The approximations of these significant constants is interesting — but to my mind, being unconcerned with fawning respect of superstition, I see only more questions.
You, and I was there once, see a hand at work. I recall when the Bible Code craze struck. For a short time, one intense afternoon, I experienced actual shock at the thought of a real god speaking undeniably. All those terrors and rumours of childhood came to the fore. I can't rightly say what calmed me; this was pre-internet, so there was no further information with which to immunize. I think my basic indifference to the foul idea of a god was enough to shrug-off the spell.
If you think the idea of a God 'foul' then you are hideously misinformed both bout his character and your own highest nature. Or maybe you would rather there was none for reasons of your own. Either way, I contend that none of your own musings, fears, or perhaps second hand opinions, will make any difference as God's reality.
The Bible Code, more properly called the Torah codes, is a truly fascinating phenomenon and I have reason to believe it may be real, athough the work Vernon has done is unrelated. One thing I did note several years ago was that some pretty competent mathematicians and probability theorists on either side of the debate couldn't reach agreement on whether the Torah code was genuine, which didn't bode well for showing that numerical codes such as Vernon Jenkins has done is real. So very little such work has been attempted, although the little that has been done is very suggestive of it being real.
The questions this pi/e business raises in me are about the surrounding territory, and the fidelity of the data.
Fidelity:
Do the letter-numbers always map as shown? Are there differing systems? Delvo indicates controversy.
In the Masoretic text of Genesis, 1000-year-old copies of which are still extant (and I've checked the lettering myself) it always 'maps' yes. There are other versions of the Hebrew Bible, such as the Samaritan Bible, and there a Greek version of the Old Testament. But the Masoretic Bible, being the basis for the Leningrad codex, which is the oldest complete version of the text, and which became the Biblia Hebraica and Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia, the modern Hebrew Bible, is the encoded one - and it could only be one, given that small textual changes rapidly destroy the patterns.
Is there some impact in the two languages when converting to the numbers? If one does the pi calculation in Greek, for example, what then?
Changing to another language destroys the encoded material, which depends upon the precise letters used. The pi calculation therefore wouldn't work in Greek, if by this you mean a Greek translation of the text of Genesis 1.1. The e calculation, done identically to the pi calculation, is in Greek.
Is there certainty that the words chosen for the calculations are the intended ones — to reveal these constants — or are there flavours of the wording that give other numbers?
The wording in the Masoretic is fixed for all time now, in the electronic age. The only thing that counts here is the letter sequence in Genesis 1.1, as given in the Masoretic. It doesn't matter if these weren't the original words written, because it was, I believe, meant to be discovered now - in the age of the electronic calculator.
Essentially: how special is the pleading? How narrow is the needle to make these constants, however crude, appear?
If one letter was changed or dropped or added to genesis 1.1, most of the patterns would be destroyed They are very sensitive to alternative spellings, etc. It's possible that some of it might remain intact.
For instance if a Hey (= 5) were added the product of the letter values would increase from 3.14155 . . . x 10E40 to 1.57077 . . . x 10E41. However if a Yod (=10) were added, the pi calculation would be unaffected, increasing to 3.14155 . . . x 10E41. the first five digits would still be present. But in both cases most of the other patterns would be lost. The sum would be 2706 and 2711, for instance, neither number having any particularly notable properties, as far as I'm aware.
Be back.
The surrounds:
What do other initial verses in the rest of the Bible produce under the same algorithm?
As far as I am aware, only John 1.1, if you are talking about pi, e and similar numbers. However, integrated geometry has been found in other verses, and in fact Vernon Jenkins has extended the Genesis geometric patterns into verses 2 and beyond.
What is the frequency of finding pi/e (to the same error margin) in other texts? (Or even the Bible.) i.e. — for all I know the rough pi/e just fall out more often than not.
Sticking with pi, the first five digits would be found about 1 in 90000 times by any such calculation. The production of digits by the calculation used is for all practical purposes a random process (although true randomness is impossible). Since the first digit cannot be 0, there is a 1 in 9 chance of obtaining 3. For all the other digits, the chances are 1 in 10, since 0 is allowed. So the odds against obtaining 31415 in any calculation of this type is 1 in (9 x 10 x 10 x 10 x 10), or 1 in 90000. Now there are 31102 verses in the Bible, so there is a fair chance of getting 31415 . . . somewhere, although more chance of not obtaining it. But to find it in the first verse is incredible. I was in Scotland's largest second-hand bookshop yesterday, with a stock of around 100000 books and built like a rabbit warren, with little rooms and corridors everywhere. One of those books was on the subject of pi, a fascinating number for many reasons, and the most well known and useful number in mathematics. The chances of getting 31415 . . . in a verse is equivalent to walking blindfolded for the first time into that bookshop, wandering around and putting my hand on that pi book first. That gives you some idea of the unlikelihood of hitting pi on your first try, which is what happened since Genesis 1.1 is the first verse in scripture.
There are several assumptions you have made, which you marry to the findings, that I see as non-sequiturs.
The causal explanation to these "constants" gifted to a god, with all his attendant properties being so markedly depended from your personal hopes and fears is one. The timing, being coincident with your life and moment of faculty, is another.
You're assuming a lot about my hopes and fears, especially since I gave up belief in God at age 11, and only let God back into my life after he knocked on my door very loudly 27 years later.
I'm not sure what your second sentence means.
There are those who would ascribe these messages to Aliens. Others to wholly different gods. Others to conspiracy by various hated human tribes. I ascribe them to the category of "potential knowledge — pending verification".
That, my friend, is very sensible!
Once the vital steps of beating the findings from all sides has passed, and should there remain viable intrigue, then only is some degree of wonder acceptable. Even so, it would not point to any hand behind the scenes — much more and varied evidences would be compulsory.
I basically agree with you here, although I would caution against the kind of skepticism that drifts into cynicism, ie, for whom no amount of evidence is ever enough. You are your own man, though.
I hearken to my previous posts wherein I urge you to speculate on the rôle you play on this urgent stage you so pace. If it is only you, and a smattering of others, who so ardently feel this hand taking your scruffs to rub your noses in such hidden arithmetics, then why? Why only you? Why leave so many billions bereft of the same visceral attendance to the event?
Etcetera.
I can't answer that one. In my case, I would guess it might be because, as Paul wrote, "My strength is made perfect in your weakness."