS GODS LAW GODS IS I AM AT TA MA AM MAAT AT AM I 9   
 
 
   THE TIMES Monday September 
                      12 2005 Advert opposite 
                      Page 16 "GLOBAL WARNING"   GLOBAL WARNING GLOBAL GLOBALWARNINGGLOBALWARMINGGLOBALWARMINGGLOBALWARNING GLOBAL WARMING GLOBAL     DAILY STAR Front Page Headlines Monday, September 12, 2005 "999 PANIC"     DECIPHER MANKIND HAD 1200 YEARS YEARS TO CRACK THE CODE WE HAVE ONE WEEK LEFT Stel Pavlou Page 357 24 hours "We live in a universe of patterns. Every night the stars move in circles across the sky. The seasons cycle at yearly inter vals. No two snowflakes are ever exactly the same, but the all have sixfold symmetry. Tigers and zebras are covered in patterns of stripes; leopards and hyenas are covered in pat terns of spots. Intricate trains of waves march across the oceans; very similar trains of sand dunes march across the desert . . . By using mathematics... we have discovered great secret: nature's patterns are not just there to be admired, they are vital clues to the rules that govern natural processes."  Ian Stewart, Nature's Numbers, 1995     THE EIGHT Katherine Neville 1988 "A QUEST 
                      WITH SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE" Page 407 (number omitted) THE CASTLEAlice: It's a great huge game of chess 
                              that's being played all over the world. . . Oh what fun
 it 
                      is! How I wish I was one of them! I wouldn't mind being 
                      a Pawn, if only I
 might 
                      join - though of course I should like to be a Queen best.
 Red 
                      Queen: That's easily managed. You can be the White 
                        Queen's Pawn if you like, as Lily'stoo 
                      young to play - and you're in the Second Square to begin with. 
                      When you
 get 
                      to the Eighth Square you'll be a Queen. 
                        . . .
 Lewis CarrollThrough 
                        the Looking-Glass
     THELIGHT OF ASIA
 Sir Edward Arnold
 1909
 THE LIGHT OF ASIA.
 OR
 THE GREAT RENUNCIATION
 (Mahabinishkramana)
 BEING
 THE LIFE AND TEACHING OF GAUTAMA
 Page 35 GAUTAMA SHAKYAMUNI 
                          SIDDARTHA 153 153 SIDDARTHA SHAKYAMUNI GAUTAMA  "So he 
                          issued from the womb as befits a Buddha." "When born, 
                          he was so lustrous and stead-fast that it appeared as if the 
                          young son had come down to earth and yet, when people gazed 
                          at his dazling brilliance, he held their eyes like the moon. 
                          His limbs shone with the radiant hue of precious gold, and 
                          lit up the space all around. Instantly he walked seven steps, 
                          firmly and with long strides. In that he was 
                          like the constellation of the seven seers. With the bearing 
                          of a lion he surveyed the four quarters, and spoke these words 
                          full of meaning for the future: 'For enlightenment I was born, 
                          for the good of all that lives. This is the last time that 
                          I have been born into this world of becoming." MAITREYA, THE 
                          FUTURE BUDDHA Page 237 "As the years pass, the impulse 
                          of the teachings of the Buddha Shakymuni gradually exhausts itself, and attention shifts to Maitreya, 
                            the coming Buddha who will appear in the future, after 
                          about 30,000 years or so. At present Maitreya is belived to reside in Tushita heaven, awaiting his last rebirth when the time is ripe."   
                                
                                  | 4 | LORD | 49 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 8 | MAITREYA | 92 | 38 | 2 |  
                                  | 6 | BUDDHA | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 18 | First Total | 181 | 82 | 10 |  
                                  | 1+8 | Add to Reduce | 1+8+1 | 8+2 | 1+0 |  
                                  | 9 | Second Total | 10 | 10 | 1 |  
                                  | - | Reduce to 
                                    Deduce  | 1+0 | 1+0 | - |  
                                  | 9 | Essence of Number | 1 | 1 | 1 |      
                                
                                  | 7 | TUSHITA | 98 | 26 | 8 |  
                                  | 6 | HEAVEN | 55 | 28 | 1 |  
                                  | 13 | Add | 153 | 54 | 9 |  
                                  | 1+3 | Reduce | 1+5+3 | 5+4 | - |  
                                  | 4 | Deduce | 9 | 9 | 9 |      
                                
                                  | 4 | LORD | 49 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 8 | AMITABHA | 55 | 28 | 1 |  
                                  | 6 | BUDDHA | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 18 | LORD 
                                    AMITABHA BUDDHA | 144 | 72 | 9 |      
                         SACRED BOOKS 
                          OF THE WORLD  A. C. Bouquet 1954
                     ( vi)- Extract from.the Lotus Sutra 
                                (Mahayana) Page 153 " I am the Tathagata, 
                          O ye gods and men! the Arhat, the perfectly enlightened one; 
                          having reached the shore myself, I carry others to the shore; 
                          being free, I make free; being comforted, I comfort; being 
                          perfectly at rest, I lead others to rest.By my perfect wisdom I know both this world and the next, 
                          such as they really are I am-all knowing, all-seeing; Come 
                          to me, ye gods and men! hear the law. I am he who indicates 
                          the path, as knowing the path, being acquainted, with the 
                          path.
 I shall refresh 
                          all beings whose bodies are withered, who are clogged to the 
                          triple world, I shall bring to felicity those that are pining 
                          away with toils, give them pleasures and final rest. Hearken to me; 
                          ye hosts of gods and men approach to behold me: I am the Tathagata, 
                          the Lord, who has no superior, who appears in this world to 
                          save. To thousands of kotis of living beings I preach a.pure 
                          and most bright law that has but one scope, to wit, deliverance 
                          and rest. I preach with 
                          ever the same voice, constantly taking enlightenment as my 
                          text. For this is equal for all; no partiality is in it, neither 
                          hatred nor affection. I am inexorable, bear no love nor hatred 
                          towards anyone, and proclaim the law towards anyone, and proclaim 
                          the law to all creatures without distinction, to the one as 
                          well as the other. Page 154I recreate the whole world like a cloud shedding its water 
                          without distinction; I have the same feelings for respectable 
                          people as for the low; for moral persons as for the immoral; 
                          for the depraved as for those who observe the rules of good 
                          conduct; for those who hold sectarian views and unsound tenets 
                          as for those whose views are sound and correct. I preach the 
                          law to the inferior in mental culture as well as to persons 
                          of superior understanding and extraordinary faculties; inaccessible 
                          to weariness, I spread in season the rain of the law."
   THE RAINBOW  OF RA - IN - BOW 
                        
           
                                
                                  | 10 | NAMES 
                                    OF GOD | 99 | 45 | 9 |  
                                  | - | THOUGHT  | 99 | 36 | 9 |  
                                  | - | PUREST | 99 | 27 | 9 |  
                                  | - | DIVINE | 63 | 36 | 9 |  
                                  | - | LOVE | 54 | 18 | 9 |   SO RISES THAT SUN SO SETS THAT SON  ORISIS THAT SON SO SETS THAT SON                    
                                     
                   ZERO ONE TWO THREE FOUR 
                    FIVE SIX SEVEN EIGHT NINE 
                   HEARETH THEE THINE INNER VOICE
                   THOUARTNOWENTERINGINTODEEPHYPNOTICTRANCEANDWILLBEGIVENTHESEAUTOSUGGESTIONS 
                   WHICHWILLBECARRIEDOUTBYTHEMINDBYTHEBODYBYTHESUBCONSCIOUSMINDBYTHECONSCIOUS
                    MINDBYTHEHIGHERMINDALLCONTAINEDWITHINTHEQUINTESSENTIALMOMENTOFCREATIVE
                   CONSCIOUSNESSOFMINDESSENCETHESETHENARETHEAUTOSUGGESTIONSTHATDAYBYDAYANDIN
                   EVERYWAYTHATTHATTHATHOLYISISISDRAWETHTHEKUNDALINISPIRITENERGYFROMOUTTHEINOFHOLY
                   MOTHERWOMBGUIDEINGHERUPWARDSTHROUGHTHEROOTSPINEUNTOTHEFIRSTSECONDANDTHIRD
                   CHAKRAONTOTHEFOURTHFIFTH SIXTHANDSEVENTHCHAKRAINTOTHEEIGHTHANDNINTHCHAKRA
                   OFHIGHESTENLIGHTENMENTOFMINDESSENCETHETHOUSANDPETALLOTUSOFBUDDHAHOODAND
                   THEREINVOWTOCONTINUEDREAMINGTHEDREAMANDNOTENTERFINALLYINTOHIGHEST
                   ENLIGHTENMENTOFMINDESSENCEASLONGASSENTIENTBEINGSDREAMOUTTHEIRDESTINIESOR
                   THATGREATMOTHERTHATHOLYISISISDREAMETHTHATDREAMAWAYAUMMANIPADMEHUM  
                   AMEN 
                     
