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Bible code

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Bible codes, originally known as Torah codes, are information patterns said to exist in encrypted or coded form in the text of the Bible, or, more specifically, in the Hebrew Torah, the first five books of Old Testament. The existence of these codes has been a topic of research by Old Testament scholars and students of Kabbalah for over a thousand years, and in more recent times have been a topic of study by modern mathematicians. In the mid-17th century influential mathematician Blaise Pascal, widely regarded as the "father of probability science" and "father of the modern computer" summarized his view in a one sentence assertion in his philosophical Pensées, concluding that "The Old Testament is a cipher."

Overview

Contemporary discussion and controversy around one specific encryption method began in 1994 when Doron Witztum, Eliyahu Rips and Yoav Rosenberg submitted their scientific paper, "Equidistant Letter Sequences in the Book of Genesis" to the peer-reviewed journal Statistical Science[1]. After unexpectedly surviving an unprecedented three rounds of peer review, the paper was published by Statistical Science and the "ELS" phenomenon was "presented as a puzzle" to its readership. A storm of controversy immediately ensued.

Since then the term "Bible Codes" has been popularly used to refer specifically to information encrypted via the ELS method.

Since the Witztum, Rips and Rosenberg (WRR) paper was published, two conflicting schools of thought regarding the "Codes" have emerged among proponents. The traditional (WRR) view of the codes is based strictly on their applicability to the Torah, and asserts that any attempt to study the codes outside of this context is invalid. This is based on a belief that the Torah is unique among biblical texts in that it was given directly to mankind (via Moses) in exact letter-by-letter sequence and in the original Hebrew language.

Religious Belief Foundations

Hebrew religious and 'Hebraic Sacred Science' traditions hold that the text of the Torah was originally given to mankind in a single long string of 304,805 Hebrew characters. The spaces, punctuation, sentence, chapter and five-book structures were all added later to form the modern Pentateuch. This "Word" of the Creator was, according to this tradition, delivered to mankind in the form of a single 304,805 letter word. It is in this context that the Torah is uniquely, specifically and literally considered to be "The Word".

For this reason, Hebrew tradition dictates that Torah scribes must complete many years of training, much of which has to do with learning the proper meditative techniques, before being allowed to copy Torah scrolls.[1] The tradition holds that not a single "jot or tittle", nor one iota of the Torah must be added, changed or omitted from "The Word".

Believers in this tradition sometimes point to a purely literal interpretation of the first seventeen words of the Gospel of John from the New Testament as evidence for their belief:

"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God".

In summary, the exclusive application of Bible Codes techniques to the Torah "string" is based in the belief that at the most fundamental level, God is a "Living Word", essentially, an almost infinitely complex information structure that begets all that exists, that the Torah is an information structure analogous to the DNA structure of all creation.[2] Some Messianic Jews further believe that "the Word was made flesh" in a literal sense; that the physical body of Jesus Christ was manifested divinely because his DNA was somehow perfectly derived from "The Word".[3]. Researcher-spiritualist Gregg Braden and others have been exploring the human DNA string and claim to have discovered evidence of "The Word" in human DNA.

Since 1994, more recent (post WRR) views extend the analysis of biblical texts to include Old Testament texts outside the Torah and also to the New Testament.

The traditional view of the codes further asserts that the "information" encoded in the Torah cannot be used to predict the future, and that at best the codes provide evidence of an all-knowing creator whose knowledge of the Universe and all of its possibilities spans both space and time. In this view, (from an information theoretical viewpoint) the letter-sequence of the Torah is to the Universe as the DNA sequence is to the human body, useful for understanding how the universe works on the macro scale, and illustrative of the "Grand Design" which encompasses all possible events, but nonetheless utterly unreliable for prediction of what specific combinations of micro-scale events will occur to create the 'reality' of human history.

The traditional view conflicts with the more recent and highly sensationalized views suggesting that the Codes may be valuable as tools of prediction. These views of the codes first emerged in popular culture with the book The Bible Code by journalist Michael Drosnin, which suggests that the codes can be analyzed by computer to provide warnings for the future.

