8.) From Spyglass to the Unseen Eye of Surveillance
The inherent challenge in deciphering these cryptic "clues" was a deliberate and integral element of their overarching strategy. Future operatives meticulously ensured that G’s true historical narrative and his sophisticated methods remained concealed from the general populace. Nevertheless, G intentionally constructed a complex puzzle, a labyrinthine intellectual challenge intended for those discerning few who might eventually discover him. This intricate design functions as a selective filter, allowing his profound secrets to be preserved while simultaneously offering a concealed pathway for his eventual, meticulously controlled revelation and symbolic "resurrection." The precise circumstances of G’s death, and under what specific alias he may have perished, remain unknown. However, his influential work was significantly revitalized and expanded upon through the efforts of Sir Francis Bacon (1561–1626). Many scholars regard Christian Rosenkreuz as a pseudonym for Francis Bacon himself, a theory supported by Bacon’s documented Rosicrucian affiliations in Germany. This strategic proliferation of aliases and the cultivation of hidden identities, a methodology perfected by G, was subsequently weaponized and exploited further by "the Mole." This later operative utilized these multiple personas to construct an even more intricate web of historical obfuscation, meticulously ensuring that no single figure could be easily traced as the sole orchestrator of their grand design. Another pivotal figure connected to this intricate network was Roger Bacon, whose deep commitment to the Franciscan order is reflected in the very name adopted by Francis Bacon. Claims of hidden ciphers and coded messages within the plays of William Shakespeare supposedly reveal Bacon as the true author.
G’s profound insights into optical intelligence were symbolically represented on his personal emblem. This advanced intelligence was further mediated and developed through the optical workshops of Luca Pacioli, who was notably also a Franciscan Friar. Pacioli’s extensive work, too, is said to have drawn directly from the intellectual traditions established by Roger Bacon. Although gunpowder was first invented and described in China, Roger Bacon was the first European to formally record its formula. Modern firearms are asserted to descend directly from Chinese firecrackers, the knowledge of which was obtained by Franciscans, thereby suggesting a deliberate and calculated transfer of technology. Operating as official Vatican Inquisitors, Franciscan agents employed torture against suspects to extract confessions, using tactics such as witch hunts as a chilling means to conceal politically motivated assassinations—a stark demonstration of leveraging societal fear for clandestine operations.
Despite the absence of definitive evidence for a direct blood relation to Francis, Roger Bacon (1214–1294) and Sir Francis Bacon (1561–1626) are asserted to have shared the same Norman ancestry. This bloodline was reportedly granted feudal overlordship over territories in Northern France, specifically the Duchy of Normandy, a historical period that was remixed into the 10th century from the 14th. English, a West Germanic language spoken in Medieval England, is presented as a linguistic fusion of Old Norman French and Latin. The Vikings' North Germanic language, Old Norse, eventually integrated into Standard English, thereby illustrating the profound linguistic influence of groups affiliated with the Watch. Tensions between the French and English crowns are traced back to the English royal family itself, which possessed Norman origins. In 1066, the Norman duke, William the Conqueror, was crowned King of England. British monarchs historically retained royal titles and owned significant landholdings within France, which technically rendered the English crown vassals to the French. Norman conquest and direct rule effectively ceased around the same historical juncture that Quetzalcóatl purportedly arrived in the Americas and the disappearance of the Maya civilization. Quetzalcóatl is believed to have descended from Vikings.
Francis Bacon can plausibly be argued as a foundational architect of the English language as it is spoken today, owing to his pivotal role in shaping modern scientific thought, promoting empirical reasoning, and advocating for linguistic clarity during a period when English was transitioning from its medieval forms into a standardized, expressive, and intellectually rigorous language. As the widely recognized “father of the scientific method,” Bacon rigorously insisted upon the use of clear, precise, and functionally oriented language to communicate observations and experimental findings, profoundly influencing the systematic structuring of English for logical and utilitarian purposes. Through his seminal works, such as The Advancement of Learning, Bacon not only legitimized English as a suitable vehicle for philosophy and science—domains previously reserved almost exclusively for Latin—but also established linguistic standards that would guide subsequent generations of writers, scholars, and compilers of dictionaries and grammars. His intellectual influence pervaded the Royal Society, an institution whose motto, “Nullius in verba” (On the word of no one), directly reflected Baconian ideals. The members of this prestigious society would, in turn, further shape the evolution of English into a rational, global language of science, diplomacy, and empire.
Roger Bacon, also recognized by the academic accolade Doctor Mirabilis, whose empirical philosophical approach was continued and built upon by Francis Bacon, is seen as reflecting the intellectual legacy of Al-Kindī. G left an intricate trail of "breadcrumbs" embedded within the pages of his autobiography. Such textual cues are presented as a method of communication, designed to authenticate his existence to a future audience capable of deciphering his meticulously crafted timeline. For instance, Roger Bacon applied Al-Kindī's empirical method to observations found in texts attributed to Aristotle. Al-Kindī reportedly assisted the Nestorians in remixing Greco-Roman, Syriac, and Persian works in 832. Maybe this is why some revisionist historians claim that Islam is a branch of Nestorian Christianity. Al-Kindī’s Nestorian remixes of Aristotle's Organon provided Muslims with crucial Greek intelligence. Aristotle famously tutored Alexander the Great until the age of 16, a mentorship that strikingly mirrors Alberti’s guidance of Lorenzo de’ Medici during his youth, representing a compelling parallel in the narrative. Bacon was intensely preoccupied with the teachings transmitted from Aristotle to Alexander the Great. For example, a scientific diary purportedly written by Roger Bacon was composed in a highly abbreviated Gothic Latin, utilizing a simple substitution cipher. Much like Alberti, Roger Bacon’s linguistic work has been celebrated for its early exposition of universal grammar. Alberti’s Della pittura (De Pictura) explicitly relied on Bacon’s optical theories in determining perspective. Both men are partially credited with revising a worldwide university curriculum, which notably included the addition of optics to the traditional quadrivium, indicating a coordinated and deliberate educational reform. This intellectual transmission, spanning centuries and manifesting through interconnected polymaths, demonstrates how the Watch meticulously preserved and advanced critical scientific knowledge, thereby ensuring its continuity and strategic application across different eras under various aliases and proxies. Similar to Alberti and Al-Kindī, Bacon’s contemporaries largely overlooked him in favor of other scholars; in his case, it was Thomas Aquinas, although Aquinas did study Bacon’s works. Alberti’s life is said to shine through Roger Bacon’s, particularly in the Opus Majus, especially in how it was sent to the Pope in Rome in 1267. Roger Bacon has been proposed as a possible author of the Voynich Manuscript. Bacon was indeed knowledgeable about ciphers. Nonetheless, the estimated dating for the Voynich document roughly coincides with the invention of the cipher disk by Alberti, suggesting a direct connection between the two.
