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by Jeffrey Satinover
Satinover's book, introducing us to the Bible/Torah Codes, is a
well-written weavework of, as he sees it, related areas of research such
as Jewish religious tradition and history, cryptology, computing,
statistics, lunar month computations, the ninth of Ab, and even quantum
physics.
In his book, he also addresses the problem of the many amateur
"debunkers" who find "codes" in other texts - and who do not use the
same rigorous methodology or standards employed by researchers such as
Witztum or Diaconis. It is fascinating to see reviews by people who
claim to have read his book but still do not understand that the Torah
Codes phenomenon is not just about skipping letters to see what you can
find. Any text - and, perhaps, a thousand monkeys with ELS software -
can yield ELSs in the basic sense, but what is unique about the Torah
Codes is the statistical strangeness as described in Satinover's book,
the stringent methodology employed, and the fact that the ELS features in the Torah
were not uncovered after the fact, but actually predicted beforehand.
Perhaps a re-reading of this book is in order before you start loading
in the Hebrew translation of "Great Expectations."
For example, one researcher predicted the AHRN cluster just because it
seemed suspicious that Aaron was not mentioned in a passage where he was
of prime importance, except in the context of "sons of Aaron." Another
is the prediction that they would find the names of all the fruit trees
indigenous to Israel in the passage about the Garden of Eden, where no
names of trees are given. This is a different kind of ELS phenomenon
altogether. Finding ELSs about assassinations and such in texts after
the fact, picking and choosing results, etc. are not fair game in
serious (Torah) ELS research.
Satinover agrees that efforts at confirmation or debunking should
continue, but trivial stuff like the "Moby Dick" codes should not
undermine the real work - at least until such "examples" meet the same
levels of proof, which seems unlikely.
As a sort of bonus, there is the added mystery of the Jewish lunar
calculations, which, according to his tables, are of an accuracy within
2 parts in a million (did I remember that right?) when compared with
modern satellite figures. Why did the Jews ignore the results used by
the other cultures around them, and how did they arrive at their own
amazingly accurate number? Satinover presents to us the arcane
knowledge involved, steeped in Jewish tradition, that boggles the
mind.
Research continues, but my own feeling about it, after reading this
book, is - surrender. You can now put away your toy "ELS analyses" of
"War and Peace" and "Earth in the Balance." The Torah Codes are real.
Now what are you going to do about it?
Review of
Cracking the Bible Code
This is the text of the somewhat hurried review I dashed off to Amazon. - C.S.
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