Finishing the Mysteries of Gods and Symbols by Seven Star Hand - HTML preview

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Chapter 3
Grasping Ancient Wisdom

It is vital to understand that there is no truth without discernment and no wisdom without the truth. What then is “faith” but an effort to confound truth and wisdom?

Since I talk about ancient wisdom and will do so much more in the upcoming chapters and books, it is important to clarify some fundamentals before moving on to delve more deeply into the profundity modeled and encapsulated by the remainder of the symbology I demystify herein. Be a little patient and take the time to grasp this chapter before jumping into the details presented in the subsequent chapters and books.

The symbolism of mountains and pyramids are a pivotal fixture throughout the ancient wisdom narratives, concepts, and architecture of this region. They are thereby vital to grasping the truth about the topic of ancient wisdom. Mountains, pyramids, and their peaks and capstones symbolize and model the hierarchical relationship between great bodies of knowledge (mountain) and their associated wisdom (peak, pinnacle, capstone). The many allusions in modern languages to pinnacle, apex, acme, highest ideals, ascendancy, and so on, all flow from original ancient symbolized wisdom that used mountains and peaks to represent the highest of all “earthly” knowledge. Even the symbolism of arches and their keystones flows directly from this earlier model.

Notice also that stars and the sun, hence light (truth) sources, are above mountaintops (wisdom). When standing atop a mountain you can see (understand) them (truth sources) much better. This models that wisdom gives one greater insights and a wider understanding of larger bodies of knowledge, which refers to both the mountains below and the sun-stars above. Notice also how this directly matches the structure of the Doctrine of Two Spirits, where truth (light) sits above wisdom (mountaintop, capstone, keystone) at the very top of the Seven Spirits of God/Good, which also matches the symbolism of air (wind, sky, heavens) and the top of the cross, four elements, and ankh. This is another example of how natural laws and observations were used to define and organize the ancient wisdom symbology used to model and encode the associated spiritual philosophies.

Pyramids and their precise measurements and perfect angles symbolize a body of perfect (truthful) knowledge and its precise wisdom (peak, capstone). The straight sides allude to the shortest path to truth and wisdom, which is a straight line or perfect path. The capstone is based on peaks (apex, pinnacle) symbolizing great wisdom. Gold, white, or other reflective cover stones at the top (capstones) symbolize truth (light) emanating (shining) from wisdom. Similarly, the juxtaposition of a stone to a mountain symbolizes the immutable and common denominator essence (stone) of a great body of knowledge (mountain), as well as modeling its fundamentals and cornerstones (foundational wisdom). The capstone symbolism merges that of stones, cornerstones, and mountaintops.

The metaphor of things being written in or on stone flows partially from AmenMoses’ symbolic acquisition of two tables of stone engraved “atop a mountain.” Prior to that are the far more numerous Egyptian-Nubian examples of the exact same symbolism, with hieroglyphic narratives and other symbology inscribed on and/or modeled using literal stone. These all symbolize cornerstone or pivotal knowledge (wisdom) that lasts the tests and ravages of time, hence enduring and immutable wisdom about life in this universe, such as the Doctrine of Two Spirits, a.k.a. two tables of “stone.”

Understanding the symbolism of mountains, pyramids, capstones, and peaks, it should also be clear that the many allusions to mountaintops in the Hebrew canon and elsewhere are symbolizing wisdom. Accordingly, the story of AmenMoses in the Exodus actually symbolizes that he gained mastery over a great body of knowledge (mountain, pyramid) by attaining (ascending to, grasping, gaining mastery over) its wisdom (mountaintop). On the other hand, “Aaron” created a religion (the gold calf, a.k.a. a new sacred cow, a.k.a. cash cow) and led people astray. In his great disgust, AmenMoses broke the “two tables of stone” into pieces (many stones, a.k.a. many wisdom symbols) and hid them in a symbolic vessel (conveyance) symbolized as the lost or hidden ark, to protect long hidden wisdom for a far future time. That part of the Exodus story explains why there is wisdom and science encoded by symbolism throughout these ancient texts. AmenMoses clearly did not like religion and encoded proof of the truth for a far future time, hence now.