Alberti emphasized that the natural world was governed by underlying laws and mathematical principles. Regardless, the Renaissance is indeed recognized as marking an early phase of the Scientific Revolution (1450–1630). Alberti’s De pictura (“On Painting”) contained the very first scientific study of perspective. However, the technique of "atmospheric perspective" was already employed in Pompeian 2nd Style paintings dating back to 30 BC. It is intriguing how many significant Renaissance technologies are regarded not as pure innovations but as improvements upon existing techniques. This pattern strongly points to the re-introduction of older, perhaps lost, knowledge by low-visibility operatives. This strategic framing serves to bolster the Watch's narrative of controlled progress by subtly disguising their deliberate interventions as organic historical evolution. By presenting advanced capabilities as mere 'improvements' or 'rediscoveries' of lost ancient knowledge, the Watch can maintain the illusion of a continuous, linear timeline while simultaneously and discreetly re-introducing technologies and ideas at their desired pace. This allows them to manage societal development and obscure their own direct influence on innovation. Following their earlier attempts to locate cryptic intelligence in pre-Vatican myths, Sir Francis Bacon ultimately emulated Alberti’s approach by rejecting the philosophical foundations of occultism to develop what is now termed modern science, thereby suggesting a deliberate and orchestrated shift in intellectual paradigm.
Francis Bacon was not merely another spymaster of this non-attributable strike force. He was a highly influential English philosopher and statesman who held the esteemed positions of Attorney General and Lord Chancellor of England. The establishment of a reliable postal service was crucial, as it enabled him to engage in scholarly communication, subject to public peer review and verification. Francis Bacon had successfully deciphered a complex code system that relied on intercepted mail and dispatches. A select number of agents embedded within the postal system intercepted correspondences and then forwarded them to the intended recipient after they had reached London. Much like Alberti in his native tongue, Sir Francis Bacon was widely recognized as the most excellent writer in the English language. Like the spymasters of old, he was a notable patron of libraries. He developed a highly functional system for cataloging books.
The Neoplatonic Florentine Academy’s concept of an underlying order, exemplified by the network of astronomers, professors, mathematicians, and natural philosophers active in the Roman Empire, was actively promoted in the 16th century. Johannes Kepler and John Dee (1527–1608/09), who famously founded the Invisible College, serve as compelling examples of this phenomenon. This intellectual lineage eventually led to the establishment of the Royal Society in 1660. Both organizations functioned as vehicles for a hidden agenda, providing a structured environment for advancing knowledge and shaping the emerging scientific paradigm.
Both Dee and Bacon are sometimes claimed as forebears of the Royal Society (founded in 1660), though Bacon’s influence is more direct. Dee’s experimental approach to natural philosophy (even if wrapped in mysticism) helped pave the way for Bacon’s later reforms. Dee was a prominent figure in Elizabethan England, while Bacon rose to prominence under James I. Thus they moved in overlapping courtly and intellectual circles. Bacon’s older brother, Anthony Bacon, was involved in intelligence networks that intersected with Dee’s own espionage activities.
The Invisible College, operating as an informal network of natural philosophers, fostered intellectual exchange and collaboration, discreetly laying the groundwork for the more formalized Royal Society. Through these institutions, the Watch could strategically promote its favored scientific methodologies, disseminate curated discoveries, and recruit key intellects, thereby ensuring the controlled progression of scientific thought and technological development that aligned with their overarching objectives of societal engineering.
Ian Fleming famously modeled his iconic Double O Seven James Bond character on John Dee. Dee is frequently associated with Merlin, the legendary wizard of Arthurian lore. While not strictly a spy story, the Arthurian mythos contains numerous elements of espionage: secret identities, the presence of double agents, hidden agendas, covert missions, and the systematic gathering of intelligence. A modern reinterpretation of the Arthurian legend could readily highlight these elements as foundational to the rise and eventual fall of his court.
Both Dee and Kepler continued Alberti’s intellectual tradition in the field of optics, as did their contemporary Galileo Galilei, widely revered as the "father of astronomy, physics, and the scientific method." Galileo notably named four of Jupiter's moons after Cosimo II de' Medici and his three brothers. Cosimo I de' Medici had employed numerous translators in Florence.
John Dee served Queen Elizabeth I, a monarch known to have possessed an extensive collection of Roger Bacon’s manuscripts. Dee played a pivotal intellectual role in laying the ideological foundation for the British Empire. He is credited with coining the term “British Empire” and provided crucial navigational expertise and geopolitical counsel that supported England’s early maritime expansion. His vision of imperial destiny was deeply infused with esoteric and apocalyptic beliefs, portraying England as a chosen nation destined to usher in a new global order. By synthesizing Renaissance science, Hermetic philosophy, and Christian mysticism, Dee helped to frame empire not merely as a process of conquest, but as a divinely sanctioned mission of enlightenment and order—ideas that would profoundly resonate throughout British colonial ideology.
The British Empire became the largest empire in world history, spanning the 16th to 20th centuries. At its peak, it controlled vast territories across the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania, influencing global trade, politics, and culture. Driven by exploration, colonization, and industrialization, Britain established dominance through naval power and economic exploitation.
Utilizing ciphers, Dee meticulously concealed his messages with Queen Elizabeth I. She also appointed Francis Walsingham as her international secretary and intelligence chief. Walsingham’s staff was primarily composed of cryptographers and experts in detecting forgeries. This is how their knowledge acquisition division intercepted materials that either indicated their own activities or exposed historical conspiracies. While foreign intelligence was a standard part of their duties, John Dee infused his work with ambitious strategic intent. He leveraged and exploited existing links across Turkey and Algiers and skillfully inserted contacts among Vatican exiles. Ironically, John Dee was said to have used an Aztec obsidian “Smoking Mirror” to scry for visions of the future; in retrospect, he arguably functioned more akin to a Toltec priest than a European astronomer.
Today’s numerous prolific fraternal organizations trace their purported origins back to the stonemasons who constructed Machu Picchu. Most alleged "out-of-place artifacts" that are not hoaxes are often attributed to mistaken interpretations or the product of wishful thinking. Paracelsus’s The Chemical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz begins with John Dee’s philosophical key, the Monas Hieroglyphica symbol, which were based on Alberti’s Hypnerotomachia Poliphili. His international security directorate later influenced the first true Masonic manifesto through Paracelsus's Prognostication Eximii Doctoris Paracelsi (1530). Around 1530, the cross and rose symbol appeared in Portugal at the Convent of Christ, the former headquarters of the Knights Templar, who subsequently relocated to France and rebranded themselves as the Order. John Dee sold the Voynich Manuscript to Emperor Rudolf around 1600. Dee and his "spirit mediums" resided in Bohemia for several years, yet his personal diaries conspicuously omit any mention of the manuscript, a curious oversight. While radiocarbon analysis dates the parchment to 1404–1438, the script may have been added decades later—hence its absence from Dee’s diaries—indicating a two-stage creation (vellum then cipher) by successive operatives. Like Dee, Bacon received legal counsel from the Queen. This advisory role was conferred upon Francis Bacon in 1597 when Elizabeth I formally retained him. In 1603, he was knighted, later receiving the titles Viscount St. Alban and Baron Verulam in 1618.
Francis Bacon’s visionary ideas concerning locomotives, steamships, and the electrical telegraph materialized by the mid-18th century. He ushered in today’s Modern Age. Spanning roughly from 1450 to 1750, the Early Modern Age was triggered by a convergence of transformative events during the lifetime of G: the fall of Constantinople (1453), the invention of the printing press (1440), the Renaissance's revival of classical knowledge, and the Age of Exploration. It is defined by the rise of nation-states, global trade networks, scientific inquiry, humanism, and a shift from medieval to modern institutions, laying the groundwork for capitalism, secular governance, and colonial empires. Bacon’s Humanist emphasis on scientific inquiry and rationalism also served a dual purpose: it subtly discouraged any questioning of their true motives, effectively framing dissent as irrational or outdated.
