slingblade
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- Jul 28, 2005
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Still waiting for the corn dogs. Disappointing.
Still waiting for the corn dogs. Disappointing.
Not so. The pattern works mainly for letters that are not only widely separated, but not (as with that pesky Bible Code) at equidistant intervals. In these circumstances, the grammar and syntax of the source text have no direct relevance so that meaningful patterns should be unlikely to arise.
Why? Why should Genesis--a fictional acount cobbled together by multiple sources--have ANY special properties? And what about the examples on Page 2 of this thread, which show that The God Delusion and Flim-Flam share similar properties? I'm sure The Origin of the Species, Principles of Geology, On THe Origin of the Phyla, and many other texts would have similar results using your algerithm. Why are those found in Genesis special, but those found in all of the other texsts on Earth irrelevant?But I have learned to be content with the idea that the first few words of Genesis embody extraordinary properties that really shouldn't be there.
And here's the answer: it's special because you decided it was before you started. Not exactly an objective way to look at it.As I am an individual rather than a team, I do not have enough time to look for comparison samples.
What this tells me is that you're not interested in an honest discussion. You're hear to teach us idiots what's what. No thanks--ever since I taught a professor how to use her own machine I've abandoned the idea that learning means uncritical acceptance of what some authority tells you. If you have something worth saying, it will stand up to honest examination. If not, it won't. The fact that you're so obviously unwilling to modify your beliefs when new facts are presented--the fact that you so obviously are unwilling to SEE the new facts--demonstrates that your idea does not. Enjoy your delusions; I doubt you'll get much traction here.As for new knowledge, I may eventually reach a point where I can show pretty conclusively that the Genesis Seal has been noticed at a number of points in human history. The proof is to be seen in some momentous historical episodes, as well as expanded biblical narratives, and even a range of well-known mediaeval literature. However, I will not be drawn on these issues until my audience is sufficiently familiar with all aspects of the Genesis Seal.
That's after the corn dogs.
Or maybe during....
ftr, I just created a grid using the start of the babylonian creation story the "Enuma Elish"
as it turns out its a hotbed of licentious sex coupled with girls names
I am certainly not deliberately projecting into it
my favourites sentences so far are
"anyone get the wanton tart Nadeen yet"
and
"I saw the snot ray"
![]()
I know a Nadeen. She is a wanton tart. I have a strong suspicion they all are...