The traditional view can be compared to the Copenhagen Interpretation of Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle of Quantum Physics in which, at the quantum level, the very act of measuring an information system in a state of quantum uncertainty can cause that system to "collapse" into a certain state around the potentiality that the observer was looking for. According to this view, the very act of searching the code for one possible future outcome, such as an assassination, hence "measuring" the event that may happen in the future, can cause the event itself to happen. In that same paradoxical way that Schrödinger's cat is said to be both dead and alive, and neither dead nor alive until the measurement is made.

A more nuanced and academic view of the Codes was presented in 1997 by Jeffrey Satinover in Cracking the Bible Code. Satinover attempted to present the 'puzzle' in broader historical, mathematical and theological contexts, but this work was largely ignored as the more sensational Drosnin work fueled the controversy.

ELS - Equidistant Letter Sequence method

The primary method by which purportedly meaningful messages have been extracted is the Equidistant Letter Sequence (ELS). To obtain an ELS from a text, choose a starting point (in principle, any letter) and a skip number, also freely and possibly negative. Then, beginning at the starting point, select letters from the text at equal spacing as given by the skip number. For example, the bold letters in this sentence form an ELS. With a skip of -4, and ignoring the spaces and punctuation, the word SAFEST is spelled out backwards.

Often more than one ELS related to some topic can be displayed simultaneously in an ELS letter array. This is produced by writing out the text in a regular grid, with exactly the same number of letters in each line, then cutting out a rectangle. In the example below, part of the King James Version of Genesis (26:5–10) is shown with 33 letters per line. ELSs for BIBLE and CODE are shown. Normally only a smaller rectangle would be displayed, such as the rectangle drawn in the figure. In that case there would be letters missing between adjacent lines in the picture, but it is essential that the number of missing letters be the same for each pair of adjacent lines.

center Arrange the letters from Genesis 26:5–10 in a 33 column grid and you get a word search with "Bible" and "code". Myriad other arrangements can yield other words.

Although the above examples are in English texts, Bible codes proponents usually use a Hebrew Bible text. For religious reasons, most Jewish proponents use only the Torah (Genesis–Deuteronomy).

ELS Extensions

Once a specific word has been found as an ELS, it is natural to see if that word is part of a longer ELS consisting of multiple words. For example, in the middle of the right most column of the boxed matrix above is the ELS "he". After searching immediately above and below this ELS, we see another ELS ("toe") that is right below the "he" ELS. ELS extensions that form phrases or sentences with good grammar are of interest.

History

In the last years of his life, French mathematician Blaise Pascal had concluded in his philosophical work Pensees that "The Old Testament is a cipher."[4]

Shortly after Pascal's death, another early seeker of divinely encrypted messages was Isaac Newton, who, according to John Maynard Keynes believed[2] that "the universe is a cryptogram set by the Almighty" and in the structure of the universe, Newton sought the answers to "a riddle of the Godhead of past and future events divinely fore-ordained".

Newton eventually turned his attention to biblical prophecy and "the Revelation, with respect to the Scripture of Truth, which Daniel was commanded to shut up and seal, till the time of the end. Until that time comes, the Lamb is opening the seals." Some sources[3] have attempted to connect Keynes' attribution of the "universe is a cryptogram" quote with Newton's later interest in biblical prophecy, even to the extent of re-wording the quote, substituting the word "Bible" for "universe", but there appears to be no evidence that Newton ever attempted any cryptographic analyses of the Bible, nor any explicit reference by Newton to the text of the bible as a cryptogram or 'cipher', as Pascal had come to believe. Newton's interest in Biblical texts appeared to be in the unlocking of allegorical riddles rather than any mathematical de-coding of texts.

The 13th-century Spanish Rabbi Bachya ben Asher may have been the first[citation needed] to describe an ELS in the Bible. His 4-letter example related to the traditional zero-point of the Hebrew calendar. Over the following centuries there are some hints that the ELS technique was known, but few definite examples have been found from before the middle of the 20th century. At this point many examples were found by the Slovakian Rabbi Michael Ber Weissmandl and published by his students after his death in 1957. Nevertheless, the practice remained known only to a few until the early 1980s, when some discoveries of an Israeli school teacher Avraham Oren came to the attention of the mathematician Eliyahu Rips at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Rips then took up the study together with his religious studies partners Doron Witztum and Alexander Rotenberg, and several others.