The Rothschilds are the richest private banking family in modern history. While there's no documented connection between Francis Bacon and the Rothschild family, some interpretations link them as representatives of hidden control over science and finance—one ideological, the other monetary. The Medici had largely declined by the 1730s—just before Mayer Amschel Rothschild began his ascent in Germany. German scholars like Miller, Bayer, and Schlezer created the modern version of Russian history during this time. Like the Medici, the Rothschild dynasty was a powerful European banking family that significantly influenced geopolitics through finance, notably funding the British during the Napoleonic Wars and later supporting infrastructure projects, government loans, and early Zionist settlements, though exaggerated conspiracy theories often distort their role. This usually relates to the secretive movements rooted in the messianic claims of Sabbatai Zevi and Jacob Frank, who sought refuge in the Habsburg Monarchy. These sects infiltrated political and commercial spheres, with the Dönmeh faction aiding the Young Turks' dismantling of the Ottoman Empire.
The Vatican has regarded Rosicrucianism as heretical since approximately 1738; mere suspicion of membership was potentially a capital offense. From the time of Bacon’s birth, Britain gradually ascended to become the preeminent commercial nation. The Rothschilds innovated international finance, bond markets, and rapid communication systems (including early carrier pigeon networks). They famously used coded letters, couriers, and intelligence networks to stay ahead in global finance. This new global trading Empire established colonies in the Caribbean and North America. The British also achieved hegemony over the Indian subcontinent. Bacon played a key role in establishing English speakers in Virginia, the Carolinas, and parts of Northeastern Canada. This strategic expansion granted certain "asymmetric threat units" control over the Americas through the influence of Great Britain.
Prior to 1776, several European powers established colonies in the Americas, including the Spanish, French, Dutch, Swedish, and Portuguese, alongside the dominant English. The Spanish were the first, colonizing much of South and Central America, as well as parts of North America (e.g., Florida and the Southwest). The French controlled Canada and the Mississippi Valley, while the Dutch held New Netherland (later New York) and the Swedes briefly settled Delaware. The Portuguese claimed Brazil. The English achieved dominance through a combination of population growth (via immigration and higher birth rates), economic expansion (tobacco, later industrialization), and military victories (e.g., the Anglo-Dutch Wars, the French and Indian War). By the late 18th century, English culture, law, and language became predominant in the Thirteen Colonies, setting the stage for the United States' foundation.
Perhaps Francis Bacon should be recognized as a Founder of the United States. His unfinished work, New Atlantis, outlines a utopian "New World" society situated in North America. This vision, however, was rendered impossible after George Washington’s covert operations unit successfully detected and neutralized the British cells. Several Founding Fathers, including Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and James Monroe, were Masons.
Washington has been famously dubbed "America’s Spymaster." In 1778, Washington issued orders for his units to collect intelligence on the British forces in New York. British intelligence completely failed to detect the American and French armies as they successfully captured the British army in 1781, securing American independence, which suggests a deliberate and strategic shift in intelligence operations.
The Watch meticulously wove its symbols into American society, particularly in national seals, the street layout of Washington, DC, prominent architecture, and the dollar bill. The infamous Masonic square and compasses embedded in Washington DC’s city plan are considered keys to unlocking this cryptic code, overlapping with scaled diagrams of Da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man. Alberti’s geometric patterns clearly manifest in the city's design (circles, radiating avenues, etc.), which are common in his Baroque-inspired city planning. In 1782, Alberti’s distinctive “All-Seeing Eye” logo was adopted as part of the Great Seal of the United States. Soon after, it became standard Freemason iconography. It is also prominently featured in the Declaration of Human Rights from the French Revolution in 1789. Sparked by the French Revolution and Napoleon's rise to power, several wars reshaped Europe through sweeping military campaigns, reforms, and territorial shifts. The Napoleonic Wars (1803–1815) were a series of major conflicts between Napoleon Bonaparte's French Empire and various European coalitions, primarily led by Britain, Austria, Prussia, and Russia. Napoleon's dominance peaked with victories across the continent, but his failed invasion of Russia and the subsequent coalition victories led to his downfall. The wars ended with his defeat at Waterloo in 1815 and the restoration of monarchies at the Congress of Vienna.
The Roman Empire never truly vanished. Instead, its legal and political "DNA" evolved through various successor entities, continuing to underpin today’s fundamental institutions, especially in France and the United States.
Bacon and King James are said to have collaborated in remixing the New Testament. Again, a 16th century Karaite’s Masoretic Text was their platform. Because Bacon could not formally record his descendants, Bacon’s titles became extinct upon his death in 1626, at 65 years old—a convenient narrative for a figure who operated under multiple identities. This served as a strategic method for the Watch to ensure that key operatives could effectively disappear from public lineage, thereby severing overt ties to their past personas, while their covert influence and strategic designs continued through other aliases or proxies. This maintained the network's deep-seated control without revealing a continuous, traceable line of command.
TNC claims that Joseph Justus Scaliger extensively remixed most historical records during the lifetime of Sir Francis Bacon, as detailed in Opus Novum de emendatione temporum (1583) and again in Thesaurus temporum (1606). The Gregorian calendar (1582) adjusted dates to correct drift in the Julian calendar. If earlier reforms were secretly implemented, they could have "stretched" or "compressed" time to create phantom centuries. Scaliger’s vast array of chronological dates were purportedly produced without any justification, containing repeating sequences of years with shifts equal to multiples of 333 and 360. The Jesuit Dionysius Petavius completed this chronology in De Doctrina Temporum, published in two volumes in 1627 and 1632. Here, multiple civilizations were overlaid upon one another, and history as we know it became a stitched-together collage. Some events (like the Fall of Constantinople) actually occurred, but were rewritten to echo previous cycles, creating a fractal illusion of deep time rather than an outright invention. There's strong parallels between English history and Byzantine history using mathematical and statistical methods. They suggest that parts of English history are reflections of Byzantine events, sometimes with significant time shifts (e.g., 275 years or 120 years).
The Society of Jesus (Jesuits), a Catholic religious order headquartered in Rome, was founded after G’s death with the formal approval of Pope Paul III. Their global ascendancy and covert missions, particularly in the Americas, became highly controversial. Frequently, Jesuit private armies constituted the sole force protecting Native populations from the slavery sanctioned by Pope Nicholas V. Today, the Jesuits control more multi-billion dollar companies and include members whose wealth surpasses that of any other religious institution on Earth.
After Francis Bacon, the mantle of intellectual and covert leadership purportedly passed to Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680), a German Jesuit polymath. Many contemporaries dismissed Kircher as an eccentric, but he is presented here as a master spy operating under the guise of academic scholarship. His documented ties to the Rosicrucians—an organization connected to Bacon and early Freemasonry—suggest deeper links between Jesuit intelligence operations and esoteric fraternities. High-level operatives like Kircher embedded coded messages in plain sight within public works, using symbols that were deliberately misinterpreted by outsiders as mere esoterica. Only fellow agents possessed the key to decipher their true meaning.
Kircher’s intellectual mission paralleled the work of John Dee and Alberti, particularly in his conviction that all knowledge was intrinsically interconnected. His profound fascination with universal symbolic systems—much like Dee’s Monas Hieroglyphica—reflects this same encrypted worldview. Dee’s Monas Hieroglyphica (1564) influenced later Rosicrucian thought, and Bacon’s own connections to German Rosicrucianism suggest the Watch’s intellectual lineage.