So that takes us to the so-called Illuminati pyramid, as seen on the USA one-dollar bill, and what that symbolism actually means. We are told that this is “God’s” (Great Architect…) eye, without ever saying that the Creator doesn’t have physical eyes, so this is symbolizing something else. Since the Seven Spirits of God are also symbolized as “seven eyes” in both Revelation and Zechariah, the shining eye is a compound symbol for truth. Likewise, the sun is our great light source, which the Egyptians also referred to as the right eye of the current “chief god.” Since light symbolizes truth, an eye shining with light merges these symbols to redundantly model pivotal details about the truth.

The shining eye is often set within a capstone, a compound symbol for wisdom. Similarly, since the seven spirits of god/good are called seven eyes and lamps, the shining eye is a compound symbol for truth and wisdom, as well as all seven spirits of god. As you can see, from the above descriptions, the shining eye and capstone symbolize truth emanating from wisdom, as well as wisdom opening one’s eyes and improving one’s ability to “see” the “light,” hence [understand] the [truth], among other profound details.

The direct association of truth and wisdom with the Creator is clearly modeled, as is the fact that truth and wisdom are unequivocal prerequisites to becoming more “godlike.” Notice also that truth, wisdom, and the other “spirits of god” are feminine, so this is not the eye of a “male” “god.” Sadly, it has long been viewed as a deception when displayed on money or political art like the Great Seal of the USA. Like religion, money and politics are not wisdom, as the Doctrine of Two Spirits outlines and history and current events have decisively proven.

On the other hand, whoever created this symbol had true insights. What better way to ensure everyone knows about it, but almost no one knows what it actually means. Another closely related symbol is the letter G within the square and compass. The most common interpretations have been God and the Great Architect. Two not so common ones are Gnosis (or Gnosticism) and Goddess, direct allusions to spiritual wisdom, a.k.a. Sophia, Seshat, Isis, Maat, etc. The universe is created through truth and wisdom, which are feminine concepts, the highest ideals, and insights into the nature of the Creator. The pyramid is also said to be unfinished because its corpus (body of knowledge) still lacks truth and wisdom (and justice…). Looking at the current state of humanity, the truth of the meaning and accuracy of this symbolism should now be self-evident.

Other related aspects of this symbolism are the four elements and the fact that the pyramid is an unfinished Egyptian type. I explore the links between pyramids, wisdom, and the four elements in more detail in the following definitions. Looking at the imagery of the seal behind the pyramid, we are also shown a progression of earth, water, air, and fire (the shining eye). The four elements are thereby shown in the correct order and are also purposely associated with the pyramid.

The unfinished pyramid has 13 levels, and will have 14 when the capstone is ready. This is a direct and purposeful allusion to the Egyptian tale of Isis and Osiris. In this story, Isis recovers and reassembles Osiris’ body after it has been cut into pieces and hidden in multiple places by his mortal enemy, Set[h]. An important detail within this parable of Isis and Osiris is that his body was cut into 14 pieces, yet Isis could only locate 13 of them. The lost piece was his penis (masculine desires) so she fashioned a “golden pillar” as a replacement, symbolizing both golden principles (associated with the sun) and feminine desires or desire for the feminine, a.k.a. righteousness.

Look at the Doctrine of Two Spirits and see that there are 14 lines, 7 good and 7 evil, directly matching the structure of Amen’s dual-feathered headdress. Thereby, the number thirteen can be traced back to this pivotal Egyptian symbolic parable about Osiris’ very bad luck and how it took Isis’ intervention (a winged feminine symbol) to save and resurrect him (change his “luck”) using special wisdom associated with the number 14, hence 7+7. Thereby, the thirteen levels of the pyramid represent the unfinished corpus of humanity awaiting the necessary truth and wisdom to lose its “masculine” desires to raise out of the muck (deep mud, mixture of earth and water, ergo unwise and unclean deeds) and into “cleansing waters,” “air,” and “light.” This is also symbolized by obelisks, which are pillars and symbolize wise (golden) principles, as well as air and the upper arm of the cross and four elements. I explore other aspects of this symbolism in Addendum 1- Of Obelisks, Sun Worship, and Other Grand Deceptions.

Following are some relevant definitions excerpted from the current draft of the upcoming update to Apocalypse Symbol Guide. These will repeat some of what I have already discussed.

Wisdom – The foundational and defining (simple, core) truth(s) about a larger body (corpus) of knowledge. Pivotal knowledge, principles symbolized as stone, pillars, obelisks, mountains, pyramids, and their peaks and capstones. Axiomatic and/or proverbial knowledge that succinctly enumerates and clarifies a wider understanding of a topic and/or knowledge base by describing common denominator rules and essential truths (essence, the spirit of) that accurately relate pivotal insight(s), both qualitative and quantitative, about an entire subject matter. Wisdom can thereby also be understood as a microcosm of defining truths about the associated macrocosm’s knowledge base.