Rips and Witztum designed computer software for the ELS technique and subsequently found many examples. About 1985, they decided to carry out a formal test and the "Great rabbis experiment" was born. This experiment tested the hypothesis that ELSs for the names of famous rabbis could be found closer to ELSs of their dates of birth and death than chance alone could explain. The definition of "close" was complex but, roughly, two ELSs are close if they can be displayed together in a small rectangle. The experiment succeeded in finding sequences which fit these definitions, and they were interpreted as indicating the phenomenon was real.

The great rabbis experiment went through several iterations but was eventually published (1994) in the peer-reviewed journal Statistical Science. Prior to publication, the Editor subjected the paper to three successive peer reviews by the journal's referees, a level of scrutiny that was unprecedented for the journal at that time, which had until then never required more than two such reviews. Although neither the Editor nor the referees were convinced by it[4], none of the reviewers had found any flaws. Understanding that the paper was certain to generate controversy, it was presented to readers in the context of a "challenging puzzle".

Witztum and Rips also performed other experiments, most of them successful, though none were published in journals. Another experiment, in which the names of the famous rabbis were matched against the places of their births and deaths (rather than the dates), was conducted by Harold Gans, an employee of the United States National Security Agency.[5] Again, the results were interpreted as being meaningful and thus suggestive of a more than chance result. These Bible codes became known to the public primarily due to the American journalist Michael Drosnin, whose book The Bible Code (Simon and Schuster, 1997) was a best-seller in many countries.

In 2002, Drosnin published a second book on the same subject, called The Bible Code II. The Jewish outreach group Aish-HaTorah employs the Bible Codes in their Discovery Seminars to persuade secular Jews of the divinity of the Bible and to encourage them to trust in its traditional Orthodox teachings. Use of Bible code techniques also spread into certain Christian circles, especially in the United States. The main early proponents were Yakov Rambsel, who is a Messianic Jew, and Grant Jeffrey. Another Bible code technique was developed in 1997 by Dean Coombs (also Christian). Various pictograms are claimed to be formed by words and sentences using ELS.[6] By 2000, most books, and most web sites, devoted to the codes were produced by Christians.[citation needed]

Since 2000, physicist Nathan Jacobi, an agnostic Jew, and engineer Moshe Aharon Shak, an orthodox Jew, have discovered hundreds of examples of extended ELSs in acceptable Hebrew.[7] The number of extended ELSs at different lengths are compared with those expected from a non-encoded text, as determined by a formula from Markov Chain theory.[8]

Predictions

Traditional codes scholars and adherents believe that the codes cannot (and should not) be used for "soothsaying". The traditional view that the codes are "useless for prediction", and the basis for it, were described by Jeffrey Satinover in his 1997 book "Cracking the Bible Code"[9]. This view holds that, at best, signs of the existence of encrypted historical information in the Torah indicate evidence supporting the existence of an all-knowing creator.

Nonetheless, the use and publication of "predictions" based on Bible codes has succeeded in bringing about popular awareness of the codes, most notably based on the work of journalist Michael Drosnin. Drosnin's most famous prediction, in 1994, was the 1995 assassination of Israeli Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, using a Bible code technique.[10] Drosnin uses this prediction as evidence for the validity of his bible code techniques.[11] Opponents claim that in the political atmosphere of the time, predicting with no additional details the fact that Rabin would be assassinated is not compelling, though dramatic.[citation needed]. Less political predictions include the 2004 Red Sox World Series victory, and widespread use of hand held communication devices (cell phones).[citation needed]

Drosnin, in The Bible Code II, described the probability of nuclear holocausts and the destruction of major cities by earthquakes in 2006, saying "The dangers will peak in the Hebrew year 5766 (September 2005 - September 2006 in the modern calendar), the year that is most clearly encoded with both 'World War' and 'Atomic Holocaust'."[12]

