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On the destructive appearance of formless matter within the atom

The mysterious evolutionary purpose of the unformed matter within the atom has received many strange and wonderful mathematical explanations throughout history, including texts written on ancient pyramids, sacred writings from India, and on ancient Greek scrolls. The Greeks warned of a terminal logic of formless matter capable of emerging from the atom to destroy civilization. From that science we discovered the hidden nature of nuclear warfare and today we have inherited a serious problem with the mass production of hydrogen bombs. Although we have actually discovered a mathematical antidote to this problem, the modern scientific mind does not want it.

In Gibbon’s The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire, the beginning of the collapse of that civilization is set in AD 415 when the custodian of the Great Library of Alexandria, the mathematician, philosopher, astronomer, and inventor, Hypatia, was killed by a mob. Christian in riots. under the supervision of Bishop Cyril. Not all Christians condemned Hypatia as a mathematical instrument of the devil, but they celebrated her as a symbol of virtue. The Christian historian, Socrates of Constantinople, described it in his Ecclesiastical History:

“There was a woman in Alexandria named Hypatia, daughter of the philosopher Theon, who achieved such achievements in literature and science, that she far surpassed all the philosophers of her own time. Having succeeded in the school of Plato and Plotinus, she explained the principles of philosophy to his auditors, many of whom came from afar to receive his instructions. magistrates. Nor did she feel ashamed to attend an assembly of men. Because all men for her extraordinary dignity and virtue admired her more. “

With the strongest possible emotional intentions, the sexually challenged Saint Augustine at the time of Hypatia’s death outlined his ideas about the purpose of the shapeless matter within the atom. He translated the mathematical definition of shapeless matter as the evil of female sexuality (see in his published ‘Confessions’) and placed his sexual observations in the current Western legal system. As a result, it became illegal for modern Western science to attempt to discover the antidote to the current nuclear problem. Augustine was by no means stupid. He knew that the mathematics that supported the Babylonian cult of Ishtar, the goddess of prostitution and war, belonged to the Great Whore of Babylon, mentioned in the Christian Holy Bible, the word of God. What he did not know was that Hypatia was teaching about the mathematical antidote contained in the pagan mathematics of Platonic philosophy.

Augustine proclaimed under Roman law that Hypatia’s mathematics was the work of the Devil. However, the Church later forgave Plato for being born a pagan before the birth of Christ, officially declaring that he was the founding father of the Christian religion. Scientists today have little incentive to treat the antidote to the appearance of unformed matter within the atom as a serious neurological problem. The legal legacy prohibiting the devil’s math has not been addressed. However, we have no real alternative but to get this message out to the world for critical discussion as soon as possible.

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