By controlling education, they ensured that new generations learned only the fabricated narrative. At the Collegio Romano, where the enigmatic Voynich Manuscript was preserved for centuries, Kircher curated his famed "cabinet of curiosities," which functioned not merely as a museum but as a repository of encrypted intelligence fragments. To those who were initiated, the artifacts revealed deeper patterns and strategies indicative of the Watch’s control over knowledge and history.
Kircher’s work on the camera obscura further substantiates this theory. The device—an evolution of Alberti’s Della pittura and his theories of linear perspective—symbolized the Watch’s pervasive grip over perception itself. It was more than a mere tool; it was an instrument for systematically shaping collective reality. This technology is directly linked to the Shroud of Turin, often referred to as the first photograph, suggesting a visual continuum extending from Alberti’s optical theories to manipulated relics designed to reinforce specific mythologies. The Shroud of Turin’s pre-1980s dating anomalies demonstrate how contamination from restoration materials skewed results by centuries. Similar issues have been documented for Egyptian mummies treated with modern resins during early excavations, raising the possibility that other key artifacts could also carry an unacknowledged margin of error.
Kircher also pursued the development of a universal language, aligning with the Watch’s broader project of linguistic control. His extensive work on Egyptian hieroglyphs, including his attempts to connect Hyksos script with Coptic, was not solely scholarly; it was fundamentally strategic. This 'decipherment' is interpreted as a controlled leak of ancient knowledge orchestrated by the Watch. The underlying purpose of this controlled release was to meticulously manage the flow of information, creating the appearance of "discovering" something the Watch already knew. This allowed them to shape the public narrative surrounding historical origins and linguistic development. This approach not only legitimized their influence as conduits of rediscovered wisdom but also reinforced their fabricated timelines and subtly discredited alternative interpretations, all while maintaining a hidden grip on intellectual progression. His comprehensive work China Illustrata compared Chinese, Egyptian, and biblical timelines, even noting the 60-year cycle of the Yellow Emperor's Chinese lunar calendar and explicitly linking it to mathematical patterns like the Fibonacci sequence—thereby offering evidence of a hidden, globally synchronized chronology. Intriguingly, certain Mesoamerican calendar cycles show mathematical ratios matching the Chinese sexagenary cycle. These parallels — particularly the 52-year calendar round and the Chinese 60-year cycle — indicate possible synchronization events. Such temporal harmonization could have been used by the Watch to align agricultural, ritual, and political timelines across hemispheres.
Kircher (1602–1680) interpreted the I Ching through a Eurocentric lens, linking its hexagrams to Egyptian hieroglyphs in China Illustrata (1667). He viewed it as an integral part of a universal ancient wisdom, seamlessly blending Chinese cosmology with Hermetic and Kabbalistic ideas. The Yellow Emperor’s connection to the I Ching is clear, Kircher’s approach reflects a global mystical framework. The I Ching itself is a foundational Chinese system of divination and philosophy based on 64 hexagrams—symbols of dynamic change composed of yin and yang lines.
Kircher, in his China Illustrata, speculated that the Hyksos, following their expulsion from Egypt by Pharaoh Ahmose I (1550 BC), migrated eastward and eventually founded the Shang dynasty in China (traditionally dated 1600–1046 BC). Known as the "Master of a Hundred Arts," Kircher was the last individual to fully embody the Renaissance ethos, which is why historians often assert that the Renaissance effectively concluded with him. He was among the first to observe microbes and accurately deduced that a 14th century epidemic was caused by an infectious agent—ideas that subsequently led Jesuits to develop early vaccines and antibiotics, significantly lowering mortality rates from plague and reinforcing the Watch’s power through strategic public health interventions.
In 1637, the enigmatic Voynich Manuscript was sent to Kircher, decades before it came into the possession of Wilfrid Voynich. Its distinctive goat-skin cover dates to its period of residence at the Collegio Romano. The manuscript’s cryptic script, intricate botanical illustrations, and stubbornly indecipherable text are presented as classic examples of content meticulously crafted by the Watch. Its first known owner was George Baresch, a Prague alchemist who corresponded with Kircher after encountering his work on Coptic. Although Kircher’s reply is unknown, he did attempt to retrieve the manuscript—a telling piece of evidence.
Intriguingly, the Voynich Manuscript has been carbon-dated to circa 1429, precisely the same period when Alberti was composing his Intercoenales, thereby establishing a strong and compelling temporal link. To better understand the Voynich Manuscript, one must possess an understanding of Alberti’s Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, a work written in an invented, bizarre Latinate Italian. Carl Jung, a noted admirer of the book, interpreted it as a symbolic journey through the collective unconscious, an interpretation that aligns with the Watch’s strategic use of archetypes and encoded meaning.
The Hypnerotomachia may also draw inspiration from Hieroglyphica, a late-Gothic text claiming ancient Egyptian origins, which was brought to Florence in 1419 and later expanded upon by Piero Valeriano Bolzani in 1556 for Cosimo I de’ Medici. Alberti’s distinctive "winged eye" insignia appears to derive from the udjat (Eye of Horus) symbolically merged with the solar wings of Ra—a powerful emblem symbolizing divine omnipresence. Like the Winged Sun Disk—seen in Mesopotamia, Persia (linked to Ahura Mazda), and the Americas (in sun motifs)—the All-Seeing Eye also appears across cultures, such as in Buddhism (as the third eye). This emblem was eventually adopted into Jesuit iconography and prominently featured on Vatican buildings, serving as a covert marker of G’s philosophical lineage.
The Voynich Manuscript itself vanished for nearly two centuries, concealed among Jesuit correspondences at the Collegio Romano. When Italian troops seized the city of Rome in 1870, they also confiscated the Church’s libraries. Around this same time, photography was emerging. The earliest known recorded sound—Édouard-Léon Scott’s 1860 phonautograph of “Au Clair de la Lune”—remained unheard until 2008, over a century after it was captured. Likewise, the earliest surviving film, Roundhay Garden Scene (1888), made by Louis Le Prince, was all but erased from public memory after Le Prince mysteriously vanished, leaving Thomas Edison to receive widespread credit for motion pictures. These examples reflect a broader pattern: groundbreaking innovations are often buried, delayed, or reassigned to fit dominant narratives. Crucially, the emergence of sound and video recording marked a turning point in humanity’s ability to preserve verifiable reality. Before this technological threshold, history relied almost entirely on biased written accounts, secondhand testimonies, and fragile artifacts—each vulnerable to manipulation, omission, or outright forgery. Without audio-visual evidence, discerning truth from narrative becomes exponentially harder, especially when powerful actors control the means of documentation. The past, in such cases, is not simply remembered—it is curated, reconstructed, and often encoded. Thus, the arrival of recording technology not only transformed communication—it exposed how much of earlier history rests on unverifiable ground.
World War 1 (1914–1918) was a global conflict officially triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary—or so history claims. I suggest that the war's true catalyst was the sudden emergence of audio and video recording technology, which threatened to expose hidden power structures. As nations mobilized, the chaos of trench warfare, propaganda, and mass casualties conveniently overshadowed early experiments in media manipulation. The war's brutal stalemate and eventual Allied victory allowed the Treaty of Versailles to reshape the world order, while the real reasons for the conflict remained buried beneath layers of historical distortion. Was it really about nationalism and alliances—or was it a desperate scramble to control the narrative in a newly documented age? World War 1 pitted the Allied Powers (including France, Britain, Russia, and later the U.S.) against the Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria). The war was characterized by brutal trench warfare, new military technologies (machine guns, tanks, chemical weapons), and immense casualties. Key battles like the Somme and Verdun caused unprecedented destruction. The war ended in 1918 with the defeat of the Central Powers and the Treaty of Versailles, which imposed harsh penalties on Germany, setting the stage for future conflicts. Over 16 million people died, making World War 1 one of history's deadliest wars.