                   O
                   NAMUH 
                   I AM YOU AND YOU ARE ME WE ARE THAT THAT THAT ISISIS YOU I EVERYTHING  ALL ARE CREATORS HAPPY BIRTH DAY O NAMUH THEN SINGS MY SOUL MY SAVIOUR GOD 
                          TO THEE HOW GREAT THOU ART 
                          HOW GREAT THOU ART THEN SINGS MY SOUL MY 
                    SAVIOUR GOD TO THEE HOW GREAT THOU ART HOW 
                    GREAT THOU ART 
            
   
   
            
 OM AUMMANIPADMEHUM AZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZAZA     
                    
                      |  |  | 33 | 15 |  |  
                      |  |  | 66 | 30 |  |  
                      | 9 | First Total  | 99 | 45 | 45 |  
                      | - | Add to Reduce  | 9+9 | 4+5 | 4+5 |  
                      | 9 | Second Total  | 18 | 9 | 9 |  
                      | - | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+8 |  |  |  
                      | 9 | Essence of Number | 9 |  |  |      
                    
                      |  |  | - | - | - |  
                      |  |  | - | - | - |  
                      |  |  | 20 | 2 |  |  
                      |  | H | 8 | 8 |  |  
                      |  |  | 5 | 5 |  |  
                      |  |  | - | - | - |  
                      |  | F | 6 | 6 |  |  
                      | - | A | 1 | 1 | 1 |  
                      |  |  | 13 | 4 |  |  
                      |  | I | 9 | 9 |  |  
                      |  |  | 12 | 3 |  |  
                      | - | Y | 25 | 7 | 7 |  
                      |  |  | - | - | - |  
                      | 9 | Add to Reduce  | 99 | 45 | 45 |  
                      | - | Reduce to Deduce  | 9+9 | 4+5 | 4+5 |  
                      | 9 | Essence of Number | 18 | 9 | 9 |      
                    
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 20 | 2 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 8 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 5 | 5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 6 | 6 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 1 | 1 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 13 | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 9 | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 12 | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 25 | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  | 99 | 45 | 45 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  | 4+5 |  |  |  | 9+9 | 4+5 | 4+5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  | 18 | 9 | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |      
                    
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 1 | 1 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 20 | 2 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 12 | 3 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 13 | 4 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 5 | 5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 6 | 6 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 25 | 7 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 8 | 8 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  | 1 |  | 9 | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  | 99 | 45 | 45 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  | 4+5 |  |  |  | 9+9 | 4+5 | 4+5 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  | 18 | 9 | 9 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |      REAL REALITY REVEALED = 99-9999-9999  REVEALED REALITY REAL OH I SAY WE DID LAUGH, BUT YOU WOULD HAVE HAD TO HAVE BEEN THERE   
                      
                        | 4 | REAL | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
                        | 7 | REALITY | 90 | 36 | 9 |  
                        | 6 | OXYGEN | 90 | 36 | 9 |  
                        | 7 | SILICON | 81 | 36 | 9 |  
                        | 7 | CARBONS | 72 | 27 | 9 |      The Natural 
                    Remedy For The Relief Of Arthritis Dr. Anton Robinson  Bodywell (no 
                    date) "The treatments active ingredient 
                    was a metal present in the soil, found almost everywhere on earth. 
                    In fact, silicon is the second 
                    most abundant element on the planet, after oxygen. The dioxide of silicon (SiO2), called silica, is an extremely 
                    hard solid that constitutes over half of the Earth's crust. That explains why clay, which is essentially composed of 
                    hydrated aluminum silicates, has been used to treat rheumatic 
                    and other types of joint pain since time immemorial."    LIVING AT THE END OF 
                    THE WORLD Marina Benjamin JOSEPH SMITHS KINGDOM Page 144 "Mormonism is currently the fastest-growing new religion in the modern world.Its 
                    subscribers number 10 million and rising, it continues to attract 
                    converts from across the globe at an astonishing rate of 900 per day"     BREWER'S  DICTIONARY OF PHRASE 
                    AND FABLE Ivor H Evans 1985 Page 785"Nihilism (ni' hil izm) 
                    (Lat. nihil, nothing). The name given to an essentially 
                    philo-sophical and literary movement in Russia which questioned and protested against conventional and established 
                    values, etc. The term was popularized by Turgenev's novel Fathers 
                      and Sons (1862) and was subsequently confused with a kind 
                    of re-volutionary anarchism. Although nihil-ism proper was basically 
                    non-political, it strengthened revolutionary trends. The term 
                    was not new having long been ap-plied to negative systems of philosophy..."
 
 Nile. The Egyptians used to say that the rising of the  Nile was caused by the tears of ISIS. The feast of Isis was 
                    celebrated at the anniversary of the death of OSIRIS, 
                    when  Isis was supposed to mourn for her husband..."
   
                      
                        
                          
                            | 4 | ISIS | 56 | 20 | 2 |  
                            | 6 | OSIRIS | 89 | 35 | 8 |  
                            | 10 | . | 145 | 55 | 10 |  
                            | 1+0 | . | 1+4+5 | 5+5 | 1+0 |  
                            | 1 | . | 10 | 10 | 1 |  
                            | . | . | 1+0 | 1+0 | . |  
                            | 1 | . | 1 | 1 | 1 |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | 4 | NILE | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                            | 4 | LINE | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                            | 8 | . | 80 | 44 | 8 |  
                            | . | . | 8+0 | . | . |  
                            | 8 | . | 8 | 8 | 8 |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | . | . | . | . | . |  
                            | . | HALO | . | . | . |  
                            | 2 | HA | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                            | 2 | LO | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
                            | 4 | HALO | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
                            | . | . | 3+6 | 1+8 | . |  
                            | 4 | HALO | 9 | 9 | 9 |    User avatarheron
 Posts: 18
 Joined: 05 Apr 2016 15:48
 Re: An Introduction to Hyperspace
  Quote Postby heron » 05 Apr 2016 20:10 Creatures that driftin the depths of the sea
 are the very last
 to discover the water
   EVERYONE UNDER WATER NO ONE KNOWS THEY'RE WET   The Tempest's Epilogue "You do look, my son, in a moved sort, As if you were dismayed; be cheerful, sir.
 Our revels now are ended. These our actors,
 As I foretold you, were all spirits and
 Are melted into air, into thin air;
 And, like the baseless fabric of this vision,
 The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces,
 The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
 Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve,
 And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
 Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
 As dreams are made on, and our little life
 Is rounded with a sleep."
 William Shakespeare 1564-1616     KEEPER OF GENESIS A QUEST FOR THE HIDDEN 
              LEGACY OF MANKIND Robert Bauval Graham Hancock 1996 Page 254"...Is there in any sense an interstellar 
                    Rosetta Stone? We believe there is a common language that all technical 
                    civilizations, no matter how different, must have. That common language 
                      is science and mathematics. The laws of Nature are the 
                    same everywhere:..." Page 255 "In addition, though 
                  the monuments are enabled to 'speak' from the moment that their 
                  astronomical context is understood, we have also to consider the 
                  amazing profusion of funerary texts that have come down to us from 
                  all periods of Egyptian history - all apparently emanating from 
                  the same very few common sources5 As we have seen, 
                    these texts operate like 'software' to the monuments' 'hardware', 
                    charting the route that the Horus-King (and all other future seekers) 
                    must follow. We recall a remark made by Giorgio 
                  de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend in Hamlet's Mill to the effect 
                  that the great strength of myths as vehicles for specific technical 
                  information is that they are capable of transmitting that information 
                  independently of the knowledge of individual story-tellers.6 In other words as long as a myth continues to be told true, it will 
                    also continue to transmit any higher message that may be concealed 
                    within its structure - even if neither the teller nor the hearer 
                    understands that message." 
 
