Newton's Last Secret - Alternative View

Newton's Last Secret - Alternative View
Newton's Last Secret - Alternative View

Video: Newton's Last Secret - Alternative View

Video: Newton's Last Secret - Alternative View
Video: The Secret Side of Sir Isaac Newton 2024, April
Anonim

We will tell you about what is not mentioned in any of the many biographies of the famous English scientist.

By the end of his life, Isaac Newton (1643-1727) was left alone. He did not even have students to whom he could pass his archive and diary entries with scientific reasoning and proofs.

Less than six months before the death of his complex and contradictory life, he, without addressing anyone, writes a letter-message, about which in the scientific world almost no one knows. Here it is:

“Letter to the One who can do What I have failed to do. I, the great physicist and scientist Newton Isaac, repented of everything that was done and not done by me, and admitting his inconsistency in physics, I transfer this work to the hands of the One who can do What I have not done, realizes the knowledge I have received and will preserve the relics of the dominating over everyone and all of Nature … I ask You, O Good Friend of my research, to convey What You will find here to people … that is why I remain a slave of Your Will and deeds, "teacher of physics and lies", Isaac Newton!"

That's it! This letter is by no means an emotional outburst of mighty talent, but a sober and self-critical assessment of all his scientific activities, which, according to the scientist, has not been brought to its logical conclusion.

To understand this almost dying letter of the scientist, sent to virtually no one, perhaps it makes sense to recall some information about Newton's life. In the early 70s of the 17th century, being by that time still a very young, but already famous scientist, Isaac joined the London Royal Scientific Society, which was founded under the auspices of the most brilliant minds of England in the time of Cromwell. Only Masons were members of this society. And Newton was also.

By the way, Freemasonry originated in England and very quickly spread in the bourgeois and noble circles of many European countries. The Masons strove to create a secret world organization with the aim of uniting mankind worldwide in a religious fraternal union. But all their efforts were in vain. After becoming president of the Royal Scientific Society in 1703, that is, practically the supreme scientist of the country, Newton vigorously used the power he received for the widest possible publication and repeated reprinting of his works. But apart from the official presidency in the Royal Society, Isaac was also the Navigator (otherwise, the head) of the semi-legal lodge "Prior of Zion".

At the end of his life, Newton felt very unwell, and his affairs in the Royal Scientific Society and in the lodge of "Prior of Zion" went very badly. Due to poor health, he could no longer make out the fraudsters around him, who, using the exorbitant ambition of their leader, entered into his trust in order to maliciously set the true admirers of the scientist's talent against him personally. Isaac did not notice anything of this, moreover, in his old age, he sometimes allowed himself absolutely impermissible liberties for his significant position. His former "comrades-in-arms", and now outright enemies, who were eager for power, were quick to take advantage of this. Gradually, as if jokingly, they declared him to be out of his mind, a worthless old man, since at times, in all seriousness, he told his "associates" about some documents that no one had ever seen,he allegedly received from "ambassadors who arrived from distant stars." At the same time, he began to openly laugh at his own previous judgments and sharply questioned the foundations of mathematics and physics developed by him.

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At the beginning of December 1726, during one of these conversations, which eventually turned into an open conflict due to the fact that those who listened to Newton did not believe his "cosmic nonsense" at all, he firmly declared that he would leave his archive to anyone, but only not to their former employees. They, of course, did not attach serious importance to his threat, since the rules of the "Prior of Zion" strictly prohibited the disclosure of his secret to unauthorized persons. And Isaac, returning home, writes the already mentioned letter.

But in March 1727, when the scientist died and the members of the society and lodges came to pay him their last debt, they, to their great surprise, did not find either the archive or the diaries. A commotion began. Enraged members of the Prior of Zion ransacked the house, but to no avail. Only after destroying most of the dwelling, the already half-mad five members of the lodge found what they were looking for in a carefully hidden chest, but they did not notice the scientist's message …

It must be said here that the deceased's chief archivist was George Warren Bacon, a distant relative of Francis Bacon (1561-1626), the philosopher and founder of English materialism. This last representative of the Bacon clan did not share the opinions of his companions on the Prior of Zion. Deeply honoring his late boss, he looked for a way to fulfill his last will and finally found it.

Once the archivist heard about the young and talented physicist Thomas Jung, who had been looking for information about Newton's archive in various libraries for a long time …

And from Jung's diary, we read: “On August 27, 1727, I stayed late in the office to complete some business … A sudden knock on the door distracted my attention … I got up and asked; “Who is there?”, But they didn’t answer me. Then, opening the door a little, I saw a man of very noble appearance and, apparently, rich. I let him into the house, although his intentions remained a mystery to me. He introduced himself to me as George Warren Bacon, a distant relative of the famous Francis Bacon, and said that he is the archivist of the secret society "Prior of Zion" … I, for my part, expressed surprise: how I could be of use to him, to which he handed me a strange letter with the following content ". Further, everything is known. We gave the letter-message at the very beginning.

Jung was very lucky. He was dumbfounded by the contents of Newton's diaries and archive. But the guest warned Jung that everything he brought must be returned very soon, that is, before the return of the members of the Prior of Zion lodge, who are now in France in negotiations, and he had stolen the secret archive and brought, in his opinion, the only person. able to appreciate the importance of what is happening.

Jung spent only a few days studying the secret materials. During this time, he managed to rewrite no more than one third of the "Doctrine of the Breath of the World", which Newton himself marked as "work" presented to him by "extraterrestrial rulers". However, this was enough for Thomas to seriously think about the origins of light energy, the boundaries of knowledge of the World Will, and much more.

Before taking away the archives and diaries of his former boss, Bacon urged Jung to be very careful with his knowledge, since members of the Prior of Zion lodge closely monitor the development of science and any suspicion that someone has penetrated them. secrets, can lead to serious consequences. Unfortunately, the young scientist did not heed his advice. He immediately desired to make Newton's knowledge public and hastened to publish a number of articles in which he invariably referred to the "greatest physicist." As a result, the archivist disappeared without a trace, and Jung fled to France, where later, thanks to the reading of secret Newtonian materials, he became famous, first of all, as the founder of the wave theory of light.

So, as a result of violation of the rules of the "Prior of Zion" by Newton himself, his faithful servant and the young scientist Thomas Jung, the great scientist did not manage to defame anyone. Bacon, however, most likely, was killed by members of the lodge, and the young talent became famous in science.