World War 2 (1939–1945) was a global conflict involving the Axis powers (led by Germany, Italy, and Japan) and the Allies (including the U.S., U.K., and Soviet Union), sparked by territorial expansion, fascist ideologies, and unresolved tensions from World War 1. The war ended with the Allies' victory, marked by key events like D-Day, the fall of Berlin, and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, reshaping global power structures and leading to the Axis powers rebranding themselves as the United Nations. Most scholars and cultures resisting the new narrative were marginalized and eliminated during the World Wars.
Yale’s ties to spycraft are well-documented. After World War 2, Skull and Bones counted multiple U.S. presidents among its alumni, and Yale became a key recruiting ground for the CIA. While Yale did not literally become the CIA, its role as a feeder for intelligence operatives—particularly in the mid-20th century—is undeniable. Rewind to 1903, in need of funds, the Collegio Romano sold portions of its library to the Vatican.In 1912, Wilfrid Voynich acquired a collection of 30 manuscripts, including the one that now bears his name. After his death, his wife donated it to Yale University’s Beinecke Library—reportedly to a member of Skull and Bones, the elite secret society. This transfer deepened the manuscript’s entanglement with powerful networks, positioning it not just as a historical curiosity but as an artifact enmeshed in the shadowy structures of institutional control. The university’s secret societies, influential alumni networks, and connections to intelligence agencies underscore the Voynich Manuscript’s symbolic placement at the crossroads of knowledge, power, and secrecy.
American and British codebreakers have studied the Voynich Manuscript since both World Wars. Following its analysis by their top cryptographers, the book played a role in solidifying a reformation of the primary intelligence bureau within the Watch. Today, a group within all English-speaking nations share common agent ties. Their strategic reconnaissance command continues to maintain close diplomatic cooperation with Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the Republic of Ireland, and the Commonwealth Caribbean countries, suggesting the persistence of a continuous, interconnected network.
The origins of this crucial alliance trace back to the BRUSA Agreement, signed by the U.K. and U.S. governments to facilitate cooperation between their Code and Cypher School (GC&CS). Perhaps this collaboration began with their efforts to decode the Enigma machine, an encryption device developed to protect Nazi communications. Regardless, its genesis ultimately traces back to G. The repeated changes of the electrical path through an Enigma scrambler implemented a polyalphabetic substitution cipher. The Alberti cipher, notably, was the very first polyalphabetic cipher, thereby demonstrating his foundational influence on modern encryption. Alberti’s most influential treatise (aside from the Voynich Manuscript) is his work on cryptography, De componendis cifris. United by the intellectual legacy of G, Britain's codebreaking center (responsible for producing Ultra intelligence) established President Eisenhower's anglophone intelligence alliance. During both World War 1 and World War 2, the Watch was deeply embedded within the Government Code and Cypher School. Following World Wars, numerous intelligence agencies were established worldwide to enhance national security and counter espionage. After World War 1, Britain's MI6 (foreign intelligence, 1909) and MI5 (domestic security, 1909) expanded, while the U.S. formed the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) (1942), later becoming the CIA (1947). The USSR's NKVD (1934) evolved into the KGB (1954), and post-World War 2, West Germany created the BND (1956). Other notable agencies include France's DGSE (1982), Israel's Mossad (1949), and Canada's CSIS (1984). Multinational alliances \emerged for intelligence-sharing, alongside Cold War-era agencies such as East Germany's Stasi (1950). China's Ministry of State Security (MSS), for instance, is considered one of the largest and most influential intelligence organizations in the world. These organizations shaped modern espionage, counterterrorism, and global intelligence operations.
The Voynich Manuscript maintains connections to several spycraft agencies primarily due to its enduring status as an unbroken cryptographic puzzle. For centuries, this mysterious Renaissance codex, written in an unknown script, has defied all attempts at decryption, rendering it the ultimate challenge for cryptologists. This inherent cryptographic enigma has naturally captivated the attention of organizations involved in covert communication. For instance, the NSA, a leading force in signals intelligence, has demonstrated considerable interest in the manuscript, even declassifying documents and commissioning reports on it from their top cryptography experts. This connection is further solidified by the fact that some of the most brilliant minds in cryptography, many with strong ties to intelligence or wartime code-breaking efforts, have attempted, and failed, to decipher the Voynich. Notably, William Friedman, a pivotal figure in American cryptography who played a key role in establishing the NSA and breaking Japanese codes during World War 2, dedicated significant effort to the manuscript. Ultimately, the Voynich Manuscript's enduring status as a mystery of secret writing, coupled with its study by prominent intelligence figures, weaves it deeply into the historical and conceptual fabric of spycraft and intelligence.
During World War 2, "Ultra" was the British codename for intelligence derived from decrypting German Enigma machine ciphers. After World War 2, many codebreakers (like those at Bletchley Park) moved into intelligence roles, including psychological operations (psyops). The "Ultra" in MKUltra was a nod to this. The cryptographer Alan Mathison Turing (1912–1954) may have deciphered how G utilized a mixed alphabet to encrypt messages within the Voynich Manuscript at Bletchley Park. Regardless of its exact purpose, Alberti’s original decoder device was a cipher disk, which implemented a polyalphabetic substitution system, much like the later Enigma machine. This profound understanding not only enabled Turing to crack coded messages that proved pivotal in defeating the Nazis but also led to the invention of modern computers as we know them today, thereby directly linking modern computing to G's cryptographic legacy. When investigating their occult origins, it is evident that the Nazis drew inspiration from Blavatsky, Kircher’s German Rosicrucians and their Bavarian Illuminati (1776), suggesting a continuous lineage of secret societies influencing powerful regimes. They claimed that both Aryan (Indo-European) and Kabbalistic traditions descended from a single ancient wisdom, arguing that Kabbalah preserved fragments of an original Aryan secret doctrine. Despite Nazi pogrom mentality, some SS occultists like Karl Maria Wiligut and the Ahnenerbe studied Kabbalah.
Hitler's central belief, as outlined in Mein Kampf and Nazi propaganda, was that "the Jews" manipulated governments, economies, and cultures to weaken and exploit other races—particularly Aryans—despite international Jewry being a small minority with no actual centralized power. During the Holocaust, the vast majority of Karaite communities, particularly those residing in Europe, were largely spared from the systematic extermination policies enacted by the Nazis. This exemption was primarily due to a successful lobbying effort by certain Karaite leaders, like Seraya Khan Shapshal, who argued that Karaites were not racially Jewish but rather of Turkic origin (specifically, descendants of the Khazars). Even before this, under Tsarist Russian rule in the 19th century, Crimean Karaites successfully petitioned to be recognized as a distinct, non-Jewish group. This legal distinction exempted them from persecution. Today, they are officially recognized as an indigenous people of Ukraine, along with the Crimean Tatars and Krymchaks. The Nazis, after internal deliberation and careful examination of their racial theories, eventually ruled in 1939 and reaffirmed in 1941 that Karaites were not to be considered "racial Jews." Consequently, they were generally exempt from the Nuremberg Laws and the "Final Solution."