              HARMONIC 288Bruce Cathie
 1977
 Page 95 ( Eight) THE MEASURE OF LIGHT "The search for this particular value was a lengthy one and the clue that led me finally to a possible solution was a study of the construction of the Grand Gallery. The height of the Gallery was the first indication that it was not just an elaborate access passage. Previous measurements made by scientific investigators pointed to some interesting possibilities."  Page 95  "The value that I calculated for length was extremely close to that of the one published in Davidson and Aldersmith's book, their value being 1836 inches," Page 95/97  "A search of my physics books revealed that 1836 was the closest approximation the scientists have calculated to the mass / ratio of the positive hydrogen ion, i.e. the proton, to the electron." Page 24  "A proton is 1,836 times heavier than an electron, and the number 1,836 would have the same connotations to any 'intelligence' "     JUST SIX NUMBERSMartin Rees
 1
 999
 OUR COSMIC HABITAT
 I PLANETS STARS 
                  AND LIFE Page 24 / 25 "A manifestly artificial signal- 
                      even if it were as boring as lists of prime numbers, or the digits of 'pi' - would imply that 'intelli-gence' 
                      wasn't unique to the Earth and had evolved elsewhere. The nearest 
                      potential sites are so far away that signals would take many years 
                      in transit. For this reason alone, transmission would be primarily 
                      one-way. There would be time to send a measured response, but 
                      no scope for quick repartee!Any remote beings who could communicate with us would have some 
                      concepts of mathematics and logic that paralleled our own. And 
                      they would also share a knowledge of the basic particles and forces 
                      that govern our universe. Their habitat may be very different 
                      (and the biosphere even more different) from ours here on Earth; 
                      but they, and their planet, would be made of atoms just like those 
                      on Earth. For them, as for us, the most important particles would 
                      be protons and electrons: one electron orbiting a proton makes 
                      a hydrogen atom, and electric currents and radio transmitters 
                      involve streams of electrons. A proton 
                        is 1,836 times heavier than an electron, and the number 1,836 
                        would have the same connotations to any 'intelligence' able and motivated to transmit radio signals. All the basic forces 
                      and natural laws would be the same. Indeed, this uniformity - 
                      without which our universe would be a far more baffling place 
                      - seems to extend to the remotest galaxies that astronomers can 
                      study. (Later chapters in this book will, however, speculate about 
                      other 'universes', forever beyond range of our telescopes, where 
                      different laws may prevail.)
 Clearly, alien beings wouldn't use metres, kilograms or seconds. 
                      But we could exchange information about the ratios of two masses 
                      (such as thc ratio of proton and electron masses) or of two lengths, 
                      which are 'pure numbers' that 
                      don't depend on what units are used: the statement that one rod 
                      is ten times as long as another is true (or false) whether we 
                      measure lengths / in feet or metres or some alien units"
     THE TUTANKHAMUN 
                    PROPHECIESMaurice Cotterell
 1 999 Page 195 "Anderson's Constitutions of the Freemasons 
                    (1723) comments:. . . the finest structures of Tyre and Sidon could not be compared 
                    with the Eternal God's Temple at Jerusalem. . . there were employed 3,600 Princes, or 'Master 
                    Masons', to conduct the w,ork according to Solomon's directions, 
                    with 80,000 hewers of stone in the mountains ('Fellow Craftsmen'), 
                    and 70,000 labourers, in all 153,600, besides the 
                    levy under Adoniram to work in the mountains of Lebanon by turns 
                    with the Sidonians, viz 30,000 
                    being in all 183,600."
 "being in all 183,600."  
                          THE TUTANKHAMUN PROPHECIESMaurice Cotterell
 1 999 Page 190 BEHIND THE WALL OF SILENCE "The holy number of sun-worshippers 
                      is 9, the highest number that can be reached before becoming 
                      one (10) with the creator. This is why Tutankhamun was entombed in nine layers of coffin. This 
                      is why the pyramid skirts of the two statues, guarding the entrance 
                      to the Burial Chamber, were triangular (base 3), 
                      when the all-seeing eye-skirt of Mereruka contained a pyramid 
                      skirt with a base of four sides. The message concealed here 
                      is that the 3 should 
                        be squared, which equals 9"   "The message 
                          concealed here is that the 3 should be 
                            squared, which equals 9"     THE JUPITER EFFECTJohn Gribbin and Stephen Plagemann
 1977
 Page 122
 "Seventeen 'major historical earthquakes' are referred 
                      to in the report all of which occurred since
 1836"
 
                        THE TUTANKHAMUN PROPHECIESMaurice Cotterel
 1 999 BEHIND THE WALL OF SILENCE Page 190"The holy number of sun-worshippers is 9, the highest number that can be reached before becoming 
    one (10) with the creator. This is why Tutankhamun 
                      was entombed in nine layers of coffin. This is why the pyramid 
                      skirts of the two statues, guarding the entrance to the Burial 
                      Chamber, were triangular (base 3), when the all-seeing eye-skirt 
                      of Mereruka contained a pyramid skirt with a base of four sides. 
                      The message concealed here is that the  3 should be squared, 
                      which equals  9"   "The message concealed 
                        here is that the 3 should be squared, which equals 9"
   STEPHEN HAWKING Quest for a theory of everything Kitty 
                      Ferguson 1991  Page  103 "The square root 
                      of 9 is three. So we know that the third side.' (line 
                        ends)   There 
                          are  13 words and the 
                          number  9 in the 33rd line down of page  103    THE BIOLOGY OF DEATHLyall Watson
 1974
  Page 49"As long ago as 1836, 
                      in a Manual of Medical Jurisprudence, this was said: 'Individuals 
                      who are apparently destroyed in a sudden manner, by certain 
                      wounds, diseases or even decapi-tation, are not really dead, 
                      but are only in conditions incompat-ible with the persistence 
                      of life."
                     
                     THE 
                      OTHER MAN                    
                     continues, weaving the thread of the gossamer web
                        
                     
                    
                     THE EIGHT Katherine Neville 1988 "A QUEST 
                      WITH SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE" Page 407 (number omitted) THE CASTLEAlice: It's a great huge game of chess 
                              that's being played all over the world. . . Oh what fun
 it 
                      is! How I wish I was one of them! I wouldn't mind being 
                      a Pawn, if only I
 might 
                      join - though of course I should like to be a Queen best.
 Red 
                      Queen: That's easily managed. You can be the White 
                        Queen's Pawn if you like, as Lily'stoo 
                      young to play - and you're in the Second Square to begin with. 
                      When you
 get 
                      to the Eighth Square you'll be a Queen. 
                        . . .
 Lewis CarrollThrough 
                        the Looking-Glass
   DAILY   MIRROR Tuesday June 8,   2004 Jonathan   Cainer VENUS MAKES A   PASS THE TRANSIT OF   VENUS ACROSS THE SUN Page 26 /   27 "IF YOU'RE reading this before noon, there is   a show that is out of this world happening over your head.Venus is passing in front of the face   of  THE   SUN. A miracle of nature is causing the famous twinkling evening star to   become briefly visible in broad daylight. Nothing like this has happened since   1882 - which means not a single living soul has ever witnessed it.If you'd   like to be part of history, all you have to do is to grab two bits of card and   make the simple pinhole projector on the far right.
 Do not, repeat not, look   directly at the sun.
 Don't kid yourself that you will be safe as long as you   are wearing sunglasses, either. If you're foolish enough to watch through cheap   tinted specs, or stupid and rich enough to use Dolce & Gabbanas - you'll go   blind just the same.
 After all, this is an event that will affect rich and   poor alike. Yet the alignment symbolises the   kind of love that'money can't buy. Deep, true, compassionate., dedicated,   unconditional love.
 Love is coming in waves towards the earth and, just as   surely as it is going to cross economic boundaries, it is will ignore   astrological distinctions. No matter your sign, you will experience an uplift in   your spirits soon.
 Your material circum-stances will also improve   as a result of the love   that you are willing to share, and the   loving support from others you are humble enough to accept. You think this is a   cold, harsh world?
 It can be... but this transit means we're heading for a   phase during which less selfish ideals predominate.
 And it's going to last   for the next eight years.
 The next transit   of Venus is on June 6, 2012, and many New Agers believe that the period between   now and then marks a "gateway between worlds of positive   possi-bility". The way they see it, every   121 years or so, the Earth gets a   chance to become the brighter, happier place it has always had the potential to   become. An eight-year "window" opens up, during which people   become far more receptive to inspirational
 ideas and grow less inclined to   nurse old grudges and grievances. .
 The Venus transits   usually (though  not always) come in   pairs, eight years apart, at the end of a   121-year cycle. Though those eight-year periods don't always   coincide with peace, they do create a more mellow, forgiving climate.
 The New   Agers believe that the first Venus transit in   the sequence (the one happening today) is the key turning in the lock, opening   the door to a paradise future. The second brings the moment when people must   decide whether to permanently welcome an era of higher consciousness or return   to the old ways of war, greed, suspicion and hatred.
 It is no coincidence,   they say, that the Mayans - the   pre-conquest inhabitants of what is now Southern Mexico and   Guatemala - ended their astonishingly accurate calendar   in 2012. It is, after all, based on   the Venus cycle.   According to those who still believe in the Mayan vision, 2012 will be when the   Venus-god Quetzalcoatl returns to earth, to ask one   last time whether its inhabitants are ready to create paradise. Or will they   remain in the same hell of mutual hatred?
 Of course, this is not the only   interpreta-tion of the Venus transit.
 Others, as   you can see on this page, have their views of what it means. Most agree that it   is about love-and some, too, reckon it is related to increased prosperity. But   the majority, myself included choose to reserve judgment. First we need to   observe the event. Then digest it. But on one point, at least, we are all   already agreed. In so   far as one event can ever be good news for the whole race, this   is!"
   VENUS 81 VENUS VENUS 18 VENUS VENUS 9 VENUS     CATCHING   THE LIGHT Arthur   Zajonc 1993 Page 44 ANGELIC   LIGHT - HUMAN LIGHT "HOW YOU   HAVE FALLEN FROM HEAVEN, BRIGHT SON OF THE MORNING FELLED TO THE   EARTH!" Isaiah   14:12-15 
                            
