EUR 27,80
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
EUR 30,21
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
EUR 30,21
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
EUR 41,62
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Añadir al carritoGebunden. Condición: New.
Librería: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Alemania
EUR 31,37
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Añadir al carritoBuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware - This book began as an article first published in the Journal of Scientific Exploration - Vol. 31, No. 4, pp. 643-694, 2017; and it follows the content by expanding and adding to it. The original article is also the first publication to provide scientific evidence, amounting to proof, that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, was the true author of the plays and poetry popularly ascribed to William Shakespeare.The subject of Shakespeare's authorship has a long history of doubt accompanying it, but until now there has been no convincing evidence to overcome the uncertainties. Eleven 'rune' ciphers, authenticated by poets: Edward de Vere, Ben Jonson, Edmund Spenser, Thomas Nashe, Leonard Digges, together with those published by Thomas Thorpe and John Benson, have recently been discovered. Each one of these is united by the single code word 'rune', with its archaic meaning of 'whisper, talk in secret', and by the repeated key to each cipher having employed the number 17, to coincide with the 17th Earl of Oxford.The employment of such ciphers is a recognized part of the science of cryptology. The book therefore commences with a brief overview of how cryptography became a science in Europe during the Renaissance, together with its arrival in Elizabethan England, where it was used by both pro and anti-government interests, as well as by men of letters to combat the heavy censorship imposed upon the written word by Lord Burghley.The transfer of authorial identity between Lord Oxford and William Shakespeare can be fully explained as a consequence, orchestrated by Burghley (father-in-law and former guardian of Lord Oxford) to shield three noble families from public scandal, if his son-in-law's sonnets of endearment to the teenage 3rd Earl of Southampton were published; especially since, the boy was a ward of the Queen, placed under his guardianship. And so, by first censoring the Sonnets and then transferring their authorship to a man from the lower classes, resident in the midlands, any connexion between the earls of Oxford and Southampton became extinguished.Forced to accept the loss of his identity as poet and playwright, Oxford's response was to rebel, by enciphering his identity into his work. Other men of letters followed his example by enciphering his identity into works that praised 'Shakespeare's' art. The science of cryptology adjudges such evidence as beyond a chance occurrence.The book also apprises the reader that because the first half of Shakespeare's life is void of any facts concerning literature or penmanship, it has become a depository for biographers to graph their own conjectures into this empty space; without which, there would be no biographies of Stratford's William Shakespeare.
EUR 37,60
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware - This book examines and analyses the evidence proposed in support of Shakespeare as the author of the plays and poems published under that name. The evidence is compared to the alternative proposal that Shakespeare acted as an allonym for the Earl of Oxford, whose homo-erotic Sonnets addressed to the teenage Earl of Southampton, and the plays characterizing members of Elizabeth's court, made it imperative that he should not be identified with their content. Confirmation of this truth is confirmed by Jonson, Nashe, Chettle, Thorpe, Marsden, and Digges, who relied upon innuendo, puns, and the latest discovery in cryptology by the mathematician, Cardano, to assert what had happened. In this age of censorship, William Camden also confirmed the existence of a conspiracy by the present powers to extinguish this memory from future generations.
EUR 37,60
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware - The known facts about the life of William Shakespeare are critically re-examined for evidence that is both necessary and sufficient for him to have authored the works that bear his name. 'Proving Shakespeare' is a companion to the Roland Emmerich film 'Anonymous.' While adding further information to its story-line, it also corrects the secret concealed behind Lord Oxford's hidden identity.
EUR 53,64
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Añadir al carritoBuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware - - A new, original, and evidence-based concept that unites science with religion - Original and significant conclusions that reprise the work of a great philosopher - Relativity and quantum theory, united with consciousness, require a new world-view David Roper reprises the Principles of Human Knowledge, as advanced by Bishop George Berkeley, and presents a viable theory of the true nature of reality based upon a striking new model of space-time, world-lines and consciousness. He shows how this theory accounts for the unification of a wide variety of hitherto unresolved problems. They include space-time, world-lines, time, natural laws, cause and effect, memory, freewill, determinism, precognition, the mind-brain problem, heaven, and the place of prayer in the world. Readership: Philosophers, theologians and scientists with an interest in the logical implications and consequences of work carried out by the physical sciences. It will also interest a more general readership for the many famous, historical references that correlate in an error-free way to their foreknowledge.