[ RadSafe ] Climate Change, physics and intelligent design --- OFF TOPIC

neildm at id.doe.gov neildm at id.doe.gov
Wed Nov 3 15:08:56 CDT 2010


I have also heard that this is based on a trick in the text that the translators didn't know about. It relies on the use of Hebrew characters as numbers as well as letters.  The apparent misspelling of the word equivalent to "circumference", when divided by the correct spelling as numbers gives a correction factor that comes extremely close to the correct value. 

I went out on the net looking for the reference and got this:
"First, mathematically, take the etymology of the words (images lost)[heh vaw quof] and [vaw quof] (the Hebrew word used in this verse, versus the usual word for circumference), and you'll find that the ratio of their numeric value (via Gematria) [(5 + 6 + 100)/(6 + 100)] is 1.0471698, which multiplied by 3 is pi. "


-----Original Message-----
From: radsafe-bounces at agni.phys.iit.edu [mailto:radsafe-bounces at agni.phys.iit.edu] On Behalf Of J. Marshall Reber
Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 2010 12:33 PM
To: The International Radiation Protection (Health Physics) Mailing List
Subject: Re: [ RadSafe ] Climate Change,physics and intelligent design --- OFF TOPIC


On Nov 3, 2010, at 5:58 AM, od at tlmq.com wrote:

>  A problem I have been told about recently: the description of the altar in Solomon's Temple (in Kings A', 7:23) states that it is round, 5 cubits in diameter and thirty in perimeter. Ergo, pi (د€)  = 3. Now, this might have been due to a miracle, but I doubt that that was the intention of the "being" when it dictated this particular passage.
> 
> D.Okkalides
> THEAGENEION Anticancer Hospital
> Thessaloniki
> Greece
> 


The Hebrew, qomah, which you have translated as "diameter" is generally translated as "height", thus nullifying your analysis.

J. Marshall Reber, ScD
165 Berkeley St.
Methuen MA 01844

Tel/Fax: 978-683-6540
Alternate Email: reber at alum.mit.edu



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