                          
                            
                              | 12 | QUETZALCOATL | 153 | 45 | 9 |  
                              | 5 | VOTAN | 72 | 18 | 9 |  
                              | 5 | VENUS | 81 | 18 | 9 |  
                              | - | V+E | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | - | S+U+N | 54 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | 9 | FEATHERED | 72 | 45 | 9 |  
                              | 7 | SERPENT | 97 | 34 | 7 |  
                              | 5 | SEDNA | 43 | 16 | 7 |  
                              | 5 | ANDES | 43 | 16 | 7 |    QUETZALCOATL PRESENTS THE   FEATHER RED SERPENT http://theosophy.org/tlodocs/teachers/Quetzalcoatl.htm   QUETZALCOATL "What does your mind seek?Where is your heart?
 If you give your heart to each and every thing,
 You lead it nowhere: you destroy your heart.
 Can anything he found on earth?
 Beyond is the place where one lives.I would be lying to myself were I to say:
 "Perhaps everything ends on this earth;
 Here do our lives end."
 No, O Lord of the Close Vicinity,It is beyond, with those who dwell in Your house,
 That I will sing songs to You, in the innermost of heaven.
 My heart rises;
 I fix my eyes upon You,
 Next to You, beside You,
 O Giver of Life.
 Cantares Mexicanos  "No one outside the adyta of initiation can know the ultimate origins of American Indian spirituality, and only a few have penetrated the veil of metaphor and symbol constituting the core of Nahuatl literature. No one knows how many, if any, of those who still speak the Nahuatl tongue, spoken by the Aztecs before them and already richly developed in the time of the earliest Toltecs, really fathom the inner meaning of its startling profusion of juxtaposed images, symbolic descriptions and ethereal allusions. The Nahuatl mind found truth only in "flowers and songs", in intuitive apprehension, and entirely dispensed with delusive dichotomies and mechanistic categories. Only the barest lineaments of the history of the Aztecs, latest of the major pre-Columbian civilizations in Meso-America, are known. The peoples before them are immersed in an obscurity dimly illuminated here and there by legend and archaeological discovery. Ancient Mexico and the lands immediately south of it are, as H.P. Blavatsky said, "a land of mystery". Yet within that lost continent is to be found Quetzalcoatl, one of the iridescent spiritual impulses of poorly recorded history. Quetzalcoatl emblazoned a trail through human thought and culture that could not be effaced by the indifference of the rapacious conquistador and the ruthless zeal of the Inquisition."   
                        
                          |  | QUETZALCOATL | 153 | 45 |  |  
                          | 7 | CHOLULA | 72 | 27 | 9 |  
                          | 11 | TEOTIHUACAN | 117 | 63 | 9 |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | - | - | - | - | - |  
                          | 11 | TEOTIHUACAN | - | - | - |  
                          |  | T+E+O+T | 60 | 15 |  |  
                          | 1 | I | 9 | 9 |  |  
                          |  | H+U+A | 30 | 30 |  |  
                          |  | C+A+N | 18 | 9 |  |  
                          | 11 | TEOTIHUACAN | 117 | 63 | 27 |  
                          | 1+1 | - | 1+1+7 | 6+3 | 2+7 |  
                          | 2 | TEOTIHUACAN | 9 | 9 | 9 |      LURE &   ROMANCE OF ALCHEMY C. J. S.   Thompson 1990  THE MYSTERY OF THE EMERALD   TABLET
 Page 31(chapter   IV)"AN atmosphere of romance and mystery surrounds the tradition of an   emerald tablet or table that is said to have been discovered in the tomb of the   legendary Hermes. It is first mentioned in Western literature in a treatise   attributed to Albertus Magnus called De   Mineralibus, written in the early part of the fourteenth   century. In this manuscript it is stated that the tomb of Hermes was discovered   by Alexander the Great in a cave near Hebron, and that in the tomb was found a   tablet of emerald, taken from the hands of the dead Hermes by Sarah, the wife of   Abraham. On this were inscribed in Phrenician characters the precepts of the   Great Master concerning the art of making gold. The Hermes alluded to is   doubtless intended to mean the traditionary Hermes Trismegistus mentioned in   Chapter III.
 There are many translations of the inscription supposed to have   been found on the tablet, and these in varied Arabic and Latin forms have been   carefully studied by Ruska.1 The earliest forms of the text are in Arabic, and   the following is a translation from an Arab collection of commentaries of the   early twelfth century known as
 The Emerald   Table of Hermes: True it   is, without falsehood, certain most true. That which is above is like to that   which is below, and that which is below is like to that which is above, to   accomplish the miracles of one thing. And as in all things whereby contemplation   of one, so in all things arose from this one thing by a single act of   adoption.The father thereof is the Sun, the mother the Moon.
 The wind   carried it in its womb, the earth is the source thereof.
 It is the father of   all works of wonder throughout the world.
 The power there of is   perfect.
 If it be cast on to earth, it will separate the element of earth   from that of fire, the subtle from the gross.
 With great sagacity it doth   ascend gently from earth to heaven. Again it doth descend to earth and uniteth   in itself the force from things superior and things inferior.
 Thus thou wilt   possess the brightness of the world, and all obscurity will fly far from   thee.
 This thing is the strong fortitude of all strength, for it over-cometh   every subtle thing and doth penetrate every solid substance.
 Thus was this   world created.
 Hence will there be marvellous adaptations achieved of   which the manner is this.
 For this reason I am called Hermes Trismegistus   because I hold three parts of 'the wisdom of the whole world.
 That which I   had to say about the operation of Sol is completed."
 
     WHY SMASH   ATOMS A. K. Solomon   1940 "ONCE THE FAIRY   TALE HERO HAS PENETRATED THE RING OF FIRE ROUND     THE MAGIC   MOUNTAIN HE IS FREE TO   WOO THE HEROINE IN HER CASTLE ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP"     THE MAGIC MOUNTAINThomasMann
 1924 To speak of   sorrow would be disingenuous. Yet in these days Hans Castorp's eyes did wear an   expression more musing than common. This death, which could at no time have   moved him greatly, and after the lapse of years could scarcely move him at all,   meant the sundering of yet another bond with the life be-low; gave to what he   rightly called his freedom the final seal. In the time of which we speak, all   contact between him and the flat-land had ceased. He sent no letters thither,   and received none thence. He no longer ordered Maria Mancini, having found a   brand up here to his liking, to which he was now as faithful as once to his   old-time charmer: a brand that must have carried even a polar explorer through   the sorest and severest trials; armed with which, and no other solace, Hans   Castorp could lie and bear it out indefinitely, as one does at the   sea-shore. It was an   especially well cured brand, with the best leaf wrapper,   named Light   of Asia" 
 THE
 LIGHT OF ASIA
 Sir Edward Arnold
 1909
 
 THE LIGHT OF ASIA.OR
 THE GREAT RENUNCIATION
 (Mahabinishkramana)
 BEING
 THE LIFE AND TEACHING OF   GAUTAMA
 
 "AH! BLESSED LORD! OH, HIGH DELIVERER!
 FORGIVE   THIS FEEBLE SCRIPT, WHICH DOTH THEE WRONG,
 MEASURING WITH LITTLE WIT THY   LOFTY LOVE.
 AH! LOVER! BROTHER! GUIDE! LAMP OF THE LAW!
 I TAKE MY REFUGE   IN THY NAME AND THEE!
 I TAKE MY REFUGE IN THY LAW OF GOOD!
 I TAKE MY   REFUGE IN THY ORDER! OM!
 THE DEW IS ON THE LOTUS! - RISE, GREAT SUN!
 AND   LIFT MY LEAF AND MIX ME WITH THE WAVE.
 OM MANI PADME HUM, THE SUNRISE   COMES!
 THE DEWDROP SLIPS INTO THE SHINING SEA! "
   
                        THELIGHT OF ASIA
 Sir Edward Arnold
 1 909 "RISE, GREAT SUN! AND LIFT MY LEAF"  "THE LIGHT OF   ASIA"     THE   SPIRITUAL TOURISTMick Brown
 Edition
 1
 999
 "Sir Edwin Arnold was another of the same breed. An educationalist   and journalist - he was at one time editor
 of the Daily   Telegraph - Arnold was originally sent to India as the principal of a government college   in Poona. He   became absorbed in Oriental studies   and wrote an epic poem on the life of the
 Buddha,The Light of Asia"
   ALL HAIL THE BUDDHA   THE DHARMA THE SANGHA   
                        
                          
                            | 6 | BUDDHA | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                            | 6 | SANGHA | 50 | 23 | 5 |  
                            | 6 | DHARMA | 45 | 27 | 9 |  
                            | 18 | Add | 135 | 72 | 18 |  
                            | 1+8 | Reduce | 1+3+5 | 7+2 | 1+8 |  
                            | 9 | Deduce | 9 | 9 | 9 |      
                        