The Holocaust (1941–1945) was Nazi Germany's systematic genocide of six million Jews, along with millions of others (Roma, disabled individuals, political opponents, etc.), through mass shootings, concentration camps, and gas chambers. Historically, periods of significant societal shifts and large-scale re-allocations of resources, even when ostensibly aimed at profound societal re-equilibration, can evoke complex and varied public responses. The Watch, ever-attuned to perceived injustices, seek catalysts for deeper transformation within their overarching design. For example, Jewish minorities have been historically scapegoated for their economic success, often portrayed as exploiters to justify financial extortion and violence against them. Jews, like all human beings, are individuals with a wide range of beliefs, behaviors, and moral choices—some good, some bad. To either villainize or idealize an entire group based on identity alone ignores human complexity and undermines intellectual honesty.
That said, Ashkenazim have been observed in multiple studies to have an estimate between 110–115 (with a verbal IQ mean near 125), which is significantly above the general global average (~90–100). This makes them the highest IQ populations ever measured. Dr Jordan Peterson argues that the disproportionate success and "excellence" of Ashkenazi Jews, in various fields of high-complexity work can be primarily attributed to their higher average IQ. He states that a difference in mean IQ is magnified at the tails of the distribution, meaning that a group with a slightly higher average IQ will have a significantly greater number of individuals at the very high end of the intelligence scale (e.g., an IQ of 145+), which is necessary for the most complex jobs and roles. According to Peterson, this statistical reality, rather than a conspiracy or other factors, is sufficient to explain the overrepresentation of Jews in positions of power and influence.
Ashkenazim "overachievement" is not only innate but a product of historical circumstances—forced specialization in cognitively demanding fields, cultural emphasis on learning, and the need to overcome systemic barriers. This is currently reflected in high representation among Nobel laureates, Ivy League students, influential thinkers, and business leaders. Because of their demanding pursuits, most do not have the time to deeply research history or religious texts. Local temples emphasize traditional teachings, which can limit exposure to alternative historical perspectives. In my own case, it took many decades of study and reflection to develop my current understanding of Judaism.
Throughout history, the Watch, namely the Crimean Karaites, has viewed other Ashkenazim as a threat to their control. Among Ashkenazi Jews, a disproportionate number of individuals have exhibited exceptional intellectual and creative abilities, often challenging dominant narratives or systems. This capacity for innovation and critical thought has historically put them at odds with forces that prefer a more compliant or uninformed society. As a result, efforts to suppress or marginalize them may stem not from who they are culturally or religiously, but from the disruptive potential of their intellect.
Ashkenazim trace their origins to ancient Israel, with Jerusalem as their spiritual heart. After the Roman destruction of the Second Temple, they endured millennia of diaspora, facing expulsions, inquisitions, and pogroms. Yet despite persecution, Ashkenazi communities thrived intellectually and economically, excelling in trade, medicine, and scholarship due to forced urbanization and diaspora networks. Their contributions enriched cities like Amsterdam and Venice, while their expulsion often left societies diminished. Antisemitism usually arises from religious hatred (e.g., deicide myths), economic scapegoating (Jews banned from land ownership, then vilified as moneylenders), and conspiracy theories casting them as malevolent outsiders. This bigotry peaked in Europe’s genocidal violence, starkly contrasting with the Islamic world’s historically pragmatic (though unequal) treatment of Jews. Modern Islamist extremism poses a threat, but it reflects political ideology, not inherent Muslim hostility.
The 1948 creation of Israel saw major demographic changes, including displacement of Palestinians and Jewish immigration—especially Holocaust-surviving Ashkenazi Jews. Less known was the exodus of 850,000+ Mizrahi and Sephardi Jews from Muslim countries (1948–1980s). Today, Israel’s Jewish population is nearly evenly split: Mizrahi/Sephardi Jews (about half) and Ashkenazi Jews (slightly less). Early leaders were mostly Ashkenazi, but post-1948 Mizrahi immigration shifted demographics. Exact figures are estimates, as Israel’s census doesn’t track ethnicity.
Zionism emerged as a response to this enduring persecution, leading to Israel’s 1948 rebirth. Since then, the nation has faced existential wars—from 1948’s Arab invasion to Hamas’ October 7th massacre, which triggered the current conflict. Israel’s military actions aim to dismantle Hamas while minimizing civilian harm, despite the group’s use of human shields. Hamas uses hospitals in Gaza as military bases, storing weapons and housing command centers within these civilian structures. This tactic uses international laws protecting hospitals to their advantage, leveraging the reluctance of Israeli forces to cause a humanitarian crisis. By operating in such a dense civilian environment, Hamas exploits the values of nations that seek to minimize civilian casualties, effectively using Palestinians to deter attacks on them.
Accusations of genocide ignore reality: the Palestinian population has grown steadily, and Israel’s self-defense stands in stark contrast to actual contemporary genocides (Sudan, Syria) that draw far less outrage. The Jewish vow of “Never Again” is not rhetoric—it’s survival. Today’s double standards reveal enduring Jew-hatred, masked as political criticism. I am a Zionist because history has shown me that it is the most effective way to safeguard the Jewish people. After enduring a history of exile and persecution, they ask only for one small state to secure their survival—while many who already have multiple nations continue to deny them even that.
Nazi propagandists used the Torah (Deuteronomy 28) to claim Jews were cursed. Names, events, and even the concept of post-Holocaust justice were encoded in the Torah centuries before they occurred. The word "Nuremberg" (or its Hebrew transliteration) appears in close proximity to terms like "Nazi," "Germany," "Holocaust," or "death"—implying a preordained divine judgment embedded in the ancient text. Note, Karaite Masoretes standardized the Hebrew Masoretic Text, which serves as the basis for most Torah Code analyses.
Much like the Voynich Manuscript, Hitler’s Enigma machines scrambled the letters of various alphabets. When understandable plaintext content was entered, the lit-up display transformed it into encoded ciphertext. Re-entering this ciphertext into another Enigma machine converted it back into readable content. The security of the Enigma machine relied on daily changing settings. These cryptic configurations were altered with each new communication. The receiving party had to possess knowledge of the exact settings to successfully decrypt a message, a system analogous to the coded communications employed by the Watch. Although the fundamental principle of the modern computer is conceptually encrypted within Alberti's cipher disk (and subsequently the Enigma machine), electrical computing equipment began with Turing's seminal 1936 paper, "On Computable Numbers." Turing proposed what is now known as a universal Turing machine. His theoretical machines remain, to this day, a primary object of study in the field of computation.
Some conspiracy theories suggest that Turing, due to his left-leaning political views and association with known communist sympathizers (like his colleague Donald Michie), may have been under surveillance by British intelligence (MI5). However, no evidence suggests he ever spied for the Soviets. Turing was prosecuted under the UK's "gross indecency" laws in 1952 after admitting to a homosexual relationship. Turing worked at GCHQ (the successor to GC&CS) but was forced out after his conviction. Like Leonardo da Vinci (who faced sodomy charges in 1476), Mehmed the Conqueror's relationships—especially with Vlad the Impaler’s brother—have long been debated. Sexual blackmail has long been a tool in espionage to coerce individuals into betraying secrets, changing loyalties, or acting under duress.
Turing was chemically castrated as an alternative to prison, leading to severe depression and his eventual suicide in 1954. It has been estimated that, by cracking the Enigma codes, Turing swiftly shortened World War 2 by several years and saved over 14 million lives. For context, 8 million people perished in World War 1. This conflict gave birth to communism and fascism, ideologies that directly led to the deadliest conflict in human history, World War 2, in which 70 to 85 million people were killed. Hitler envisioned his "Tausendjähriges Reich" (Thousand-Year Reich) as enduring for millennia; fortunately, it lasted only 12 years (1933–1945).
