What do we know of Antimagnus? Who are its present members? Calvin, Jahan, Smith... Who else?

What do we know of Antimagnus? Who are its present members? Calvin, Jahan, Smith... Who else?  

What historical Antimagnuses have we discovered or do we suspect?  The inner court of the Persian empire?  The alchemists (Flammel?)?  They believed in math and science.  Archimedes?  Maybe even Henry the Navigator's School? 

Researching now. This knowledge will become valuable.

Comments

  1. What about the illuminati? They believe in science....

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  2. Well, there was your earlier supposition about Amaziah Lasich.

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  3. Edgar Allan Wright​​ You know very well.

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  4. Well, we know that they are associeated with n'zeer somehow. That Anti-Magnus groups have existed, often unaware of each other across time and cultures. They trace back to ancient civilizations like the Egyptians, harappans, persian empire....

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  5. I've always believed Nicolas Flamel to be a member of the 13MAGNUS, the book he used in legend to ascend to immorality a type of 13MAGNUS manuscript.

    Gab Riel​, you think the doctor could be a member of the Anti MAGNUS? Interesting, to say the least if so.

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  6. Yik Sheng Lee​, got any thoughts here?

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  7. Edgar Allan Wright He consuming in using ancient text. Nicholas f and one other person

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  8. as mentioned in this recent post by H. Richard Loeb - https://plus.google.com/+HRichardLoeb/posts/WWLGePeYcca

    "Had it not been for Thaïs making off with some Prime XM Artifacts, the N’zeer would have been forever locked out of our dimension. This was certainly her intention. Anti-Magnus was forced into a corner by Alexander's conquests, and they feigned defeat in order to begin a phase of rebuilding. Seems like a strategy that has worked out in the long run."

    So, Thaïs? If so - what was the rest of her life like?

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  9. "One particular “Hellfire Club” had 13 members, which included: Sir Francis Dashwood, John Wilkes, John Montagu, Benjamin Franklin, Robert Vansittart, Thomas Potter, Francis Duffield, Edward Thompson, Paul Whitehead, George “Bubb” Dodington, William Hogarth, Sir John Dashwood-King, and Thomas Stapleton."

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  10. Issac Newton straddled both worlds of science and mysticism/alchemy.

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  11. How about Mary Shelley? Frankenstein could surely be a story about a Simulacrum.

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  12. JoJo Stratton your right :) finally someone notice me!!!!, lol thanks

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  13. JoJo Stratton "leather apron" sound like an organize organization on political value

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  14. Mustafa Said no, I do not think so.

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  15. What about the many bronze age barrows of pre-roman Britain? Some of these structures could have been nests. This might cast the Roman invasion as having a similar dimension to the Alexandrian conquests; an attempt to destroy the N'Zeer foothold in Britain.

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  16. Alan Turing was likely a member of Antimagnus.

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  17. I think a good illustration of the cycle of 13Magnus and Antimagnus is to think about the succession cycle of the ancient world. If Alexander was carrying out a 13Magnus program to advance Hellenic civilization, he did so largely at the expense of the Achaemenid Empire.

    But the Achaemenid Empire was itself built by Cyrus, who overthrew his grandfather Astyages in order to do so. Astyages in turn was the son of Cyaxares, who is credited with the building of the Median civilization to its height by uniting the tribes of Iran against Ashurbanipal, the last leader of the Assyrian empire.

    The very name Antimagnus suggests that it would not exist without a Magnus to oppose. The sense one gets with the birth of Hellenic civilization is that Alexander was himself attempting to break a cycle that went back to the fall of the Assyrians, who had ruled for centuries beforehand. But yet, when Alexander died, the legend goes that his dying words as to whom his empire should go, "to the strongest" implied he knew of the coming wars of succession.

    Given how he admired Cyrus the Great, this may not be surprising. He would have known both how Cyrus achieved his throne and been able to compare it with how he himself took the crown of the Achaemenids. It is possible that the Antimagnus are the forces within these nations that attempt to bring low the great civilizations of man, stoking the pride of those who would be great themselves.

    I still think, however, that figures like Alexander are less 13Magnus or Antimagnus themselves but influenced by Magnus groups: the idea of Aristotle planting in Alexander's mind the idea that he should seek the outer ocean foretells a sort of transcendent destiny, to seek the very edges of the potential of humanity. This leads one to wonder where Aristotle got such an idea, and I think some of this points to Pythagoras. Pythagoras promulgated a view that the soul was immortal and could be improved through successive incarnations. This points to both the concept of patterns and the Ultimate, as well as an understanding of N'zeer simulacra and nests.

    I think another important element to remember in the interplay of Magnus and Antimagnus is the common belief amongst ancient civilizations that a god could be embodied in a statue, and capturing that statue itself would be considered subduing the god. A city was said to be unable to be rebuilt after conquest unless the god was reclaimed. This may be a sort of acknowledgement of the early power of portals, and the fate of civilizations when the power of their protective barriers wanes.

    Remember that these groups were and are secret societies within secret societies. As such an accounting of membership is fraught and we may only be able to follow them by their shadows.

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  18. It is also wise to not simply follow the idea of "believing in math and science" as the footprints of the N'Zeer. I think what is wiser to follow instead is a belief in tearing down, a belief that an individual can escape their humanity through secret knowledge.

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  19. What about Sir Isaac Newton he studied math, science, and alchemy. Or perhaps the eponymous and brilliant Ada Lovelace those parallels can't be ignored.

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  20. An important data point is that the Spanish Inquisition hunted 13Magnus members. This provides a clue: who would the Inquisition oppose, who would harbor 13Magnus members? This points to Jewish exile networks as perhaps being groups for transmission of 13Magnus technology and artifacts. 

    This would indicate that Spinoza may have been 13Magnus influenced.

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