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16%OFFChristopher Knight - Uriel's Machine:  The Ancient Origins of Science - 9780099281825 - 9780099281825
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Uriel's Machine: The Ancient Origins of Science

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Description for Uriel's Machine: The Ancient Origins of Science Paperback. The authors of this text show that the ancient Book of Enoch, rediscovered in the 18th century, describes how Uriel's Machine should be constructed, and how Enoch's secret technology has been preserved since ancient times in Freemasonic lore. Num Pages: 624 pages, 16 illustrations. BIC Classification: HBLA; HRCA; HRCS1; JFHC; JFSV1. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 180 x 111 x 39. Weight in Grams: 352.
* What is the standard view of history is completely wrong? * What if science and writing developed from an advanced prehistoric civilisation in the British Isles? * What is written evidence in the Dead Sea Scrolls records megalithic history and provides the plans for a machine that could rebuild civilisation following a global catastrophe? * And what if Jesus and his brother James were practitioners of megalithic astronomy? In URIEL'S MACHINE Knight & Lomas offer powerful new evidence that our planet was hit by seven mountain-sized lumps of comet, creating a series of giant waves that ripped across the ... Read more

Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2000
Publisher
Arrow
Condition
New
Number of Pages
624
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9780099281825
SKU
9780099281825
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
Ref
99-2

About Christopher Knight
Christopher Knight was born in 1950, and has a degree in advertising and graphic design. He is chairman of a marketing and advertising agency and is a Freemason. Robert Lomas was born in 1947 and has a degree in electrical engineering. He has worked on the guidance systems for Cruise missiles, and was involved in the early development of ... Read more

Reviews for Uriel's Machine: The Ancient Origins of Science
A Plausible explanation of how prehistoric societies could have developed astronomical observatories such as Stonehenge for practical reasons
Sunday Times
The book is superb... the insights that it opens in a series of varied fields, tying them in logically to each other, is very lucid
Howie Firth, Director of the Orkney Science Festival

Goodreads reviews for Uriel's Machine: The Ancient Origins of Science


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