More recently, Drosnin has refrained from making concrete predictions, saying, "I don't think the code makes predictions. I think it reveals probabilities." Drosnin also said "I think it might tell us all our possible futures. That appears to include a warning of a possible nuclear war." [13]

Criticism

The primary objection advanced against Bible codes is that information theory does not prohibit "noise" from appearing to be sometimes meaningful. Thus, if data chosen for ELS experiments are intentionally or unintentionally "cooked" before the experiment is defined, similar patterns can be found in texts other than the Torah. Although the probability of an ELS in a random place being a meaningful word is small, there are so many possible starting points and skip patterns that many such words can be expected to appear, depending on the details chosen for the experiment, and that it is possible to "tune" an ELS experiment to achieve a result which appears to exhibit patterns that overcome the level of noise.

Criticism of the original paper

In 1999, mathematicians Brendan McKay, Dror Bar-Natan and Gil Kalai and psychologist Maya Bar-Hillel published a paper[14] ('MBBK') in Statistical Science in response to the original paper[1] by Witztum, Rips and Rosenberg (WRR). The MBBK paper argued that:

  • The flexibility of the spelling of Hebrew words could have allowed for improper collection of data that would lead to the WRR results.
  • Indirect evidence supported the allegation that the data were not, in fact, collected properly; that is, the choice of names and spellings was somehow biased, either intentionally or unintentionally, towards those supporting the codes hypothesis.
  • This "tuning" tactic was capable of generating a result similar to WRR's Genesis result in a Hebrew translation of War and Peace
  • Attempts at replicating the experiment, while being similar in the large, failed to achieve the exactly same results to the last digit.
  • The WRR authors had "cheated" to choose a selection of names and/or dates in advance, and intentionally designed their experiments to match their selection and thereby achieve their desired result. Therefore, "their result merely reflects on the choices made in designing their experiment and collecting the data for it."

The WRR authors issued a response[15] to the claims of the McKay paper, as well as testimony by a third party that no "tuning" took place[16]. WRR author Witztum also later responded in a new paper[17] claiming that McKay had used straw man arguments. Witztum also claimed that, upon interviewing a key independent expert contracted by McKay for the MBBK paper, that some experiments performed for MBBK had validated, rather than refuted the original WRR findings, and questioned why MBBK had expunged these results from their paper.[citation needed]

McKay issued a rebuttal to the further claims[18], while Bar-Hillel summarized the view that the WRR paper was an intentionally and a carefully designed "magic trick"[19].

Criticism of Michael Drosnin

Journalist Drosnin's books have been criticized by some who believe that the Bible Code is real but that it cannot predict the future.[20] Some accuse him of factual errors, claiming that he has much support in the scientific community,[21] mistranslating Hebrew words [10] to make his point more convincing, and using the Bible without proving that other books do not have similar codes.[22]

Responding to an explicit challenge from Drosnin, who claimed that other texts such as Moby Dick would not yield ELS results comparable to the Torah, McKay created a new experiment that was tuned to find many ELS letter arrays in Moby Dick that relate to modern events, including the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. He also found a code relating to the Rabin assassination, containing the assassin's first and last name and the university he attended, as well as the motive ("Oslo", relating to the Oslo accords).[23] Drosnin and others have responded to these claims, saying the tuning tactics employed by McKay were simply "nonsense", and providing analyses to support their argument that the tables, data and methodologies McKay used to produce the Moby Dick results "simply do not qualify as code tables". [24]

Noted skeptic Dave Thomas claimed to find other examples in many texts, though Thomas' methodology was refuted by Robert Haralick [25] and others. In addition, McKay claimed that Drosnin had used the flexibility of Hebrew orthography to his advantage, freely mixing classic (no vowels, Y and W strictly consonant) and modern (Y and W used to indicate i and u vowels) modes, as well as variances in spelling of K and T, to reach the desired meaning. In his television series John Safran vs God, Australian television personality John Safran and McKay again demonstrated the 'tuning' technique, demonstrating that these techniques could produce "evidence" of the September 11 terrorist attacks on New York in the lyrics of Vanilla Ice's repertoire. Additionally, 'coded' references in non-Torah Bible texts, as for instance the famous Number of the Beast, do not use the Bible code technique. And, the influence and consequences of scribal errors (eg, misspellings, additions, deletions, misreadings, ...) are hard to account for in the context of a Bible coded message left secretly in the text. McKay and others claim that in the absence of an objective measure of quality and an objective way to select test subjects, it is not possible to positively determine whether any particular observation is significant or not. For that reason, most of the serious effort of the skeptics has been focused on the scientific claims of Witztum, Rips and Gans.

