Jump to content

Great & Rare Quotes About Francis Bacon & The Shakespeare Works


A Phoenix

Recommended Posts

14 hours ago, A Phoenix said:

Francis Bacon Invisible Progenitor of Humankind

BACONSHAKE ACADEMIC QUOTES 31.png

The word "propriety" in relation to divine powers and beings puzzled me until I looked up the etymology:

"late Middle English (in the sense ‘peculiarity, essential quality’ from Old French propriete, from Latin proprietas"

So in this context, "propriety" could have meant "essence, essential or intrinsic nature" rather than "standards, rules or correctness", as it's come to mean over time. Perhaps one way of paraphrasing the narrator's remark could be that Divinity is known only to itself, and to those who carry a degree of divinity within themselves.

Edited by Eric Roberts
  • Like 3
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, A Phoenix said:

Baconian Sources for All's Well That Ends Well

BACONSHAKE ACADEMIC QUOTES 32.png

Isn't it fascinating how Lord Bacon was able to demonstrate his philosophical, psychological and scientific insights in highly complex dramatic forms that the world has enjoyed and marvelled at for over four centuries?

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, A Phoenix said:

Francis Bacon, King Lear & The Balance of Europe

BACONSHAKE ACADEMIC QUOTES 33.png

Doesn't this quote from "Of Empire" remind you of the stated position of the European Union and NATO in the face of Russia's incursions into Ukraine? In both cases, it's about maintaining the integrity of borders. What's changed in 400 years?

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/24/2022 at 2:48 AM, Eric Roberts said:

I couldn't find anything about Rev. Walwyn or Robert Fowler of Wisborough Green, but I did find another Robert Fowler:

image.png.e4b237f30fae05d1b8c1fc18918bacaa.png

https://sites.rootsweb.com/~lunsford/research/crests/fowlercrests.htm

Your post motivated me to look into our Fowler past. Yesterday being Thanksgiving, my regular access was restricted to family. But I could look into our family history with tools others built!

Our Fowler line loses paperwork (sources) in the late 1600's in Rhode Island. Funny a "Robert Fowler" is the last name before anything that has been documented. He was born in c1645 and hints of England, but no records.

My paternal grandma was a Hale. We can trace our Hale line to Jamestown in the early 1600's, but the real person who is the last name in the line is not solved,  "George Hale." The popular version is he was the "George Hale" who was a drummer on the ship called "Supply" in 1620. But the problem is the George in England who also possibly came over was a prominent land owner or something, and the George in Jamestown was doing pretty good with position and respect, but the 13 year old George on the ship is documented as an "indentured servant" so could not be either. New mystery for me... 😉

Whytes go back into the 1400s with records. It is interesting how these two Pyramids grow. Like an "X" design. If we look at where we came, to go back to the 1600's we have 1 to 2,000 "Grandparents" in that generation, or more. That is ten generations for families where people make into middle age or so.

For these same individuals from hundreds of years ago, they have many times more descendants than grandparents. 

The math is Baconian, "binary".

2 parents, 4 grand parents, 8 great grand parents, 16 great great grand parents, 32 great great great grand parents, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1028, 2056, so on...

Imagine families that have 5 or more kids! 5, 10, 20, 40, 80,

We know these Baconian binary numbers? 128, 256, 512, 1028, 2056 (2K). We who are older anyway. Dialup speed in 1997 was 128K if you were lucky. Floppy's were 512K and that was the most you could put on any movable medium!  LOL

aaaa is 0, aaab is 1, aaba is 2, abaa is 4, baaa is 8, same pattern forever, infinitely. What did Bacon describe with his cipher? How to solve Shakespeare? Or how to solve the future logistics to manage billions of people and all that goes with it?!

Going back, if we could? We are all connected at one point, or instance (as best as we in our ignorance can describe it) that was and is infinite and eternal. Big Bang? Describe a point in time/space where all is one, yet is infinite in space and eternal in time. Makes me wonder how many dimensions I am obvious to that all connect there!

 

  • Wow! 3

T A A A A A A A A A A A T
157     www.Light-of-Truth.com     287
<-- 1 8 8 1 1
O 1 1 8 8 1 -->

Link to comment
Share on other sites

55 minutes ago, Light-of-Truth said:

Your post motivated me to look into our Fowler past. Yesterday being Thanksgiving, my regular access was restricted to family. But I could look into our family history with tools others built!

Our Fowler line loses paperwork (sources) in the late 1600's in Rhode Island. Funny a "Robert Fowler" is the last name before anything that has been documented. He was born in c1645 and hints of England, but no records.

