Thanks for the reply, this is what i've been looking for.. It fills
in the gaps..
Please note also...
Luca Pacioli(1445-1517)crafted the art of double-bookkeeping and
magic squares…
Bookkeeping and the occult a very semitic affair..
Magic squares were also an occult technique used by Agrippa and the
shady Cabbalist Rabbi Joseph Tzayach of Damascus (1505-1573)….
(I have copied the below from the web-site which says it all
really).
The rest of Pacioli's pretentious mathematical summation was soon
forgotten. But the section on double-entry bookkeeping was reprinted
and translated, and it continued teaching accountants well into the
19th century.
This formal method was, in the words of an early 16th-century
accountant,
"a magic mirror in which the adept sees both himself and others."
http://www.gresham.ac.uk/printtranscript.asp?EventId=382
http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi1229.htm
http://www-groups.dcs.st-
and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Pacioli.html
http://www.math.unifi.it/~caressa/math/sator.html
--- In
evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com, "evola_as_he_is"
<evola_as_he_is@y...> wrote:
>
>
> "(...) in 'La scienza ebraica, la teoria della relatività e
> la "catarsi demoniaca"' (Vita Italiana, May 1940), Evola, under
the
> pen-name 'Arthos', brought to light "the relations which have
existed
> since the most ancient times between Judaism and the inclination
to
> an abstract and lifeless mathematical speculation", and noted
> that "that relation, in its turn, brings us back to an opposition
> between general world-outlooks, and originates in that denial of
the
> world as cosmos, as organic and living unity, which characterised
the
> Semite as opposed to the Aryan". More concretely, he added
that "it
> can be noted that algebra and arithmetics were brought to the West
by
> the Semites and the Arabs ; the numbers which allow algebraic
> operations are precisely those called 'Arabic', and unknown, for
> instance, to the Romans, who had their own methods of calculation -
> since, obviously, with Roman numbers it is impossible to perform
the
> most basic arithmetical operations known to everyone today".
>
>
http://thompkins_cariou.tripod.com/id68.html
>
> Precisely, 'La scienza ebraica, la teoria della relatività e
> la "catarsi demoniaca"' goes deeper into that question.
>
>
>
> --- In
evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com, "darkiexx"
<tristanarpe@h...>
> wrote:
> >
> > Evola in ' Three Aspects of the Jewish Problem' page 11, in
final
> > paragraph also speculates on mathematics and quantification.
> Granted,
> > today, we live in the era of quanta, however to state that this
is
> a
> > Jewish speciality, might be totally of mark. Of course, figures
and
> > abstractions maybe a Oriental speciality, but unless, he refers
to
> > some occult lineage via the Templars to the modern world and
> science,
> > I doubt it.
> > He mentions Einstein and the Italian Jew Enriques, however in
the
> same
> > vein can one really mention Scottish bible thumpers like James
> Clerk
> > Maxwell, Peter Ware Higgs, Graham Bell or the Ulster-Scot John
S.
> Bell
> > and the Nordic types like Heisenberg and Bohr, all in the same
> vein??
> > Granted that the last two specialised in the Manhattan Project;
but
> if
> > it were not for those hard head Scots, that I mentioned we would
> not
> > be sitting typing into these blasted machines…
> >
> > Any reflections anyone???
> >
>