Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 1, 2016

Sir Isaac Newton and the occult

Sir Isaac Newton, one of the greatest scientists/mathematicians who lived from 1642 to 1727, and creator of the ‘Principia Mathematica’ paved the way for the Industrial Revolution. Newton’s ideals helped lay the foundation of classical physics and has once again appeared in the news after discovering more evidence about his hidden side.

New discoveries have been found in old manuscripts saying that Newton regularly drank deep at some of the same arcane sources as today’s New Age theorists. Newton has been deeply linked to ancient Alchemy according to the manuscripts already found, and the same describes very interesting formulas that have not yet been revealed.

He was also known for his studies of the scriptures and Jewish mysticism, according to newly revealed texts.

Israel’s national library contains a vast treasure of Newton’s esoteric writings, and have recently digitized his occult collection and posted it online.

Among the yellowed texts is Newton’s famed prediction of the apocalypse in 2060.

The curator of Israel’s National Library’s humanities collection asserted that Newton was also a devout Christian who believed that the scripture provided a ‘code’ to the natural world.

The Daily Mail quoted Milka Levy-Rubin as saying the following: “Today, we tend to make a distinction between science and faith, but to Newton it was all part of the same world.”



“He believed that careful study of holy texts was a type of science that if analyzed correctly could predict what was to come.”

To enhance his understanding of the subject, Newton learned Hebrew, explored the esoteric Jewish philosophy, the mysticism of Kabbala, and the Talmud.

For example, he based his calculation on the end of days on information gleaned from the Book of Daniel, which projected the apocalypse 1,260 years later.

Newton discovered that this count started from the crowning of Charlemagne as Roman emperor in the year 800.

He also believed that the geometry of Solomon’s temple encoded ancient wisdom about proportions in nature, and man’s place in Creation.

The papers cover topics like interpretations of the Bible, theology, the history of ancient cultures, the Tabernacle, and the geometry of Solomon’s Temple.

The collections also constitute maps that Newton sketched to help him in his calculations and his attempts to divulge the secret knowledge he believed was encrypted within.



He tried to project what the end of days would look like, and the role Jews would play when it happened.

“He took a great interest in the Jews, and we found no negative expressions toward Jews in his writing,” said Levy-Rubin.

“He said the Jews would ultimately return to their land.”

But the university rejected his nonscientific papers, and consquently, the family auctioned them off at Sotheby’s in London in 1936.

The library exhibited the papers for the first time in 2007, and now they are accessible to everyone - free of charge - on the Internet.

Final Notes:

Despite of this news, we should agree that when we integrate Newton’s idea of spirit as both permeating and enabling the functions of time and space with his own probing into the possibilities of subatomic matter, we begin to move closer to the contemporary notion of a zero-point energy field underlying all physical reality, and even much more.



Newton’s achievements, in both touching upon the realms of the occult and appearing to anticipated quantum theory, not only seems colossal; it seems incommensurable. And perhaps it is best summed up in the words of the greats economist John Maynard Keynes, who was one of the first researches the records of Newton’s alchemical pursuits, and who, in address in which he introduced those first finding to the public in 1942, said:

‘Newton was not the first of the age of reason. He was the last of the magicians, the last of the Babylonians and Sumerians, the last great mind which looked out on the visible and intellectual word with the same eyes as those who began to build intellectual inheritance rather less than 10,000 years ago. Sir Isaac Newton, a posthumous child born with no father, on Christmas’s day, 1642, was the last wonder-child to whom the Magi could do sincere and appropriate homage.”

For those interested in downloading the manuscripts please go to: The Jewish National and University Library. The same has published a number of high-quality scanned images of various Newton documents.



“I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.”

-Sir Isaac Newton-

Source:

Peter Bros
Dnaindia

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