My paternal grandma was a Hale. We can trace our Hale line to Jamestown in the early 1600's, but the real person who is the last name in the line is not solved,  "George Hale." The popular version is he was the "George Hale" who was a drummer on the ship called "Supply" in 1620. But the problem is the George in England who also possibly came over was a prominent land owner or something, and the George in Jamestown was doing pretty good with position and respect, but the 13 year old George on the ship is documented as an "indentured servant" so could not be either. New mystery for me... 😉

Whytes go back into the 1400s with records. It is interesting how these two Pyramids grow. Like an "X" design. If we look at where we came, to go back to the 1600's we have 1 to 2,000 "Grandparents" in that generation, or more. That is ten generations for families where people make into middle age or so.

For these same individuals from hundreds of years ago, they have many times more descendants than grandparents. 

The math is Baconian, "binary".

2 parents, 4 grand parents, 8 great grand parents, 16 great great grand parents, 32 great great great grand parents, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1028, 2056, so on...

Imagine families that have 5 or more kids! 5, 10, 20, 40, 80,

We know these Baconian binary numbers? 128, 256, 512, 1028, 2056 (2K). We who are older anyway. Dialup speed in 1997 was 128K if you were lucky. Floppy's were 512K and that was the most you could put on any movable medium!  LOL

aaaa is 0, aaab is 1, aaba is 2, abaa is 4, baaa is 8, same pattern forever, infinitely. What did Bacon describe with his cipher? How to solve Shakespeare? Or how to solve the future logistics to manage billions of people and all that goes with it?!

Going back, if we could? We are all connected at one point, or instance (as best as we in our ignorance can describe it) that was and is infinite and eternal. Big Bang? Describe a point in time/space where all is one, yet is infinite in space and eternal in time. Makes me wonder how many dimensions I am obvious to that all connect there!

 

Last line - "oblivious" was auto-corrected to "obvious". Doncha hate that? 🙂

  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Eric Roberts said:

Last line - "oblivious" was auto-corrected to "obvious". Doncha hate that? 🙂

LOL

Truth is I disabled auto-correct (I think) as it is too much for me to try to correct myself!

I write with my mind swimming. I then read and fix a ton of typos and add more as my mind expands on every thought. Depending on my schedule I may submit a post with a bunch of typos or missing words. The next time I read it if I have time I see most of them. I'll edit usually, hit save and move on. Typos still.

In contrast in life my financial security is based on my programming skills. Syntax is everything. One character not perfect, my code will not work. It's math, binary "Baconian" indisputable Truth. On my off time I am a Baconian on a forum where we share our thoughts, art, ideas. I make typos in words, but it is not math, they are words. Like Shakespeare. The meaning still comes through, nothing breaks.

For those who read this in our community while this similar topic is being brought up in another forum thread; suggestions, corrections, requests within ourselves that do not contribute to the goals of a thread on the forum are best addressed by using the private Messenger feature of the B'Hive. I've received and replied to countless messages from almost everyone who posts here, often about a typo that I fix only saying, "Thanks!"

I am quicker to fix a typo in a private message as once it is public my fear of anyone seeing it already over. LOL

Sometimes I really don't care. I gave up on being perfect. The older I get, the less perfect I know I am. 😉

"Makes me wonder how many dimensions I am obvious to that all connect there! "

Maybe that is what I meant. 😉

 

 

 

  • Haha 3

T A A A A A A A A A A A T
157     www.Light-of-Truth.com     287
<-- 1 8 8 1 1
O 1 1 8 8 1 -->

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, A Phoenix said:

Francis Bacon and Nature and Art in The Winter's Tale

BACONSHAKE ACADEMIC QUOTES 39.png

Nature is also the destroyer of all human enterprise and creativity, and by "nature' do we include human existence? Or do we see ourselves as distinct from nature? Perhaps I've missed the point of the quotation... As I vaguely understand it, traditional Japanese art allowed for the "interference" of nature to complete the rawness of human expression. Is this what the author is saying? Seems like a very advanced aesthetic: "time blurs the boundaries between nature and art.

 

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Francis Bacon, The Tempest & the Creating of New Worlds

#FrancisBacon #Prospero #Shakespeare #ShakespeareAuthorship #TheTempest #Rosicrucians #Freemasons #NewWorld  #America #NewAtlantis #Republicanism #ProfessorJordan

BACONSHAKE ACADEMIC QUOTES 45.png

Edited by A Phoenix
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...