See also

Relevant mathematical topics:

  • Ergodic theory, which forms the foundation for modern information theory
  • Information theory, which involves various statistical properties of long sequences of text
  • Ramsey theory, for an interesting and important notion of "unavoidable coincidences"
  • Symbolic dynamics, a subfield of ergodic theory which deals with (possibly multidimensional) symbolic sequences

References

  1. ^ a b Doron Witztum, Eliyahu Rips, Yoav Rosenberg (1994). "Equidistant letter sequences in the Book of Genesis". Statistical Science. 9: 429–438.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Keynes_Newton.html John Maynard Keynes on Newton's cryptogram beliefs
  3. ^ http://www.exodus2006.com/CodesBible.htm
  4. ^ Kass, R.E. (1999). Introduction to "Solving the Bible Code Puzzle" by Brendan McKay, Dror Bar-Natan, Maya Bar-Hillel and Gil Kalai. Statistical Science 14, 149.
  5. ^ http://www.aish.com/seminars/discovery/Codes/codes.htm
  6. ^ http://www.bible-codes.org/what-are-Bible-codes.htm
  7. ^ BibleCodeDigest.com
  8. ^ Non-Random ELS Extensions in Ezekiel
  9. ^ See "A Talk with Dr. Jeffrey Satinover at http://www.quantgen.com/TALK.HTM
  10. ^ a b http://www.rsingermanson.com/html/drosnin.html
  11. ^ http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9706/04/israel.bible/drosninlog.html
  12. ^ http://futurenewsinfo.blogspot.com/2004/12/nuclear-war-futurists-view-bible-code.html
  13. ^ http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9706/04/israel.bible/drosninlog.html
  14. ^ Brendan McKay, Dror Bar-Natan, Maya Bar-Hillel, Gil Kalai (1999). "Solving the Bible Code Puzzle". Statistical Science. 14: 150–173.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ http://www.torahcodes.co.il/response.htm
  16. ^ http://www.torahcodes.co.il/havlin.htm
  17. ^ http://www.torahcodes.co.il/emanuel/eman_hb.htm
  18. ^ http://cs.anu.edu.au/~bdm/codes/WNP/Rebuttal.pdf
  19. ^ Maddness in the Method at http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/teaching_aids/books_articles/Maya.html
  20. ^ http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/bib-code.html
  21. ^ http://cs.anu.edu.au/~bdm/dilugim/torah.html
  22. ^ http://www.wopr.com/biblecodes/
  23. ^ http://cs.anu.edu.au/~bdm/dilugim/moby.html
  24. ^ http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0212/02/cf.00.html
  25. ^ http://www.torah-code.org/papers/skeptical_inquirer_02_15_07.pdf
  • Drosnin, Michael (1997). The Bible Code. USA: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-81079-4.
  • Satinover, Jeffrey (1997). Cracking the Bible Code. New York: W. Morrow. ISBN 0-688-15463-8.
  • Drosnin, Michael (1997). The Bible Code. UK: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-81995-X.
  • Drosnin, Michael (2002). The Bible Code II: The Countdown. USA: Viking Books. ISBN 0-670-03210-7.
  • Drosnin, Michael (2002). The Bible Code II: The Countdown. UK: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-84249-8.
  • Drosnin, Michael (Forthcoming 2006). The Bible Code III: The Quest. UK: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-84784-8. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help)CS1 maint: year (link)
  • Stanton, Phil (1998). The Bible Code - Fact or Fake?. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books. ISBN 0-89107-925-4.
  • Haralick, Robert M.; Rips, Eliyahu; and Glazerson, Matiyahu (2005). Torah Codes: A Glimpse into the Infinite. Mazal & Bracha Publishing. ISBN 0-9740493-9-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)