                          
                            | 11 | BODHISATTVA | 121 | 40 | 4 |  
                            | 10 | SHAKYAMUNI | 122 | 41 | 5 |  
                            | 21 | Add to   Reduce | 243 | 81 | 9 |  
                            | 2+11 | Reduce to   Deduce | 2+4+3 | 8+1 | - |  
                            | 3 | Essence of   Number | 9 | 9 | 9 |    
                      
                        
                         
                          
                            
                              | 10 | SHAKYAMUNI | - | - | - |  
                              | 6 | BUDDHA | - | - | - |  
                              | - | S | 19 | 10 | 1 |  
                              | - | H+A | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | - | K+Y | 36 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | - | AMUN | 49 | 13 | 4 |  
                              | - | I | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | - | B+U+D | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | - | D | 4 | 4 | 4 |  
                              | - | H+A | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | 16 | SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA | 162 | 72 | 54 |  
                              | 1+6 |  | 1+6+2 | 7+2 | 5+4 |  
                              | 7 | SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA | 9 | 9 | 9 |      THE TIBETAN BOOK OF THE   DEAD LIBERATION   THROUGH UNDERSTANDING IN THE BETWEEN Translated by Robert A, F.   Thurman Foreward by H.H. The Dalai   Lama Page xxii "In the writing of Sanskrit and Tibetan names I have   written them phonetically as pronounced by English readers, not observing the   conventions of scholarly transliteration: Shakyamuni, not Sakyamuni; Vair-ochana, not Vairocana, and so forth. I   have omitted long marks on vowels, and write the vowelr as   "er".   BUDDHIST   SCRIPTURES Edward Conze 1959 THE LEGEND OF THE BUDDHA   SHAKYAMUNI Page 34 "We now come to the life of   the 'historical Buddha' who is distingushed from   other Buddha's as 'Shakya-muni', the 'Sage   from the tribe of the Shakyas.' "   
                          
                            
                              | 11 | SHUDDHODANA | - | - | - |  
                              | - | S+H | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | - | U+D+D+H+O+D+A+N+A | 72 | 36 | 9 |  
                              | 11 | SHUDDHODANA | 99 | 45 | 18 |  
                              | 1+1 | Add to   Reducee | 9+9 | 4+5 | 1+8 |  
                              | 1 | Second   Total | 18 | 9 | 9 |  
                              | - | Reduce to   Deuce | 1+8 | - | - |  
                              | 1 | Essence of   Number | 9 | 9 | 9 |      
                          
                            
                              | 11 | SHUDDHODANA | 99 | 45 | 9 |  
                              | 7 | SHAKYAS | 84 | 21 | 3 |      
                          
                            
                              | 9 | GREAT MAYA | - | - | - |  
                              | 5 | GREAT | 51 | 24 | 6 |  
                              | 4 | MAYA | 40 | 13 | 4 |  
                              | 9 | GREAT MAYA | 91 | 37 | 10 |  
                              | - | Add to   Reduce | 9+1 | 3+7 | 1+0 |  
                              | 9 | Second Total | 10 | 10 | 1 |  
                              | - | Reduce to   Deduce | 1+0 | 1+0 | - |  
                              | 9 | Essence of   Number | 1 | 1 | 1 |      
                          
                            
                              | 6 | BUDDHA | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                              | - | - | - | - | - |  
                              | - | - | - | - | - |  
                              | 7 | GAUTAMA | 64 | 19 | 1 |  
                              | 10 | SHAKYAMUNI | 122 | 41 | 5 |  
                              | 9 | SIDDARTHA | 84 | 39 | 3 |  
                              | 26 | First   Total | 270 | 99 | 9 |  
                              | 2+6 | Add to   Reduce | 2+7+0 | 9+9 | - |  
                              | 8 | Second Total | 9 | 18 | 9 |  
                              | - | Reduce to   Deduce | - | 1+8 | - |  
                              | 8 | Essence of   Number | 9 | 9 | 9 |      THELIGHT OF ASIA
 Sir Edward Arnold
 1909
 'THE LIGHT OF ASIA.
 OR
 THE GREAT RENUNCIATION
 (Mahabinishkramana)
 BEING
 THE LIFE AND TEACHING OF GAUTAMA
 Page 35 "1. The 
                          Birth of the Bodhisattva "There lived 
                          once upon a time a king of the Shakyas, a scion of the solar 
                          race whose name was Shuddhodana. He was pure in conduct, and 
                          beloved of the Shakyas like the autumn-moon. He had a wife, 
                          splendid, beautiful, and steadfast, who was called the Great 
                          Maya, from her resemblence to Maya the goddess. These two 
                          tasted of loves delights, and one day she conceived the fruit 
                          of her womb."   
                                
                                  | 9 | GREAT 
                                    MAYA | - | - | - |  
                                  | 5 | GREAT | 51 | 24 | 6 |  
                                  | 4 | MAYA | 40 | 13 | 4 |  
                                  | 9 | GREAT 
                                    MAYA  | 91 | 37 | 10 |  
                                  | - | Add to Reduce | 9+1 | 3+7 | 1+0 |  
                                  | 9 | Second Total  | 10 | 10 | 1 |  
                                  | - | Reduce to 
                                    Deduce | 1+0 | 1+0 | - |  
                                  | 9 | Essence of 
                                    Number | 1 | 1 | 1 |      
                                
                                  | 6 | BUDDHA | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | - | - | - | - | - |  
                                  | - | - | - | - | - |  
                                  | 7 | GAUTAMA | 64 | 19 | 1 |  
                                  | 10 | SHAKYAMUNI | 122 | 41 | 5 |  
                                  | 9 | SIDDARTHA | 84 | 39 | 3 |  
                                  | 26 | First Total | 270 | 99 | 9 |  
                                  | 2+6 | Add to Reduce | 2+7+0 | 9+9 | - |  
                                  | 8 | Second Total  | 9 | 18 | 9 |  
                                  | - | Reduce to 
                                    Deduce | - | 1+8 | - |  
                                  | 8 | Essence of 
                                    Number | 9 | 9 | 9 |  Page 35 GAUTAMA SHAKYAMUNI 
                          SIDDARTHA 153 153 SIDDARTHA SHAKYAMUNI GAUTAMA  "So he 
                          issued from the womb as befits a Buddha." "When born, 
                          he was so lustrous and stead-fast that it appeared as if the 
                          young son had come down to earth and yet, when people gazed 
                          at his dazling brilliance, he held their eyes like the moon. 
                          His limbs shone with the radiant hue of precious gold, and 
                          lit up the space all around. Instantly he walked seven steps, 
                          firmly and with long strides. In that he was 
                          like the constellation of the seven seers. With the bearing 
                          of a lion he surveyed the four quarters, and spoke these words 
                          full of meaning for the future: 'For enlightenment I was born, 
                          for the good of all that lives. This is the last time that 
                          I have been born into this world of becoming." MAITREYA, THE 
                          FUTURE BUDDHA Page 237 "As the years pass, the impulse 
                          of the teachings of the Buddha Shakymuni gradually exhausts itself, and attention shifts to Maitreya, 
                            the coming Buddha who will appear in the future, after 
                          about 30,000 years or so. At present Maitreya is belived to reside in Tushita heaven, awaiting his last rebirth when the time is ripe."   
                                
                                  | 4 | LORD | 49 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 8 | MAITREYA | 92 | 38 | 2 |  
                                  | 6 | BUDDHA | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 18 | First Total | 181 | 82 | 10 |  
                                  | 1+8 | Add to Reduce | 1+8+1 | 8+2 | 1+0 |  
                                  | 9 | Second Total | 10 | 10 | 1 |  
                                  | - | Reduce to 
                                    Deduce  | 1+0 | 1+0 | - |  
                                  | 9 | Essence of Number | 1 | 1 | 1 |      
                                
                                  | 7 | TUSHITA | 98 | 26 | 8 |  
                                  | 6 | HEAVEN | 55 | 28 | 1 |  
                                  | 13 | Add | 153 | 54 | 9 |  
                                  | 1+3 | Reduce | 1+5+3 | 5+4 | - |  
                                  | 4 | Deduce | 9 | 9 | 9 |      
                                
