Alphanumeric Qabbala, the English Trigon, and the riddles of Liber AL vel Legis —[ MEGA THREAD ]— One of the most interesting properties of the 'English Trigon' (i.e. the alphanumeric triangle) is that it contains exactly 4 rows for the digits 0-9, and 4 rows for the letters
This triangle answers the major riddles in Liber AL vel Legis in a very simple and straightforward way. The riddle of AL II:76 contains a cryptic sequence of 'the numbers & the words' which has remained unsolved until this day, despite all the previous attempts at cracking open
Then we have the other major riddle of Liber AL vel Legis: the 'grid page', whose secrets still haven't been fully decrypted or explained until this day — at least not in a completely satisfactory way. The alphanumeric solution, again, brings a fresh new perspective on what the
Now, what exactly does this solution imply in the context of Thelema? That's actually the most interesting (and potentially polemical) part of all this, so we'll talk about it, one step at a time. *** I. There are NO written records of base36 notation (or AQ, its Gematria
@GematResearch How much of an influence was Allen H Greenfield to ya ?
@AniOsaru His work only inspired me to use other ciphers (other than the ALW cipher / English Qaballa) to replicate his own results. And the funny thing is that you'll always be able to find "meaningful matches" regardless of the cipher you use. So, just like English Qaballa shows