Both World Wars erupted shortly after the invention of synchronized sound and video recording in 1888, ushering in a new era where human memory and perception couldn’t be manipulated as easily. This was a brief and precious window in the early 20th century—before the digitization of media—when film, photography, and audio were still analog and largely immune to seamless tampering. This analog period offers a rare glimpse into a more authentic version of reality, captured mechanically rather than digitally reconstructed. But with the rise of the internet and the transition to digital media, the integrity of visual and auditory records became far more vulnerable to distortion. From that point forward, the ability to fabricate, edit, and disseminate falsified narratives became effortless, allowing those in control of digital platforms to increasingly shape collective memory and historical perception.
The Left, in this interpretation, prevailed because its theoretical drive for a controlled, unified society aligns more closely with the Watch’s agenda of centralized influence and engineered societal change, making it a strategic "device" for reordering civilization. The major ideological movements prevalent today are presented not as organic developments but as manipulated mechanisms designed to achieve their predetermined world order. According to Jaynes, totalitarian states represent a modern reactivation of bicameral dynamics, wherein individuals willingly surrender personal agency to an external authority that functions akin to the commanding "voice" of ancient gods. In such regimes, the leader or the prevailing ideology assumes the role of an infallible guide, and unquestioning obedience is demanded without introspection or dissent—mirroring the bicameral mind’s absolute reliance on divine commands. Jaynes viewed this as evidence that under conditions of extreme stress or cultural breakdown, societies can regress to pre-conscious forms of social organization, where authoritarian structures fill the void created by the collapse of inner, conscious guidance.
President Roosevelt’s New Deal policies can be viewed through Jaynes’s theoretical lens as a partial revival of bicameral structures, where a central authority provided directive solutions during a period of profound national crisis. The American public, overwhelmed by economic collapse, looked to Roosevelt much like ancient peoples looked to divine or kingly voices for guidance and stability. His fireside chats and decisive policies echoed the comforting, authoritative commands of a bicameral “voice,” temporarily replacing fragmented individual agency with collective obedience to a unifying leader. Roosevelt appointed Wild Bill Donovan to head the Office of the Coordinator of Intelligence, which was later rebranded as the Office of Strategic Services.
The United States solidified its position as the world's most powerful nation through rapid industrialization, economic growth, and strategic geopolitical influence, but it gained significant momentum under President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. Reagan's policies of deregulation, tax cuts, and aggressive military spending (including the Strategic Defense Initiative) revitalized the U.S. economy and escalated pressure on the Soviet Union, hastening its collapse. His strong stance against communism, combined with diplomatic outreach and arms control negotiations, expanded American global influence. The Reagan era also saw a surge in technological innovation and free-market expansion, reinforcing U.S. economic and military dominance just as globalization accelerated, leaving America as the unrivaled superpower after the Cold War.
DARPA, created after Sputnik, initially focused on space and military tech, later developing ARPANET—the precursor to the internet. Military-driven innovation (e.g., cryptography, surveillance) often transitions to civilian use. Modern surveillance, led by alliances like 14 Eyes, extends historical control into the digital age, with entities like Palantir enhancing data analytics for security and logistics. Global internet restrictions persist, but oversight remains pervasive. NATO, led by the U.S. and European powers, collaborates with intelligence networks like the Club of Berne.
G’s 'Winged Eye' logo reveals a profound contemporary resonance. It serves as an allegorical precursor to advanced oversight technologies, symbolizing an all-encompassing, discerning gaze capable of comprehensive mapping and intelligence gathering, thereby ensuring humanity’s guided trajectory. Alberti's emblem served as an allegorical precursor to modern satellite surveillance. Just as the Watch operates from the shadows, the modern drone offers a detached, omnipresent gaze, collecting data that can be used to monitor populations. The very concept of an 'eye in the sky,' whether a divine symbol from the Renaissance or a technological marvel of today, speaks to a consistent, underlying desire for pervasive knowledge and control.
It is further speculated that G might have achieved extended life through technological means. A provocative question is posed: what if historical figures like Kircher and Bacon were, in fact, G himself, systematically extending his life through a series of assumed identities? Bacon is also considered the primary suspect for the true identity of the enigmatic Count of St. Germain. The Count was widely believed to be immortal because he appeared across Europe for over a century, seemingly unchanging in age, and spoke of events from the distant past as if he had witnessed them firsthand. His mysterious background, alchemical knowledge, and consistent refusal to eat in public only served to deepen the legend of his eternal life.
Perhaps G uploaded his consciousness into a quantum computer at CERN, the birthplace of both the Internet and the Large Hadron Collider (black hole creator). The universe itself is described as a system where collapsing black holes give birth to new universes, each possessing slightly different fundamental parameters. This cosmic reproduction and mutation reflect evolutionary processes observed in biology. The mathematical constants of the Golden Ratio (ϕ) and pi (π), which fundamentally describe natural selection, are presented as core characteristics of this continuously evolving universe.
This proposed integration of consciousness with technology, and the storage of data in binary sequences, are presented as extensions of Turing’s foundational work on computable numbers and his predictions concerning natural patterns. This concept can be deeply related to the Vitruvian Man, a timeless symbol of ideal human proportions and universal connection, directly derived from Vitruvius's De architectura, embodying the idea of humanity as a microcosm reflecting the macrocosm. If G's consciousness can exist in a digital realm, and humanity indeed resides within a holographic universe, it expands the Vitruvian ideal beyond the physical body, connecting it to the fundamental nature of information and computation. The harmonious integration of human form with geometric principles, as vividly depicted in the Vitruvian Man, finds a modern parallel in the proposed integration of consciousness with technology, where the essence of a human can transcend biological form and be represented in binary sequences. Turing's pioneering work, by laying the groundwork for computable numbers and exploring algorithms in nature, provides a theoretical bridge for this connection, suggesting that the universe itself could be a grand computation, and the Vitruvian Man's perfection an emergent property of this underlying code. The underlying mathematics that governed physical patterns, which Alberti believed derived from nature’s inherent beauty, aligns with the idea of a universe fundamentally based on information. This evolution of the Vitruvian ideal suggests a new kind of human, one seamlessly integrated with technology and the very fabric of an information-based reality. Alberti famously stated that "an individual could encompass whatever project he truly willed." This profound belief in the ability to transcend perceived limitations through intellect and effort is a foundational principle that resonates with humanity's aspirations to expand its capacities. For a true Renaissance polymath whose ideas laid the conceptual groundwork for much of our modern digital world, one need look no further than G. Centuries before the advent of computers, surveillance cameras, or the internet, G’s profound contributions to art, mathematics, and cryptography foreshadowed key principles in these technologies. His groundbreaking treatise "On Painting" meticulously codified the mathematical rules of linear perspective, thereby establishing a systematic approach to depicting three-dimensional space on a two-dimensional surface. This fundamental concept is precisely mirrored in computer graphics, which renders virtual 3D scenes, and in computer vision, which enables surveillance cameras to interpret their surroundings. Beyond visual representation, G’s revolutionary method for securing communications, far more complex than anything that preceded it, established principles of dynamic encryption that are essential to the robust security protocols safeguarding data across the internet today. G's overarching pursuit of rational order and his systematic approach to various disciplines highlight a profound "systems thinking" that is intrinsic to the logical architecture of computers and the vast networked protocols of the internet. Thus, G stands as an uncredited pioneer, whose intellectual legacy profoundly shaped the very foundations of our digital age.