It is important to understand that wisdom is a very special class of knowledge, while being wise is a state of mind that requires the understanding of wisdom. One cannot be truly wise without understanding what truth, wisdom, and knowledge are, how to differentiate each from the other, how they relate, and how to effectively use them. Thereby, a true sage must understand the workings of truth and wisdom and how they relate to existence, as well as learning and successfully applying actual wisdom in situations where it is relevant. Religion and most mysticism fail this test miserably and completely. It is vital to understand that there is no truth without discernment and no wisdom without the truth. What then is "faith" but an effort to confound truth and wisdom?

Simple understandings such as the carpenter’s rule of “measure twice and cut once” illustrate the basic wisdom of patiently assessing the consequences of deeds and making the correct choices, thereby preventing damaging errors that cause unnecessary struggle and difficulty. It tells you that thinking accurately by utilizing wisdom first, before acting rashly and in error, makes for a more rewarding and less difficult path through life. It describes the wisdom of patient and accurate assessment before doing deeds that will be far more difficult and time consuming to correct than if one were merely patient and discerned the truth of the situation, beforehand. It also encodes the wisdom of dualism (measure twice, Maat’s balance, ka, ka-maat) and of assessing the correct path before proceeding forward, so as to avoid erroneous deeds and their consequences.

Wisdom, as fundamental and elementary truths that serve as guiding principles (pillars of fire/light), was also referred to as law[s], hence the laws of the universe. Use of “the law” to refer to Hebrew canons flowed from this earlier and much longer usage in Egypt-Nubia. The prime example is Maat as the personification of truth, justice, and universal order. In other words, truth and justice are underlying laws of this universe. The use of “the law” eventually descended into error by referring to religious dogma, instead of truly understanding why it was wise to follow a certain path. Thereby, when referring to principles, precepts, maxims, pillars and the like, it is important to always understand the difference between verifiable and pivotal truths that encourage wiser deeds and results through greater understanding, as opposed to dogma that imposes strictures on behavior through enforced opinions and for hidden agendas.

It is often said that knowledge is power. In actuality, wisdom is power and knowledge (mountain, pyramid) is merely the steep path to wisdom (peak, capstone). That is why climbing to the top of a mountain (ascending) has always modeled and symbolized the process of acquiring great wisdom by gaining mastery over (attaining) a great body of knowledge. The longest and hardest treks are to the top of the highest peaks, which are closer to light sources (sun, stars, etc.), allowing you to better “see” the “light” (understand the truth). This is what standing upon a mountaintop symbolized. Pay close attention to how this symbolism has long been misinterpreted by so-called mystics and their groups, who have treated it literally and built temples and retreats on literal mountains, failing to grasp that is was symbolism. Similarly, all Three Faiths of Abraham have treated it completely literally and thereby falsely.

Pyramids and their precise measurements and perfect angles symbolize a body of perfect knowledge and its even more precise wisdom. The straight sides allude to the shortest path to truth and wisdom, which is a straight line or perfect path. The capstone is based on peaks symbolizing great wisdom and the reflective cover stones at the top (capstones) symbolized truth emanating (shining, enlightening) from the highest point (wisdom). This also matches the close association of all pharaohs with Maat, the personification of truth and justice as the basis for universal order, whose symbolized consort was Thoth, a.k.a. the Lord of Wisdom and the “scribe of the gods.”

To the Egyptians, symbols were the “word(s) of god(s)” and this is the source of the very same phrase used by the later religions of this region. Thoth was thereby an ancient expert in wisdom symbology, as the scribe of the “gods’ words.” All the evidence also proves that AmenMoses was similarly skilled in Egyptian wisdom symbologies. Notice how “Moses” went to a mountaintop to acquire wisdom inscribed in stone, and how this story uses both of these symbols for wisdom (stone, mountaintop) to reinforce the true purpose of this symbolic narrative. Notice how this directly matches earlier Egyptian-Nubian concepts expressed by the inscribing of the “words of gods” (symbols) using stone (wisdom)? Afterwards he shone with light, as does the shining eye and capstone above the unfinished pyramid.

