From Life Technology News http://www.lifetechnology.org/blog/index.html
How much "truth" is there to the White Gold/Star Fire story, written up
in recent years by Laurence Gardner and chemically concocted by one
David Hudson?
Laurence Gardner is of course the guy who wrote "The Blodline of the
Holy Grail" and "Genesis of the Grail Kings", books which expand on the
ideas presented by the trio Lincoln/Baigent/Leigh in "Holy Blood, Holy
Grail". His website can be found here: http://graal.co.uk/ . Gardner's
"Star-Fire" articles originally saw light in Nexus magazine in Nov
1998, and are available here:
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles/starfire1.html . They're an
interesting read, regardless of whether you buy the theory.
Many of Gardner's ideas appealed to me, and I also basically accepted
his explanation of the Star Fire myth. But even a perfunctory look at
what people are saying about him on the Net shows that he's ridiculed
by just about everyone today, including the "mystic fringe", and all of
his titles are disputed as fake or can be bought online without any
credentials. If somebody is actively leading a smear campaign against
him or something, then it's certainly a very effective one.
Just recently the writer Philip Gardiner (not a relation of Gardner...)
has put a question to the public about this issue on his website, with
some facts about Gardner and his book that are difficult (for me) to
argue with ( http://www.freewebs.com/grailhunters/newsetc.htm ) .
Perhaps someone here knows more about this and has a better take on
what's going on. This is an interesting subject, not least because
Gardner also appears to be a player in some sort of a conspiracy
involivng the restoration of the Stuart house to the throne of England,
believe it or not.
Please consider the following. David Hudson's "Orbitally Rearranged
Monoatomic Elements", or ORME's, are said to be the Philosophers Stone
of alchemist fame, and their ingestion reputedly endows one with
various "magical" powers, such as levitation and teleportation. This is
the modern compound which Gardner says reproduces the Star Fire
qualities (which in the old days was rather gruesomly made from the
menstrual blood of the Annunaki females.)
Hudson's company is called "Ormus", and he says that this is a
coincidence, as he hadn't heard of the Gnostic Ormus before. Ormus was
a (largely mythical) 1st Century mystic and contemporary of Jesus, who
is hailed by many to be the spiritual father of Rosicrucianism.
The word "orme" ties into various mystical teachings in more ways than
can be readily listed in a short note. "Orme" is the French word for
"Elm". An event in Mideaval history known as "the Cutting of the Gisors
Elm", took place in 1188 in France and signified an important split of
ranks (and bloodlines) within the old Templar Order. Immediately
afterwards, the Rosicrucian order was founded by no other than Jean de
Gisors, of the Gisors castle. The same dude is said to have founded the
elusive but now famous "Priory of Sion" that same year.
And "orme" is also related to "n-orman", and is in fact a Norman word
signifying "winged snake", which was incorporated into many place names
around England, like the Great Orme's Head in North Wales. It is also
the origin of the English word "worm". El cuzano.
In Hebrew, the word "orma" is first used in Genesis 3:1 to describe the
Snake. This word is translated as a very strange "subtil" in the King
James Version and "crafty" in the New American Standard. In Hebrew the
word means both "trickery" and "nakedness".
Is this a lot of connections, or what? There's more, too.
Some chemical properties of monoatomic elements resemble the behavior
of micro-particles within a certain structure of our cellular
cytoskeleton, known as "microtubules". An obscure field of reserach as
yet, this feature of our cells is hailed by researcher Stuart Hameroff
as a Quantum Computer, with each microtubule capable of being in one of
two states at any given time and thus able to form a binary code
sequence.
Hameroff appeard in the "What the Bleep do we know" movie. The ideas
presented in that movie for Quantum Activation can take us right into
the next stage of evolution, envisioned by researchers like Timothy
Leary. One can find a very good interview with Hameroff in issue no. 2
of the Sub-Rosa magazine.
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| Title: Re: secrets of alchemy |
07 Jul 2006 04:41:20 PM |
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www.lifetechnology.org wrote:
From Life Technology News http://www.lifetechnology.org/blog/index.html
How much "truth" is there to the White Gold/Star Fire story, written up
in recent years by Laurence Gardner and chemically concocted by one
David Hudson?
Laurence Gardner is of course the guy who wrote "The Blodline of the
Holy Grail" and "Genesis of the Grail Kings", books which expand on the
ideas presented by the trio Lincoln/Baigent/Leigh in "Holy Blood, Holy
Grail". His website can be found here: http://graal.co.uk/ . Gardner's
"Star-Fire" articles originally saw light in Nexus magazine in Nov
1998, and are available here:
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles/starfire1.html . They're an
interesting read, regardless of whether you buy the theory.
Many of Gardner's ideas appealed to me, and I also basically accepted
his explanation of the Star Fire myth. But even a perfunctory look at
what people are saying about him on the Net shows that he's ridiculed
by just about everyone today, including the "mystic fringe", and all of
his titles are disputed as fake or can be bought online without any
credentials. If somebody is actively leading a smear campaign against
him or something, then it's certainly a very effective one.
SNIP>
Hameroff appeard in the "What the Bleep do we know" movie. The ideas
presented in that movie for Quantum Activation can take us right into
the next stage of evolution, envisioned by researchers like Timothy
Leary. One can find a very good interview with Hameroff in issue no. 2
of the Sub-Rosa magazine.
Oh yes just cobble a few "mysteries" together make some weird and
arcane conjectures, and Hey Presto another conspiracy theory or nine.
How about some of the themes have a little resonance, but nothing of
any real consequence, but myth is born on the unexplained.
BS mostly but it may sell or not, to a now well worn path of conjecture
of scholars not really up to the Job.
LB
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