My fellow skeptics,
I would like to introduce to you a topic that will not be familiar – completely new territory. It is, in effect, the World’s most ancient wordsearch puzzle, and I call it the Genesis Seal. What I am looking for is some well thought-through, rational feedback (though I expect some smart-Alec will throw scorn on even that prospect).
This puzzle takes several forms, the first of which can be seen as an 8x8 grid in the illustration, below. The grid is populated with the first 64 Hebrew letters from the start of Genesis, which is all of the first verse and just the first 36 letters of Genesis 1:2. All those letters are entered into the grid in proper sequence, following the converging path shown by heavier internal borders. The sequence starts in the right-hand (or ‘E’) corner, proceeding upwards and to the left initially. It is clear, therefore, that I am not employing any sleight of hand. In fact, one of the reasons this possibility commended itself is that Genesis 1:1 consists of 28 letters (the precise size of the grid’s perimeter), with word breaks after 14, 21 and 28 letters. The perimeter is, of course, formed from four blocks, each of 7 consecutive letters.
Before I launch into a review of the ‘emergent’ content of the Genesis Seal, I should like to justify an unusual characteristic of the text in this grid. Those of you who are familiar with Modern Hebrew text will know that out of the 22 Hebrew letters there are five in particular that are written with an alternative shape when they occur at the end of a word. In the context of the Genesis Seal grid, those letters retain their initial/medial forms since, in principle, any letter in the grid may participate in any position in an emergent word.
Here is the G1 view of the Genesis Seal, with particular words and letters highlighted:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_544634f0341f84319c.png[/qimg]
And here are some of the immediate reasons for supposing the text of Genesis 1:1-2 was composed to exhibit hidden inner structure:
1. All 9 copies of the letter vav (blue backgrounds) are confined to the lower half of the grid, against odds of 164:1.
2. Five of those letters have assembled into an unlikely ‘Y’ configuration, precisely on the grid’s vertical axis of bi-lateral symmetry. This would greatly extend the (im)probability of 164:1, though by just how much I cannot guess.
3. The surprising first new literary product of this grid, shown as letters on golden backgrounds, is the word betzer (gold), where the final two letters of the last word of Gen 1:1 meet the first letter of the verse.
4. With the addition of the very next letter, the unlikely second product is aur (light), shown with letters in yellow octagonal frames. Since this is also in the Eastern corner, it combines with ‘gold’ to create a golden sunrise. And both those words have their origin in the six-letter first word that means ‘In the beginning’.
5. Ultimately, against odds of about 25:1, there is a second emergent copy of light, this one ascending where the first is descending.
6. Even stranger, the three letters of the source text squeezed between the middle letters of the two emergent lights, spell choshek (darkness). This comes directly from the text: And darkness was upon the face of the deep.
My own judgment is that the effects described here are unlikely to have arisen by accident. Any way I look at it, the Genesis Seal refuses to yield to the skeptic outlook. Where possible, I have calculated the odds against chance alone being the explanation. Using the rules of probability, the odds against Item 1 and Item 5 both being accidental should be the product of the two separate fractions (ie 164 x 25 = 4100:1). Whatever odds are applicable in the case of items 2, 3 and 6 would also have to be multiplied to determine the overall probability.
These effects are just the first signs of what appears to be a very cleverly contrived artefact. I can promise there is a lot more to follow in the same vein. And although I am interested to hear any considered first responses you may have, I must stress that the Genesis Seal is a more highly-coherent structure than is evident from Figure 1. Therefore, a proper assessment of its nature is not yet possible. If you care to offer an immediate response, please bear in mind that the source text for the Genesis Seal has been known for many centuries, and that the way it is re-structured in Figure 1 obeys an easy to follow, intuitive procedure. The procedure is even self-fulfilling, in the positive sense that the text of Genesis 1:1-3 provides several step-by-step hints.
It goes without saying that I hope to hear responses to the effect that the Genesis Seal trumps all previous candidates for ‘supernatural’ design within the Bible.
Are you channeling Matt Giwer?But Genesis was originally written in Greek, so any points about the Hebrew translation are useless.

I once roller skated with Peter Gabriel. We were both dressed as judges. Empire Pool, London, 1974.
Various others have already shown how you easy it is to find "interesting" English words in arbitrary grids of Roman letters, and how you can fudge the meaning of "interesting".
In Hebrew, that's even easier. Hebrew doesn't write vowels, and word roots typically consist of 3 consonants, which makes it even easier to find an "interesting" word of three letters.
Sometime soon, I shall show that the same format, with the same text, inserted in reverse order, raises the bar to a whole new level. It will then be clear that certain, well-defined positions in the grid are reserved for complementary constructs that extend ideas having a biblical purpose. Just to give one example, in the G1 Square (Figure 1) the rightmost corner has a 3x3 group in which one diagonal is the word for ‘light’, and the other diagonal is the word for ‘thick darkness’. When the text is reversed, the original position of ‘light’ becomes host to a word for ‘living creature’, and the place of ‘thick darkness’ is taken by ‘a ram’ (a sacrificial animal).It is essentially random.
Why did you pick 64 letters to begin with, rather than just Genesis 1:1?
What on earth do you think is in the text that "inherently suggests" the order in which you chose to arrange the letters? Why a square? Why fill it in a spiral pattern? Why start from the outside? Why start at a corner?
By all means, give it your best shot. Bear in mind, though, that the first chapter of Genesis was considered a sufficiently ‘artistic’ composition to become the Bible’s lead story.All I would have to do is list all my requirements and then write a text by carefully filling the square with letters.
I have yet to see an English example that meets the same criteria as the first Hebrew 18 words of Genesis.
There are plenty of short English words (2, 3 and 4 letters) belonging to related sets. How about composing a 64-letter piece about, say ...

That's a shame, since the JREF forum needs people who are willing to assess rationally the evidence, the whole evidence and nothing but the evidence.This part of the audience says pass.