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Don wrote:Petertrei wrote:>Don wrote:>
<snip>
>>Please post greater detail about your "winding staircase" grievance.>
>
On a happier note, it was fun to discover the Forty-seventh Problem of
Euclid staring at me right in the face from the chalkboard! It tickles
me to pull Euclid into my Masonic mosaic in the form of a new Figure.
>
Perhaps a wise guy can pull a pattern, a potential pièce de résistance,
out of this paper?
>
<https://crcomp.net/arts/forbidden/paper.png>
>
The staircase need another flight, of 7 steps.
>
Again, the main problem with trying to to use the movie to
connect Shakespeare to the Masons that none of these
claimed 'tells' in the film appear in the play.
Perhaps Hollywood left out the last seven steps as an ... innovation?
Seven steps sacrificed for the sake of framing, or something?
"My piece of evidence has been shown to be deficient, but I'm
going to insist it is valid anyway."
>Regardless, there's a misunderstanding. My current focus is to find>
Freemason forms in _Forbidden Planet_ - for the fun of it. Intention
is irrelevant to this thread - it doesn't seek to prove a connection
between Freemasonry and Shakespeare. Other people's arguments about a
connection purely provide pretext. Otherwise readers would wonder
why Freemason forms are sought in _Forbidden Planet_.
OK, fine. So, who do you think inserted these alleged 'Masonic' tells?
>Strickly speaking, the staircase and Euclid are both legend:>
>
EUCLID. The masonic legend which refers to Euclid is altogether
historically untrue. It is really a philosophical myth intended
to convey a masonic truth.
>
WINDING STAIRS, LEGEND OF. A legend in the Fellow Craft's degree
having no historical truth, but being simply a philosophical
myth or legendary symbol intended to communicate a masonic
dogma.
>
The Symbolism of Freemasonry
<https://www.gutenberg.org/files/11937/11937-h/11937-h.htm#index>
Absolutely. Freemasonry as we recognize it today grew organically out
of the tail end of the medieval Mason's Guilds during the 1500s and
1600s. We know its all made up. You occasionally find Masons who think
that the order really originated at the building of King Solomon's
Temple, but they're looked at a bit like Young Earth Creationists.
>Cookie's apron is cringe-worthy. But sometimes you must pander to>
readers. In this case to readers who, at best, recognize only one
symbol: the apron.
No one 'reads' "forbidden Plant". Its a movie. But your point remains.
Sometimes a cook's apron is just a cook's apron.
>The Blazing Star provides a tentative origin for the space object>
explosion climax cliche.
In the movie, its a planet that explodes, not a star. Yes, its a
bit of a trope now. 2010 is another good example.
>
There's a very long history of people claiming to find Masonic
allusions in things. Nearly all of it is pure apophenia.
>
Examples:
>
* I have a book that tries to prove that Stonehenge
is an ancient Masonic temple
>
* A lot of conspiracy theorists claim the two World Trade Center
towers were an allusion to a pair of pillars in Freemasonry,
and that 9/11 was somehow a Masonic ritual.
>
* Here's an attempt, at great length, and with
an amazing level of effort, to 'prove' that the film
'Eyes Wide Shut' is an allegory of what the author thinks
is in the Scottish Rite.
>
https://33degreesofeyeswideshut.wordpress.com/
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