March 28, 2009

  • Lottery Hermeneutics, continued:

    The Rest
    of the Story

    Today’s previous entry discussed the hermeneutics of the midday NY and PA lottery numbers.

    The rest of the story:

    The Revelation Game
    (continued from 7/26, 2008)

    Lotteries
    on Reba’s
    birthday,
    2009
    Pennsylvania
    (No revelation)
    New York
    (Revelation)
    Mid-day
    (No belief)
    No belief,
    no revelation

    726
    Revelation
    without belief

    378
    Evening
    (Belief)
    Belief without
    revelation

    006
    Belief and
    revelation

    091

    Interpretations of the evening numbers–

    The PA evening number, 006, may be viewed as a followup to the PA midday 726 (or 7/26, the birthday of Kate Beckinsale and Carl Jung). Here 006 is the prestigious “00″ number assigned to Beckinsale.

    Will: Do you like apples?     
    Clark: Yeah.                       
    Will: Well, I got her number.
     How do you like them apples?

    – “Good Will Hunting“ 

    Kate Beckinsale in 'Underworld: Evolution'

    The NY evening number, 091, may be viewed as a followup to the NY midday 378 (the number of pages in The Innermost Kernel by Suzanne Gieser, published by Springer, 2005)–

    Page 91: The entire page is devoted to the title of the book’s Part 3– “The Copenhagen School and Psychology”–

    Page 91 of 'The Innermost Kernel' by Suzanne Gieser, Springer 2005

    The next page begins: “With the crisis of physics, interest in epistemological and psychological questions grew among many theoretical physicists. This interest was particularly marked in the circle around Niels Bohr.”

    A particularly
    marked circle
     from March 15:
    Diamond Theory version of 'The Square Inch Space' with yin-yang symbol for comparison

    The circle above is
    marked with a version of
    the classic Chinese symbol
    adopted as a personal emblem
    by Danish physicist Niels Bohr,
    leader of the Copenhagen School.

    "Two things of opposite natures seem to depend
    On one another, as a man depends
    On a woman, day on night, the imagined

    On the real. This is the origin of change.
    Winter and spring, cold copulars, embrace
    And forth the particulars of rapture come."

    -- Wallace Stevens,
      "Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction,"
       Canto IV of "It Must Change"

    The square above is marked
    with a graphic design
    related to the four-diamond
    figure of Jung's Aion.

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