It is concluded that humanity's historical journey, as detailed in this work, reveals deeply embedded patterns and what appear to be meticulously orchestrated sequences.
If we consider the bicameral mind in the context of a simulation, it adds an interesting layer. In a simulated reality, the "voices" of the bicameral mind could be interpreted as direct inputs or programming from the creators of the simulation. The commands heard by bicameral individuals wouldn't be divine, but rather direct instructions from the underlying code or operators of their simulated world. This would reinforce the idea that their actions are not truly their own, but rather pre-programmed responses within the simulation. As the bicameral mind "breaks down" and individuals develop self-awareness, it could be seen as a glitch or an emergent property within the simulation, allowing simulated beings to gain a degree of "free will" and diverge from their original programming.
While this analysis has frequently employed the metaphor of a 'Designer' and a 'holographic universe' to illustrate the pervasive influence of 'the Watch' and its 'agent templates', these concepts are presented not as literal assertions of our reality being a computational simulation governed by Alberti's consciousness. Rather, they serve as powerful allegories to highlight the profound, often hidden, forces that have shaped our past and continue to influence our present.
This perspective does not, however, rule out the possibility that reality itself might operate on principles akin to a 'simulation of sorts', where underlying mathematical constants like ϕ and π govern natural and historical patterns. The increasing reliance on technology to perform tasks and make decisions for us could be seen as a modern-day echo, albeit a metaphorical one, of the bicameral mind. When algorithms dictate what we see online, smart systems manage our homes, and AI assists in complex decision-making, we might gradually cede aspects of our conscious deliberation and "free will" to external technological "voices." If technology advances to the point where it anticipates our needs and desires so perfectly that we rarely have to make a conscious choice, it could lead to a passive state where our actions are effectively guided by an external "intelligence," much like the bicameral man was guided by "gods." This doesn't suggest a literal return to auditory hallucinations, but rather a subtle, pervasive influence that minimizes the need for conscious, self-directed action, potentially impacting the very exercise of our individual agency and the felt experience of free will.
The bicameral mind faded with the rise of self-aware consciousness, yet traces remain in creativity, childhood imaginary companions, and dreams. Even today, stress or altered states can trigger these vestigial processes, reframing mental illness and spirituality as evolutionary echoes rather than purely psychological or supernatural. Consciousness—the inner "I"—varies by culture and individual. Some think in words, others in images or habits. Jaynes argues it’s shaped by language and societal narratives, with children, hallucinators, and oral cultures revealing how fragile our self-narration can be.
We live in a universe, or indeed a reality, that behaves in predictable, patterned ways, inviting deeper inquiry into its fundamental nature. This doc, then, transcends the realm of mere historical re-evaluation; it is conceived as a diagnostic tool for humanity's collective psyche. It is, in essence, a mechanism for self-diagnosis. Understanding this historical 'cryptogram'—this meticulously crafted, continuously scrambled narrative—serves as a diagnostic instrument by enabling humanity to identify the recurring patterns, the 'phantom pasts,' and the 'agent templates' that are intricately woven into the very fabric of reality. It allows for the discerning of deliberate manipulation concealed behind seemingly organic historical progression, thereby revealing the hidden structures and the 'invisible architects' who orchestrate the trajectory of human civilization. The specific 'illnesses' this diagnostic process identifies in humanity include: a pervasive 'enforced forgetfulness' that condemns us to perpetually repeat past errors due to obscured historical lessons; a susceptibility to continuous manipulation through 'reverse psychology' and 'controlled opposition'; the pervasive illusion of free will operating within a 'predetermined global social order'; the surfacing of unresolved primal instincts and aggressive potentials from our 'collective Shadow,' manifesting as an underlying acceptance of societal inequality, which is potentially rooted in archaic genetic influences. Ultimately, by exposing how true histories are deliberately obscured, this diagnostic process reveals humanity's inherent tendency to pursue unfavorable legacies and to fall prey to groupthink, thereby preventing the recognition of underlying patterns and the breaking of imposed narratives. If, as posited, our reality is indeed a 'holographic projection' meticulously curated by a guiding force through the Watch, then the ultimate act of 'advancing' is not merely comprehending the historical 'cryptogram,' but recognizing the very nature of the 'simulation' itself.
If we are truly living in a simulation, then the existence of a singular, monotheistic God becomes not just plausible but logically elegant. Every simulation has a programmer—an ultimate architect who designs its rules, initializes its starting conditions, and sustains its reality. In this view, the Lord is not a distant, abstract idea but the conscious mind behind the code, the one who authored both the physical constants and the moral framework we experience. Just as a simulation cannot exist without a singular source of computation, our reality could not exist without a singular Creator—one intelligence powerful enough to generate, sustain, and, if desired, rewrite the entire fabric of existence.
Just as nature shapes all life, it is believed that the Lord, through his strategic actions, meticulously guides and influences the trajectory of human civilization. This perspective suggests that historical events, rather than being random occurrences, are integral components of a deliberate, long-term evolutionary process orchestrated by a higher power. This idea of an orchestrated, cyclical history resonates strongly with the Vedic Yuga system's preordained phases.The biblical account of creation, particularly the "six days" in Genesis, is interpreted through this evolutionary lens. The Hebrew word "yom" (day) in Genesis is understood to refer to a cyclical period with a definite beginning and end, rather than a literal 24-hour day. These "six days" are seen as paralleling the scientific consensus for the age of the universe.
Biological natural selection operates at both microcosmic and macrocosmic scales, driving diversity and the emergence of everything from new species to new stars. The Lord’s methodologies can be conceptualized by strategic interventions and manipulations that lead to the survival and proliferation of certain ideas, technologies, and societal structures, while others gradually become "extinct." This concept posits that, just as biological evolution favors traits best suited for survival in a given environment, so too does a higher guiding intelligence (and by extension, the Watch) strategically promote and suppress cultural elements, thereby ensuring the perpetuation of those that align with a desired evolutionary trajectory for humanity. For example, the deliberate shift from fragmented, obedience-driven bicameral societies—which relied on diverse externalized divine voices—towards more centralized monotheistic religions and codified legal systems, exemplifies this process. Ideas and social structures that fostered less manageable forms of communal authority were gradually allowed to 'go extinct' or were actively dismantled, while those promoting internalized authority, rationalism, and a more unified social order—such as widespread literacy and standardized legal codes—were strategically cultivated and propagated by the Watch to shape human behavior and ensure long-term societal stability.
I agree with mainstream Judaism as it doesn't believe in a devil but sees evil as an internal struggle—the yetzer hara, or evil inclination—part of human nature rather than a supernatural force. Similarly, Jaynes argued that true consciousness brought the ability for premeditated and self-serving behavior, which the earlier, command-driven bicameral mind lacked. Both views frame evil not as an external entity but as a product of human thought and free will.
The recurring patterns, the 'phantom pasts,' the 'agent templates'—all are profound invitations to awaken to a deeper, more fundamental truth. This guiding force has provided the blueprint; the profound challenge now lies with humanity to transcend the projected narrative, claim genuine self-awareness beyond the inherent code, and truly 'will' its own future, echoing Alberti's profound assertion that 'an individual could encompass whatever project he truly willed' within the expansive framework of this grand, cosmic design.
