Sunday, December 24, 2017

Two great riddles of WD Gann; the first clue of the math and some final reflections on the riddles part 3 of 3

Recap.  Essay 1 of 3 solved the 2000-year old question, raised by WD Gann's Foreword to "The Tunnel Thru the Air," using math and geodesic spacial orientation; Jesus rose on the third day.  Essay 2 of 3 used that same math and geodesic method to resolve Mr. Gann's corollary confirming riddle, that "Jesus... rested on the seventh day" in contrast to his having ascended in 40 days.  When first did I have a glimpse of the interdependence of time and space and its Euclidan (two-dimension math) and Descartisan (geodesics) solution?

My first clue in visualizing the WD Gann's four-dimensional math; the September 18, 1920 Einstein Essay Prize Editor essay appearing in Scientific American.

How did I get there?  Its been previously discussed so here's the five-minute version of my February 16, 2015 essay.

The first line, I tied WD Gann's "The Tunnel Thru the Air" to Luo Clement's (a pen name of WD Gann) "The Ancient Science of Numbers" via the five asterisks.  Pages 130 of TTTTA and 45 of TASON:


Then, out of the blue and entirely without context, Mathew 9:29, the Biblical context of Marie Stanton's note in TTTTA, is found on page 16 of TASON:


I had to, just now, go back to TASON and re read page 16, the last page of the first chapter.  The quote is as inexplicable as the five asterisks in both books.

Then a participant in social media, that Luo Clement = WD Gann, I'd submitted this proposal to a disbelieving group and ultimately challenged them to provide me with one person living in the U.S. that had been named Luo Clement.  Not a person came forward.

"Luo" is Asian last name not having a first name usage in the U.S., much less in 1909 Manhattan.  "Clement" either refers to the Pope that was involved in the Friday the 13th massacre of Knights Templar or St. Clement, the martyr (from recollection).

There is much more evidence, a preponderance, that WD Gann = Luo Clement.

Second, I linked TASON to the aforementioned Scientific American Einstein Editor article....by a far less convincing clue; "Numerical Vibrations."  Inside the cover of TASON there appears the following announcement:



"Numerical Vibrations," under that name, was never published.  Ultimately, I believe it was published as "The Tunnel Thru the Air" as the "...second book of instruction..." the first being TASON, but that's another essay.

Not only was Numerical Vibrations never published, and I challenged social media to prove otherwise, I did not find any mention of it....except for one advertisement:


Someone advertising, 12 years after the 1908 TASON announcement of it, to secure a copy of "Numerical Vibrations."  Nothing anywhere else on the Internet, any link to "Numerical Vibrations."  So I searched for articles of that date and found the Einstein Editor's background article on the then new theory of relativity (special and general).

The date stung me; it was September 18, 1920, which some 87 years later we would lose our son.  The date that appears on the 13th stone of the WD Gann Gravestone Geometry.

So I read all of the half dozen or so EE essays and challenged Scientific American to divulge the name of the EE who has been anonymous for, now, 87 years.  Regarding the later, "no."  Regarding the former readings of EE essays, I was intrigued, no entranced by the following paragraph:


Space and time or spacetime, the fourth dimension, about which we do not know the mathematics and geometry.  Two and three dimension tools (Euclian geometry and Descartesian coordinate plotting) used to reckon and navigate; predicting the future using an ancient tool and modernized X, Y, coordinates.

*** ***

If you don't accept the Luo Clement link to WD Gann, well, you needn't spare a second for the far less robust, no, the indefensible September 18 link to the Einstein Editor.  After all, it's always far easier and, seemingly more "wise and responsible," to give the response "I doubt it."

We all take leaps of faith.  "I doubt it" can be the friend of inquiry if its examined as Rene Descartes did in his first proposition.  Its the enemy of inquiry in the hands of the person too self absorbed to consider.  Marie and Marks challenge...."According to your faith be it (I) unto you."

At the outset of my adventure into "The Market Thru the Air," one seemingly "wise and responsible" skeptic of my effort warned me I'd be down the "rabbit hole" as he, a wise astrologer, had been for years.  I am satisfied I am anywhere but in Alice' endless maze.  I am in search of the perfect math and geometry and see glimpses of it every day.  I believe Mr. Gann documented his understanding of that same math and geometry found in the Great Pyramid of Giza in his TTTTA and extended those natural laws to predicting, in as great granularity as he had time and desire to parse, the course of the lives of people, institutions and nations.

"According to your faith, be I (it) unto you..."  Jesus to the blind man, Marie to Robert in her note.  Knowing I computed, in regards to the first riddle of this essay series, that Jesus rose at 3:44am, the third hour of the third day, well before the women arrived with spices to see him risen.... knowing that, an inquiring mind, an observing person would be compelled to know the time of day that is on Marie's note.


The third hour.

Upon solving Robert Gordon's seven days, Mr. Gann promised we would understand not only the questions posed regarding Jesus, but he promised one other tantalizing gift; that our greatest enemy, Death, would be overcome.

It is said truth of a word may emerge from the understanding its anagram(s).


I interpret the anagram as the solution to death; it is a new beginning.

Jim Ross

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