Notice that truth and wisdom are the top two items of the Doctrine of Two Spirits outlines. If you overlay a mountain or pyramid, so the base sits at the line separating the lower (earth) and upper (air) halves, so the peak touches wisdom, then truth (light, stars, sun) would be in the “air” (sky, heaven) above the mountaintop. As I have said, ancient symbology used natural laws and realities to model wisdom and this is redundantly validated by the symbology of both Egypt and the Hebrew canon.

Ancient Wisdom–This term is fraught with confusion because of widespread ignorance about the true meaning of wisdom. Ancient wisdom is most often associated with what some call the mysteries, which is a real problem because mystery and wisdom are opposing concepts. Though truth and wisdom both require absolute precision and accuracy of concept (ergo perfection and the perfect path), the spiritually associated mysteries are mostly imprecise allusions and purposeful misdirection that absolutely fail this test.

It is important to realize that true spiritual wisdom is timeless and applies to the workings of the universe, as well as to those who operate within it. It is not just relevant to things of a particular time period, a limited body of knowledge, or physical realities, but to the fundamental questions of existence itself. Far too many who delve into the so-called mysteries, “eastern” religion, associated mysticism and esoterica, and/or the three faiths of Abraham are clueless about the history of the poorly sourced, badly translated, and deceptive derivative materials and concepts they rely upon.

Much of what is called ancient wisdom is actually misinterpreted ancient symbology that was designed to model, encode, and encapsulate pivotal spiritual and cosmological wisdom and resulting philosophy. Many also misuse the term to describe ancient medical or herbal knowledge, further muddying the lines between situational knowledge, good judgment, and wisdom. In such settings, wisdom would properly refer to understanding why things work. Knowing how and that they work is more accurately described as knowledge. The term ancient wisdom is somewhat of a misnomer, since true spiritual wisdom, being timeless and immutable, is not subject to the changing interpretations imposed by religion, mysticism, tradition, or the styles of a particular time period.

With that said, the term ancient wisdom most accurately refers to the symbolically encoded wisdom flowing from ancient Egypt-Nubia and their forbears during the much earlier times they called Zep Tepi. Unlike the more literal approach to spiritual philosophy and cosmology taken by later civilizations, especially western religion and esoterica, the Egyptians and Nubians framed and represented their wisdom both dualistically and symbolically to mirror pivotal insights into the verifiable nature of our reality. Furthermore, they used verifiable natural observations, objects, concepts, and science to model the hidden aspects of existence and directly related spiritual philosophy. They didn’t practice religion or magic in the way most now understand it. Western interpretations of their spiritual concepts, practices, and philosophies are mostly misguided and dead wrong. Most fail to fully appreciate the great antiquity of the concepts that the ancient Egyptians also asserted were deeply ancient wisdom, even to them.

Sadly, much of this ignorance flows directly from long term and purposeful efforts to confound the truth about the sources and meaning of symbolized wisdom because it disproves many religious, mystery school, and secret society assertions. Though all of the empires of the past sought to guard certain information from their enemies and subjects, the efforts of the Roman Empire are by far the most egregious. The raiding and destruction of knowledge caches like the library at Alexandria, Jerusalem, Qumran, and others by pre-Christian Rome are prime examples.

The worst and longest-running efforts to stamp-out and confound the wisdom flowing from ancient Egypt-Nubia and elsewhere have been carried out by Christian Rome, the Vatican, and their various proxies. The hiding of vast caches of ancient documents beneath the Vatican, as they hypocritically talk about faith and reason while secretly managing and/or manipulating religions, secret societies, and mystery schools, is duplicity and deception on a grand scale. Because of such efforts throughout the preceding centuries and into the present, a significant level of compounded error now plagues those who seek to understand through religion, mysticism, the New Age, and associated concepts and knowledge bases.

One of the important aspects of Egyptian-Nubian cosmology was the purposeful merger of science, wisdom symbology, and profound spiritual-moral philosophy. They correctly understood that the universe was composed of a conceptual-spiritual aspect that underlies and directly influences both the structure and outcomes within space-time. They also recognized this is inseparable from the dualism inherent within spiritual-moral realities, which are likewise inseparable from resulting physical existence, which emanates from and then affects the spiritual-conceptual-moral underpinnings, ad infinitum. This is clearly modeled by the eternity-infinity symbol or lemniscate (the number 8 on its side), which also happens to be the actual number of the dimension of time, the first dimension of space-time.