                                  | 4 | LORD | 49 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 8 | AMITABHA | 55 | 28 | 1 |  
                                  | 6 | BUDDHA | 40 | 22 | 4 |  
                                  | 18 | LORD 
                                    AMITABHA BUDDHA | 144 | 72 | 9 |      
                         SACRED BOOKS 
                          OF THE WORLD  A. C. Bouquet 1954
                     ( vi)- Extract from.the Lotus Sutra 
                                (Mahayana) Page 153 " I am the Tathagata, 
                          O ye gods and men! the Arhat, the perfectly enlightened one; 
                          having reached the shore myself, I carry others to the shore; 
                          being free, I make free; being comforted, I comfort; being 
                          perfectly at rest, I lead others to rest.By my perfect wisdom I know both this world and the next, 
                          such as they really are I am-all knowing, all-seeing; Come 
                          to me, ye gods and men! hear the law. I am he who indicates 
                          the path, as knowing the path, being acquainted, with the 
                          path.
 I shall refresh 
                          all beings whose bodies are withered, who are clogged to the 
                          triple world, I shall bring to felicity those that are pining 
                          away with toils, give them pleasures and final rest. Hearken to me; 
                          ye hosts of gods and men approach to behold me: I am the Tathagata, 
                          the Lord, who has no superior, who appears in this world to 
                          save. To thousands of kotis of living beings I preach a.pure 
                          and most bright law that has but one scope, to wit, deliverance 
                          and rest. I preach with 
                          ever the same voice, constantly taking enlightenment as my 
                          text. For this is equal for all; no partiality is in it, neither 
                          hatred nor affection. I am inexorable, bear no love nor hatred 
                          towards anyone, and proclaim the law towards anyone, and proclaim 
                          the law to all creatures without distinction, to the one as 
                          well as the other. Page 154I recreate the whole world like a cloud shedding its water 
                          without distinction; I have the same feelings for respectable 
                          people as for the low; for moral persons as for the immoral; 
                          for the depraved as for those who observe the rules of good 
                          conduct; for those who hold sectarian views and unsound tenets 
                          as for those whose views are sound and correct. I preach the 
                          law to the inferior in mental culture as well as to persons 
                          of superior understanding and extraordinary faculties; inaccessible 
                          to weariness, I spread in season the rain of the law."
   THE RAINBOW  OF RA    
                           
                         
                                
                                  | 10 | NAMES 
                                    OF GOD | 99 | 45 | 9 |  
                                  | 7 | THOUGHT  | 99 | 36 | 9 |  
                                  | 6 | PUREST | 99 | 27 | 9 |  
                                  | 6 | DIVINE | 63 | 36 | 9 |  
                                  | 4 | LOVE | 54 | 18 | 9 |  
                                    
                   SO RISES THAT SUN SO SETS 
                THAT SON                  
                   ORISIS THAT SON SO 
                    SETS THAT SON
                                                                                                                                         
                                                                                       
                 ZERO ONE TWO THREE FOUR 
                    FIVE SIX SEVEN EIGHT NINE 
                   HEARETH THEE THINE INNER VOICE
                   THOUARTNOWENTERINGINTODEEPHYPNOTICTRANCEANDWILLBEGIVENTHESEAUTOSUGGESTIONS 
                   WHICHWILLBECARRIEDOUTBYTHEMINDBYTHEBODYBYTHESUBCONSCIOUSMINDBYTHECONSCIOUS
                    MINDBYTHEHIGHERMINDALLCONTAINEDWITHINTHEQUINTESSENTIALMOMENTOFCREATIVE
                   CONSCIOUSNESSOFMINDESSENCETHESETHENARETHEAUTOSUGGESTIONSTHATDAYBYDAYANDIN
                   EVERYWAYTHATTHATTHATHOLYISISISDRAWETHTHEKUNDALINISPIRITENERGYFROMOUTTHEINOFHOLY
                   MOTHERWOMBGUIDEINGHERUPWARDSTHROUGHTHEROOTSPINEUNTOTHEFIRSTSECONDANDTHIRD
                   CHAKRAONTOTHEFOURTHFIFTH SIXTHANDSEVENTHCHAKRAINTOTHEEIGHTHANDNINTHCHAKRA
                   OFHIGHESTENLIGHTENMENTOFMINDESSENCETHETHOUSANDPETALLOTUSOFBUDDHAHOODAND
                   THEREINVOWTOCONTINUEDREAMINGTHEDREAMANDNOTENTERFINALLYINTOHIGHEST
                   ENLIGHTENMENTOFMINDESSENCEASLONGASSENTIENTBEINGSDREAMOUTTHEIRDESTINIESOR
                   THATGREATMOTHERTHATHOLYISISISDREAMETHTHATDREAMAWAYAUMMANIPADMEHUM  
                   AMEN 
                     
                   O
                   NAMUH 
                   I AM YOU AND YOU ARE ME WE ARE THAT THAT THAT ISISIS YOU I EVERYTHING  ALL ARE CREATORS O NAMUH THEN SINGS MY SOUL MY SAVIOUR GOD 
                          TO THEE HOW GREAT THOU ART 
                          HOW GREAT THOU ART THEN SINGS MY SOUL MY 
                    SAVIOUR GOD TO THEE HOW GREAT THOU ART HOW 
                    GREAT THOU ART   AVATAR 11 AVATAR    
          
            | - | THE RAINBOW LIGHT  | - | - | - |  
            |  | THE | 33 | 15 |  |  
            |  | RAINBOW  | 82 | 37 |  |  
            |  | LIGHT | 56 | 29 |  |  
            | 10 | THE RAINBOW LIGHT | 171 | 81 | 9 |  
            | 1+0 | - | 1+7+1 | 8+1 | - |  
            | 1 | THE RAINBOW LIGHT | 9 | 9 | 9 |      
   AFRICAN NIGHTMARE - SPECTRE OF FAMINE 1975     THE FIELD THE QUEST FOR THE SECRET FORCE OF THE UNIVERSE  Lynne McTaggart 2001 LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS PROLOGUE  The Coming Revolution  "WE ARE POISED ON THE brink of a revolution - a revolution as daring.and profound as Einstein's discovery of relativity; At the very frontier of science new ideas are emerging that challenge everything we believe about how our world works and how we define ourselves. Discoveries are being made that prove what religion has always espoused: that human beings are far more extraordinary than an assemblage of flesh and bones. At its most fundamental, this new science answers questions that have perplexed scientists for hundreds of years. At its.most profound, this is a science of the miraculous.For a number of decades respected scientists in a variety of disciplines all over the world have been carrying out well
 designed ex:perimenfs whose results fly in the face of current, biology and physics together, these studies offer us copious information about the central organizing force governing our bodies and the rest of the cosmos.
 What they have discovered is nothing less than astonishing. At our most elemental, we are not a chemical reaction, but an energetic charge. Human beings and all living things are a coalescence of energy in a field of energy connected to every other thing in the world. This pulsating energy field is the / Page XVI / central engine of our being and our consciousness, the alpha and the Omega of our existence.
  There is no 'me' and 'not-me' duality to our bodies in relation to the universe, but one underlying energy field. This field is responsible'for our mind's highest functions, the information source guiding the growth of our bodies. It is our brain, our heart, our memory - indeed, a blueprint of the world for all time. The field is the force, rather than germs or genes, that finally determines whether we are healthy or ill, the force which must be tapped in order to heal. We are attached and engaged, indivisible from our world, and our only fundamental truth is our relationship with it, 'The field,' as Einstein once succinctly put it, 'is the only reality.'1" MIN DOTH DREAM WHAT IN HEAVEN DOTH MIN MEAN     TABOO Alan Watts Page 295 Traditional Australian Aborigines believe, as do many other 'primitive' cultures, that rocks, stones and mountains are alive / Page 296 / and that we 'sing' the world into being - that we are creating as we name things. The discoveries of Braud and Jalm showed that this was more than superstition. It was just as the Achuar and the Huaorani Indians believe. On our deepest level, we do share our dreams." "we 'sing' the world into being - that we are creating as we name things." SING ME ANOTHER ONE DO   GATEWAY TO ATLANTIS Andrew Collins 2000 SNAKE OF FIRE Chapter xx Page 264 "THE LONG WAIT WAS WORTH IT. What lay in front of me in the depths of Punta del Este's Cueva # 1 was something quite special. The entrance is perhaps seven metres in width and three metres in height, and inside is a central chamber around twelve to fifteen metres deep. Positioned around its walls are a series of separate bays of different shapes and sizes, and a long corridor off to one side. It possessed roughly seven bays or com- partments, perhaps reflecting the septuple symbolism of Chico-moztoc, the Seven Caves.The corridor, or chamber, on the right-hand side was around ten metres in length and of undoubted human manufacture. Johnny Rodriguez, the Cuban archaeologist, pointed out that here the skeletons of Guayabo Blanco women had been found. Each one, over 2,000 years old, was laid out in a foetal position and covered in red ochre.
 From this knowledge alone, it seemed clear that the Guayabo Blanco venerated this cave site as a womb-like structure. If this was true, it made sense of why Chicomoztoc was seen as the place of emergence of the present human race.
 The Transit of Venus Strewn across the cavern's dusty floor were fragments of conch shell left behind by the last Taino to occupy, or use, the grotto. Overhead were two circular skylights, like the' zenith tubes' found at Olmec sites to mark the arrival of the sun at the time of the equinoxes. Beneath the one closest to the entrance was a circular concrete dais, where, according to Johnny, a stone plat- form would have been set in the ground. The rear skylight was difficult to approach, since it was now directly above a mound of earth displaced during excavations. Yet its apparent function was / Page 265 / interesting indeed. According to those scholars who had studied these skylights, it marked the 584-day cycle of the planet Venus. How this might have been achieved was not made clear.Should the skylight really mark the transit of the planet Venus, then this was extremely important. Quetzalcoatl was seen as the Morning Star, while his twin, Xolotl, was viewed as the Evening Star, names given to the dual aspects of Venus.
 Had we truly found the original site of the Seven Caves? Did this riddle, preserved by the Aztecs, relate in some way to the manner in which Cueva # 1 was able to catch the planetary influence of Venus, which, together with the seven stars of the Pleiades, deter-mined the 52-year calendar cycle marking the birthday of Quetzal-coatl? If this was correct, might there also be a connection between the seven-fold symbolism of the Seven Caves and the seven stars of the Pleiades? Remember, aside from being known as Ah-Canule, 'People of. the Serpent', those who established high culture in Mexico and the Yucatan were known as Ah-Tzai, 'People of the Rattlesnake'.1
 As a constellation, the rattlesnake was composed of a series of stars that emanated from the Pleiades which formed its seven-fold rattle. If we recall, too, that Quetzalcoatl's own serpentine body was that of the rattlesnake, and that the entire cult of the Chanes, or 'serpents', appears to have revolved around a species of rattlesnake known as the Crotalus durissus durissus,2 then this deadly snake begins to playa hitherto unknown role in the gradually unfolding story.
 A miracle of nature is causing 
            the famous twinkling evening star to become briefly visible 
            in broad daylight. Nothing like this has happened since 1882 
            - which means not a single living soul has ever witnessed it.If you'd like to be part of history, all you have to do is to 
          grab two bits of card and make the simple pinhole projector 
          on the far right.
 Do not, repeat not, look directly at the sun.
 Don't kid yourself that you will be safe as long as you are 
          wearing sunglasses, either. If you're foolish enough to watch 
          through cheap tinted specs, or stupid and rich enough to use 
          Dolce & Gabbanas - you'll go blind just the same.
 After all, this is an event that will affect rich and poor alike. Yet the alignment symbolises the 
              kind of love that'money can't buy. Deep, true, compassionate., 
              dedicated, unconditional love.
 Love is coming in waves towards the earth and, just as surely 
            as it is going to cross economic boundaries, it is will ignore 
            astrological distinctions. No matter your sign, you will experience 
            an uplift in your spirits soon.
 Your material circum-stances will also improve as a result 
            of the love that you are willing 
              to share, and the loving support from others 
            you are humble enough to accept. You think this is a cold, harsh 
            world?
 It can be... but this transit means we're heading for a phase 
          during which less selfish ideals predominate.
 And it's going to last for the next eight years.
 The next transit of Venus is on June 6, 2012, and many New Agers 
          believe that the period between now and then marks a "gateway 
              between worlds of positive possi-bility". 
            The way they see it, every 121 years or so, the Earth gets a chance to become the brighter, happier place it has always 
            had the potential to become. An eight-year "window" 
          opens up, during which people become far more receptive to inspirational
 ideas and grow less inclined to nurse old grudges and 
            grievances. .
 The Venus transits usually 
            (though  not always) come in pairs, eight years apart, 
            at the end of a 121-year cycle. Though those eight-year 
            periods don't always coincide with peace, they do create a more 
            mellow, forgiving climate.
 The New Agers believe that the first Venus transit in the sequence (the one happening today) is the key 
            turning in the lock, opening the door to a paradise future. 
            The second brings the moment when people must decide whether 
            to permanently welcome an era of higher consciousness or return 
            to the old ways of war, greed, suspicion and hatred.
 It is no coincidence, they say, that the Mayans - the pre-conquest inhabitants of what is now Southern 
              Mexico and Guatemala - ended their astonishingly accurate 
            calendar in 2012. It is, after all, based on 
            the Venus cycle. 
              According to those who still believe in the Mayan vision, 2012 
              will be when the Venus-god Quetzalcoatl returns to earth, to ask one last time whether its inhabitants are ready 
            to create paradise. Or will they remain in the same hell of 
            mutual hatred?
 Of course, this is not the only interpreta-tion of the Venus transit.
 Others, as you can see on this page, have their views of what 
          it means. Most agree that it is about love-and some, too, reckon 
          it is related to increased prosperity. But the majority, myself 
          included choose to reserve judgment. First we need to observe 
          the event. Then digest it. But on one point, at least, we 
            are all already agreed.  In so 
              far as one event can ever be good news for the whole race, 
              this is!"
 
