Post #31 seems to discuss paradoxes of maths and geometry. My reading about Thelema (which admittedly has been brief, of necessity) has been much more about free will and Crowley's moral philosophy. I accept that Thelema may well be correct about the maths and geometry, but many religions or philosophies of life have some things correct - that doesn't make everything contained therein correct also.I've explained it. It's deep, and it requires study. Post #31 does a good job. But the main point was actually to show that Thelema is more plausible than the
rubbish modern scientist peddle. And that's not a straw man, evidenced by many discussions on this board. Including this one, in fact.
The thing is, we get this kind of argument quite often. It's often couched in forms like "you believe x, but x is absurd, therefore y is true". Quite often, the x is not something that is held to be true (like multiverse or simulation theory, both of which are hypotheticals), and further and more importantly, disproving x does not advance y at all. The truth or otherwise of y depends on the evidence, and that's what you seem to be lacking so far in this thread.
Saying that Thelema is more plausible than two things which are currently just hypothetical ideas does nothing to advance Thelema.