The four dimensions of space-time are dimensions 8 through 11. They are preceded and defined by dimensions 1 through 7. The math of string theory has shown that there are eleven dimensions to our reality. Hence, there are seven hidden dimensions that precede and define the four dimensions of space-time (7+4=11). That is why the numbers four and seven are so prominent throughout so many ancient symbolic sources. Those seven hidden dimensions are the spiritual-conceptual underpinnings of the four expanded and expansive dimensions of space-time. Discussions of seven heavens, spheres, spirits, and many other seven-symbol groups are purposely modeling or alluding to this hidden, yet often referenced, segment of our universe. Egyptian assertions of receiving certain wisdom and cosmology from a highly advanced earlier period of civilization are strongly validated by the scientifically advanced and highly sophisticated nature of pivotal components of their symbolized wisdom.

Parallel observations are detailed within Bohm’s theories and discussions about the Implicate and Explicate orders and other observations flowing from quantum physics. Bohm does not attach a direct dimension count because those details came after his work. Even so, the functionality modeled and detailed by his theories perfectly matches the allusions of many ancient sources, as well as the details of string theory. Bohm’s efforts to understand the synchronicity of quantum physics with eastern mysticism are well known and widely published. The merger of these different sources with the verifiable truth about ancient wisdom symbology helps to clarify much that has been held as mysterious for millennia.

The subject of eastern mysticism and philosophy is pivotal to this discussion. There are two related references to the “east” associated with the topics of ancient wisdom and “the mysteries.” The first, which is more closely related to the topic of the so-called mysteries, are the symbolic references to the east and ascending from the east in Egyptian-Nubian-Hebrew related narratives. This specifically refers to the location and action of the rising Sun, but most importantly what it symbolizes. The sun represents our primary source of light and heat, which in-turn symbolize truth and justice. The rising or ascending sun represents the triumph of light (truth) and justice (heat) over the dark (absence of the truth) and cold (absence of justice).

Likewise, the Sphinx was purposely focused on the direction and point on the horizon of the rising sun during the spring equinox for its symbolic meanings. Accordingly, the Lion of the Tribe of Judah is also associated with both the sun and rising from the east. Similarly, Maat, Amen, and other Egyptian-Nubian “gods” (neter) and pharaohs were unequivocally said to support Truth and Justice and that is the reason for the synchronous symbolism of the winged-sun and a winged Maat. The theme of truth and justice arising to dispel lies and injustice are redundantly repeated throughout Egyptian symbology and narratives and are a common theme of most later wisdom traditions.

The other meaning of the east is the Asian Far East, hence India, China, Tibet, etc. Most of the eastern philosophies were less religious and much more focused on karma, reincarnation, spiritual wisdom, related esoterica, and enlightenment. Thereby, the east has always alluded to wisdom about the soul, enlightenment, and other spiritual topics. An interesting thing to note about the mysticism of the east is the existence of various terms and concepts that were first presented in symbolic form in ancient Egypt-Nubia, and according to them, even earlier during the time of Zep Tepi.

A prime example is the term karma, which was also referred to as ka-maat. Ka (spirit) refers to one’s spiritual nature based upon accumulated deeds during your lifetime. This is the true ancient meaning of the term spirit, hence one’s moral essence and character. Maat symbolized the principles of Truth and Justice as the basis for universal balance and order. Thereby, ka-maat links ones spirit (moral essence) to truth and justice (maat) as the arbiter (judge) and guidelines (scales) to determine (weigh) the nature of one’s desires (heart) and resulting spirit (ka). Notice the perfect linguistic match, as well as the perfect conceptual match between ka-maat and karma? She (of the feminine nature...) also symbolically personified truth, justice, compassion, etc.

Similarly, eastern mystics regularly had mountaintop retreats, yet mountains, pyramids, and their peaks were used to symbolize the relationship between knowledge and wisdom much earlier in Egypt and in the earliest Hebrew materials. The story of AmenMoses ascending a great mountain and gaining wisdom atop its peak symbolizes his mastery over a great body of knowledge (mountain) and acquiring and attaining (grasping, ascending to) its wisdom (peak, pinnacle, highest point). The directly associated symbolism of ascension and apotheosis is treated literally and erroneously by most who also view the term spirit incorrectly. In fact, ascension was always meant to symbolize the raising of one’s moral essence and mindset from the lower half of the Doctrine of Two Spirits to the top of upper half, which are truth and wisdom. This is why most ancient wisdom traditions go to great lengths to stress the importance of moral character to the attainment “higher consciousness.”