            
           
           CATCHING THE LIGHT
           Arthur Zajonc 
           1993
           Page 44
           ANGELIC LIGHT 
                                - HUMAN LIGHT
           "HOW YOU 
                                HAVE FALLEN FROM HEAVEN, BRIGHT SON OF THE MORNING FELLED TO 
                                THE EARTH!"
           Isaiah 14:12-15
            QUETZALCOATL 
           PRESENTS THE FEATHER RED SERPENT   
            
              | 12 | QUETZALCOATL | 153 | 45 | 9 |  
              | 5 | VOTAN | 72 | 18 | 9 |  
              | 5 | VENUS | 81 | 18 | 9 |  
              | - | V+E | 27 | 9 | 9 |  
              | - | S+U+N | 54 | 9 | 9 |  
              | 9 | FEATHERED | 72 | 45 | 9 |  
              | 7 | SERPENT | 97 | 34 | 7 |  
              | 5 | SEDNA | 43 | 16 | 7 |  
              | 5 | ANDES | 43 | 16 | 7 |    THE LURE & ROMANCE OF ALCHEMY C. J. S. Thompson 1990 THE MYSTERY OF THE EMERALD TABLET True it is, without falsehood, certain most true. That which is above is like to that which is below, and that which is below is like to that which is above, to accomplish the miracles of one thing. And as in all things whereby contemplation of one, so in all things arose from this one thing by a single act of adoption.The father thereof is the Sun, the mother the Moon.
 The wind carried it in its womb, the earth is the source thereof.
 It is the father of all works of wonder throughout the world.
 The power there of is perfect.
 If it be cast on to earth, it will separate the element of earth from that of fire, the subtle from the gross.
 With great sagacity it doth ascend gently from earth to heaven. Again it doth descend to earth and uniteth in itself the force from things superior and things inferior.
 Thus thou wilt possess the brightness of the world, and all obscurity will fly far from thee.
 This thing is the strong fortitude of all strength, for it over-cometh every subtle thing and doth penetrate every solid substance.
 Thus was this world created.
 Hence will there be marvellous adaptations achieved of which the manner is this.
 For this reason I am called Hermes Trismegistus because I hold three parts of 'the wisdom of the whole world.
 That which I had to say about the operation of Sol is completed."
 Page 31(chapter IV)"AN atmosphere of romance and mystery surrounds the tradition of an emerald tablet or table that is said to have been discovered in the tomb of the legendary Hermes. It is first mentioned in Western literature in a treatise attributed to Albertus Magnus called De Mineralibus, written in the early part of the fourteenth century. In this manuscript it is stated that the tomb of Hermes was discovered by Alexander the Great in a cave near Hebron, and that in the tomb was found a tablet of emerald, taken from the hands of the dead Hermes by Sarah, the wife of Abraham. On this were inscribed in Phrenician characters the precepts of the Great Master concerning the art of making gold. The Hermes alluded to is doubtless intended to mean the traditionary Hermes Trismegistus mentioned in Chapter III.
 There are many translations of the inscription supposed to have been found on the tablet, and these in varied Arabic and Latin forms have been carefully studied by Ruska.1 The earliest forms of the text are in Arabic, and the following is a translation from an Arab collection of commentaries of the early twelfth century known as
 The Emerald Table of Hermes:   I HAVE COME HAVE YOU COME FROM WHOLE SOURCE FROM WHOLE  SOURCE HAVE I COME     R U RECEIVING ME RECEIVING U LOUD AND CLEAR     GODISGODISGODISGODISGODISGODISGODISGODISGODISGOD     FLUX IS COOL COOL IS FLUX 6336 919 3663 3663 919 6336 18 19 18 18 19 18 9 1 9 9 1 9 18 19 18 18 19 18 6336 919 3663 3663 919 6336 FLUX IS COOL COOL IS FLUX     
            
              | E | = | 5 | - | 5 |  | 52 | 25 | 7 |  
              | F | = | 6 | - | 4 |  | 38 | 29 | 2 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 3 |  | 28 | 19 | 1 |  
              | W | = | 5 | - | 5 |  | 67 | 22 | 4 |  
              | - | - | 17 | - | 17 | Add  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  | 1+7 |  | 1+7 | Reduce  | 1+8+5 | 9+5 | 1+4 |  
              |  |  |  |  |  | Total |  |  |  |  
              |  |  | - | - |  | Deduce | 1+4 | 1+4 |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  | Essence  |  |  |  |    
 A STRAIGHT ANSWER TO A STRAIGHT QUESTION ? ARE YOU AN ALIEN AND IF SO ARE YOU FROM OUTER SPACE OR INNER SPACE ? YES AND YOU ?   
            
