The Forbidden Universe (59 page)

Read The Forbidden Universe Online

Authors: Lynn Picknett,Clive Prince

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Gnostic Dementia, #Fringe Science, #Science History, #Occult History, #Amazon.com, #Retail, #History

talismanic magic
1

tantrism
1

Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre
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,
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,
5
,
6

telepathy
1

telescopes
1
,
2
,
3

Theodosius I, Emperor
1
,
2

Theophilus, patriarch of Alexandria
1
,
2

theoretical physics
1
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2
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3

theurgy
1
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2
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3

Thirty Years War
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3
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4

Thoth
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3
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5

time asymmetry
1

transubstantiation
1

triple minimum, doctrine of
1
,
2
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3

triple-alpha process
1

Ultimate Observer
1
,
2

universe

anthropic principle
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18

big bang theory
1
,
2
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3
,
4

designed for intelligent life
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3
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expansion
1

infinite universe
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5

multiverse hypothesis
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5

participatory universe hypothesis
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6

simulated universes concept
1

see also
creation story; world systems

Urban VIII, Pope
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3

Urey, Harold
1

vacuum energy
1
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3
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4

da Vinci, Leonardo
1
,
2

Virgin of the World, The
1
,
2

Walsingham, Francis
1

Watson, James D.
1
,
2

wave-particle duality
1

Webster, John
1

Weinberg, Steven
1

Wense, Wilhelm
1

Wheeler, John Archibald
1
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Wickramasinghe, Chandra
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Wilkins, John
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witchcraft
1

world systems

biblical theory
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2

heliocentric
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hybrid model
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Ptolemaic
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Worthington, John
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Wotton, Sir Henry
1

Wren, Sir Christopher
1

Yeats, W. B.
1

Young, Thomas
1

 

The famous page from Copernicus
On the Revolutions of the
Celestial Spheres
(1543) showing his world-changing diagram of the sun-centred solar system. Less famously, just four lines below, he acknowledges his inspiration, the esoteric works of ‘Trismegistus’ – the legendary Egyptian sage Thrice-Great Hermes.
(Bridgcman) 

 
 

Detail from the lavish decoration of the Vatican’s fifteenth- century Appartamento Borgia, showing Hermes Trismegistus and Moses receiving divine inspiration from the Egyptian goddess Isis – somewhat unusual for a pope’s personal rooms. But this does show the extreme veneration that even the head of the Church accorded the demi-god of the Hermeticists.
(
Author’s collection)

 

The belief that Christianity could trace its origins via Hermeticism to ancient Egypt was taken to its extreme by the uncompromising Giordano Bruno, whose statue now stands on the spot in Rome where he was burned to death by the Church for heresy in 1600.
(
Science Photo Library
)
 

 
 

Bruno’s belief that Copernicus’ new model of the solar system would literally trigger a new age of spiritual and scientific enlightenment was shared by his successor Tommaso Campanella
(left)
, who in turn was a close friend and advisor to Galileo
(below)
. Considered science’s great martyr because of his persecution by the Church, the evidence indicates that Galileo was motivated at least as much by the Hermetic significance of heliocentricity.
(
top:
Mary Evans Picture Library
; bottom:
Bridgeman
)

 

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