Consequently, these examples clearly demonstrate that some well-known features of eastern philosophy and mysticism undeniably flow from the failure to understand earlier Egyptian-Nubian symbolic models of philosophical concepts. Those in the East had a better grasp of the subject matter though and were not bedeviled by as much spiritual deception as those in the West. Even so, there is significant evidence that eastern philosophies failed to grasp earlier concepts as well as repeating the errors inherent to all religion. Those from outside of Egypt and Nubia failed to grasp the meaning of medu neter (hieroglyphics, symbology) and associated symbolized wisdom and were clearly operating from misconceptions, based partly on oral transmission. This is a prime reason why certain concepts have long been called mysteries in both the east and west.

Most of the Egyptian-Nubian gods were initially created as symbolized and personified universal principles that were purposely dualistic. They had masculine and feminine aspects inherent within their symbolism and/or had mates that balanced the details of their symbolized gender and aspects. These were meant as philosophical symbolism of certain characterizations (natures, spirits), not literal gender. This misconception still greatly plagues religion and the mysteries. To understand this, the upper half of the Doctrine of Two Spirits enumerates the feminine aspect and the bottom half is the masculine.

Other philosophical concepts were organized accordingly. As prime examples are details associated with Amen and Amenet, Maat and Thoth/Seshat, Nut and Geb, Isis and Osiris, Adam and Eve, and other masculine and feminine duos. The feminine and masculine structure of the Doctrine of Two Spirits is clearly illustrated by the symbolic pair Nut and Geb, as well as other “feminine above and masculine below” symbolism. They all perfectly match up to the structure modeled by the Doctrine of Two Spirits overlaid by the cross-ankh. Understanding of this symbolized wisdom drifted into more and more error over time due to religious and political influences. It was finally lost due to outside invaders who arrogantly imposed their religious ignorance. Even so, Egyptian philosophy remained much closer to the root concepts than the later derivative religions that failed to understand pivotal symbolized wisdom.

The Doctrine of Two Spirits also purposely parallels and models the actual structure of this universe. The Seven Spirits of God/Good model certain wisdom about the seven dimensions that underlie and define space-time, while the seven spirits of evil (error) model certain realities associated with space-time. The cross and ankh are each models of the four elements, which purposely model underlying wisdom about the true sources and nature of the four dimensions of space-time. The dualism modeled by the Doctrine of Two Spirits and its direct relationship and inter-functionality with the four elements are prime examples of symbolized wisdom that was confounded to hide the truth about religion, the mysteries, and the symbology used to encode pivotal spiritual wisdom. The fact that four plus seven equals eleven and this matches the verifiable dimensional structure of our universe is evidence of many things.

In the purposeful model formed by the Doctrine of Two Spirits, overlaid by the cross-ankh (a.k.a. four elements), truth and wisdom are shown residing outside of space-time, hence within the seven dimensions, which precede time. Also, when the Doctrine of Two Spirits is overlaid by both the cross and ankh it positions truth and wisdom at the very top of the “head” of the ankh and at the top of the upper arm of the cross. Since both represent air, which symbolizes thought and the collective consciousness, this clearly positions truth and wisdom as the highest of spiritual concepts. They are purposely modeled in this way to impart the insight that they are timeless and non-physical in nature, as well as being senior to space-time realities and perceptions. The merger of properly decoded ancient wisdom with the frontiers of modern science provides the keys to ending the lies of religion and the errors of mysticism by proving the truth about the related “mysteries.”

Ancient Wisdom Symbology–When using this term, I am specifically referring to the body of related symbologies that were created in the period prior to what we call recorded history (Zep Tepi) and evidenced throughout the philosophy, religion, and mysticism of Africa, Asia, and beyond. This body of symbolized wisdom has also been referred to as the Philosophers’ Stone and Emerald Table[t][s] of Thoth. Both of these purposely-symbolic names for a symbolic body of wisdom have been misinterpreted and obfuscated over the last many centuries. I am now demonstrating the truth about them in a way that is easily understood and redundantly verifiable.

Most references to ancient wisdom actually refer to aspects of this body of related symbologies. It was used to model, encode, and encapsulate advanced science and pivotal spiritual wisdom for future generations, as well as forming the bas