              | 1 | I | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
              | 4 | THAT | 49 | 13 | 4 |  
              | 2 | AM | 14 | 5 | 5 |  
              | 11 |  | 145 | 55 | 1 |  
              | 16 |  | 213 | 78 | 6 |  
              | 3 | AND | 19 | 10 | 1 |  
              | 9 |  | 86 | 32 | 5 |  
              | 2 | AM | 14 | 5 | 5 |  
              | 1 | I | 9 | 9 | 9 |  
              |  | First Total  |  |  |  |  
              | 4+9 | Add to Reduce  | 5+5+8 | 2+1+6 | 4+5 |  
              |  | Second Total  |  | 9 | 9 |  
              | 1+3 | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+8 | - | - |  
              |  | Essence of Number |  | 9 | 9 |      
            
              | 11 |  | 102 | 48 |  |  
              | 2 |  | 21 | 12 |  |  
              | 10 |  | 121 | 58 |  |  
              | 10 |  | 102 | 57 |  |  
              | 10 |  | 117 | 45 |  |  
              | 9 |  | 113 | 50 |  |  
              | 3 |  | 33 | 15 |  |  
              | 9 |  | 95 | 41 |  |  
              | 2 |  | 21 | 12 |  |  
              | 16 |  | 213 | 78 |  |  
              | 12 |  | 115 | 61 |  |  
              |  | First Total  |  |  |  |  
              | 9+4 | Add to Reduce  | 1+0+5+3 | 4+7+7 | 5+4 |  
              |  | Second Total  |  |  |  |  
              | 1+3 | Reduce to Deduce  | - | 1+8 | - |  
              |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |      GREETINGS CHILDREN OF THE RAINBOW LIGHT PEACE AND GOODWILL BE UNTO YOU AND  UNTO ALL SENTIENT BEINGS     
     
            
              | - | THE RAINBOW LIGHT  | - | - | - |  
              |  | THE | 33 | 15 |  |  
              |  | RAINBOW  | 82 | 37 |  |  
              |  | LIGHT | 56 | 29 |  |  
              | 15 | THE RAINBOW LIGHT | 171 | 81 | 9 |  
              | 1+5 | - | 1+7+1 | 8+1 | - |  
              | 6 | THE RAINBOW LIGHT | 9 | 9 | 9 |      
            
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  |  |  | 1+3 |  | 1+4+8 | 5+8 | 1+3 |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  | 1+3 | 1+3 |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  
              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |      CHEIRO'S BOOK OF NUMBERS  Circa   1926
 Page106"Shakespeare,   that Prince of Philosophers, whose thoughts will adorn English literature for all time, laid down the well-known axiom: There is a tide in the affairs of men which if taken at   the flood, leads on to fortune." The question has been asked again and again, Is   there some means of knowing when the moment has come to take the tide at the   flood?
 My answer to this question is that the Great Architect of the Universe   in His Infinite Wisdom so created all things in such harmony of design that He   endowed the human mind with some part of that omnipotent knowledge which is the   attribute of the Divine Mind as the Creator of all.
 The question has been asked again and again, Is   there some means of knowing when the moment has come to take the tide at the   flood?      THE QUESTION HAS BEEN ASKED AGAIN AND AGAIN IS THERE SOME MEANS OF KNOWING WHEN THE MOMENT HAS COME TO TAKE THE TIDE AT THE FLOOD     
            
              | T | = | 2 | - | 3 | THE | 33 | 15 | 6 |  
              | Q | = | 8 | - | 8 | QUESTION | 120 | 39 | 3 |  
              | H | = | 8 | - | 3 | HAS | 28 | 10 | 1 |  
              | B | = | 2 | - | 4 | BEEN | 26 | 17 | 8 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 5 | ASKED | 40 | 13 | 4 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 5 | AGAIN | 32 | 23 | 5 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 3 | AND | 19 | 10 | 1 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 5 | AGAIN | 32 | 23 | 5 |  
              | I | = | 9 | - | 2 | IS | 28 | 10 | 1 |  
              | T | = | 2 | - | 5 | THERE | 56 | 29 | 2 |  
              | S | = | 1 | - | 4 | SOME | 52 | 16 | 7 |  
              | M | = | 4 | - | 5 | MEANS | 52 | 16 | 7 |  
              | O | = | 6 | - | 2 | OF | 21 | 12 | 3 |  
              | K | = | 2 | - | 7 | KNOWING | 93 | 39 | 3 |  
              | W | = | 5 | - | 4 | WHEN | 50 | 23 | 5 |  
              | T | = | 2 | - | 3 | THE | 33 | 15 | 6 |  
              | M | = | 4 | - | 6 | MOMENT | 80 | 26 | 8 |  
              | H | = | 8 | - | 3 | HAS | 28 | 10 | 1 |  
              | C | = | 3 | - | 4 | COME | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
              | T | = | 2 | - | 2 | TO | 35 | 8 | 8 |  
              | T | = | 2 | - | 4 | TAKE | 37 | 10 | 1 |  
              | T | = | 2 | - | 3 | THE | 33 | 15 | 6 |  
              | T | = | 2 | - | 4 | TIDE | 38 | 20 | 2 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 2 | AT | 21 | 3 | 3 |  
              | T | = | 2 | - | 3 | THE | 33 | 15 | 6 |  
              | F | = | 6 | - | 5 | FLOOD | 52 | 25 | 7 |  
              | B | - | 87 |  | 104 | First Total  |  |  |  |  
              | - | - | 8+7 | - | 1+0+4 | Add to Reduce  | 1+1+0+8 | 4+6+0 | 1+1+8 |  
              | - | - | 15 | - | 5 | Second Total  |  |  |  |  
              | - | - | 1+5 | - | - | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+0 | 1+0 | 1+0 |  
              | - | - | 6 | - |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |      YOU ARE GOING ON A JOURNEY A VERY SPECIAL JOURNEY DO HAVE A PLEASANT JOURNEY DO   
            
              
                | 8 | QUO   VADIS | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 6 | VOX   POP | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 11 | SORROW | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 8 | INSTINCT | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 11 | DESCENDANTS | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 8 | STARTING | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 9 | NARRATIVE | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 9 | SEQUENCES | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 9 | COMPLETES | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 9 | AMBIGUOUS | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
                | 7 | JOURNEY | 108 | 36 | 9 |    
    
 
    
   
 
       
   
            
              .. 
 .gif)
 
     
            
              | Y | = | 3 | - | 3 | YOU | 61 | 16 | 7 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 3 | ARE | 24 | 15 | 6 |  
              | G | = | 7 | - | 5 | GOING | 52 | 34 | 7 |  
              | O | = | 6 | - | 2 | ON | 29 | 11 | 2 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 1 | A | 1 | 1 | 1 |  
              | J | = | 1 | - | 7 | JOURNEY | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 1 | A | 1 | 1 | 1 |  
              | V | = | 4 | - | 4 | VERY | 70 | 25 | 7 |  
              | S | = | 1 | - | 7 | SPECIAL | 65 | 29 | 2 |  
              | J | = | 1 | - | 7 | JOURNEY | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
              | D | = | 4 | - | 2 | DO | 19 | 10 | 1 |  
              | H | = | 8 | - | 4 | HAVE | 36 | 18 | 9 |  
              | A | = | 1 | - | 1 | A | 1 | 1 | 1 |  
              | P | = | 7 | - | 8 | PLEASANT | 88 | 25 | 7 |  
              | J | = | 1 | - | 7 | JOURNEY | 108 | 36 | 9 |  
              | D | = | 4 | - | 2 | DO | 19 | 10 | 1 |  
              | ``- | - | 55 | - | 54 | First Total |  |  |  |  
              | - | - | 5+5 | - | 5+4 | Add to Reduce | 7+9+0 | 3+0+4 | 7+9 |  
              | - | - | 10 | - | 9 | Second Total |  |  |  |  
              | - | - | 1+0 | - |  | Reduce to Deduce  | 1+6 | - | 1+6 |  
              | - | - | 1 | - |  | Essence of Number |  |  |  |      OF TIME AND STARS Arthur C. Clarke Page 205 The Sentinel "I can never  look now at the Milky Way without wondering from which of those banked clouds of stars the emissaries are coming. If you will pardon so commonplace a simile, we have set off the fire alarm and have nothing to do but to wait. I do not think we will have to wait for long.   I CAN NEVER LOOK NOW AT THE MILKY WAY WITHOUT WONDERING FROM WHICH OF THOSE BANKED CLOUDS OF STARS THE EMISSARIES ARE COMING. IF YOU WILL PARDON SO COMMONPLACE A SIMILE, WE HAVE SET OFF THE FIRE ALARM AND HAVE NOTHING TO DO BUT TO WAIT. I DO NOT THINK WE WILL HAVE TO WAIT FOR LONG.   .... THE LIGHT IS RISING NOW RISING IS THE LIGHT     
   THE NUCLEAR FAMILY 1969   
          
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