Metaphysics

The Heptarchia Mystica

A Modern English Rendering

In septenariis totus Mundus circumagitur omnium quae et Viua gignuntur, et quae nascuntur. Septem quidem sunt (quorum est maxima potentia) Primogeniti Angelorum Principes.The whole world revolves in sevens, and all things that are born, live, and grow. Indeed, the first-born Princes of the Angels (whose power is greatest), are seven. Clement of Alexandria, Stromata Book The <strong>Heptarchia Mystica</strong>

Liber Loagaeth

Liber Mysteriorum Sextus et Sanctus

Few complete publications of the Liber Loagaeth exist, especially those with legible tables. Those that exist are in archaic formats. I thought to compile, normalise, and publish here in the most accessible format. Lines are given for each new leaf. Credit: Ana Sofia Peixoto Antão Sousa Dias, Dr John Dee, Edward Kelly, and all parties Liber Loagaeth

Forms are Fundamental

Sub-atomic particles are a substrate, a means to ends. The ends are the Platonic Forms which represent the will of a monad. The will is descriptive of desired Forms. Thus, forms are the fundamental building blocks of the universe. It is a mistake to assume that scale, or simplicity is necessarily correlated with fundamentalism. If Forms are Fundamental

The Void of Materialism

A critique of transhumanism and the mistaken idolatry of conquering outer space. Socrates is a man, but so what? Socrates did not become a man as he always was a man as long as he was mortal. We were simply unaware of it until our deduction. What does such knowledge achieve? Science begins with an The Void of Materialism

The Mystery

The mystery of experience hides knowledge.The experience is the only provable existence.Thus, it is the foundation upon which all truths can be built. The experience renders an ego,the seeming sense of self inside flesh.The flesh is made of matter and the fleshresides in dead flesh, namely the dust. The flesh is dust, the dust is The Mystery

The Philosophical Singularity: Ontological & Epistomological Foundations

The act of philosophy is reasoning. Reasoning can take any fundamental premise and produce greater composite propositions. For example, a mathematician might begin with . From here he may derive composite arithmetical processes, algebra, and even calculus. Such fundamental premises do not have to be as low-level as basic addition. For example, a Christian apologist The Philosophical Singularity: Ontological & Epistomological Foundations