PateoPedia
The
Wholly Encyclopedia
Wholly Wayshowers
The researchers who showed
me the way to Wholly Science are
mentioned below, chronologically ordered based on their birthdates. This does
not necessarily mean that all these wayshowers were
correct in all their claims. By not throwing out the baby with the bath water, Wholly Science has been able to unite
all that is veritable into a single framework of understanding that is
internally consistent, logical, and most of all relatively easy to understand.
Akhenaten [7]
His birth name was Amenhotep IV (1380 BCE – 1334 BCE), meaning “Amon is satisfied”. In 1351 BCE, he became the ruler of
ancient Khemit (meaning: “The
Zoroaster [11]
Zoroaster (660 BCE – 583
BCE) lived in the eastern part of the Iranian Plateau. He was a native speaker
of Old Avestan, formerly also known as “Zend”.
He wrote both the Yasna Haptanghaiti
(meaning: “Worship in Seven Chapters”), as well as the 17 Gathas hymns. The name Zoroaster
originated from a phonetic transliteration or semantic substitution of the Avestan zaraϑ- with the Greek zōros
(literally meaning: “undiluted”) and the Avestan -uštra with astron (meaning: “star”). In Old
Iranian, this name became Zarathushtra [9]. At the
age of 30 years old, Zoroaster received his illumination from Ahura Mazda. The literal meaning of the word Ahura is “light”
and Mazda is “wisdom”. In other
words, the Undiluted Star (Zoroaster) received his illumination from the Light
of Wisdom (Ahura Mazda). From this, Zoroastrianism
was developed as a monotheistic spiritual doctrine.
Lao
Tzu [5]
Lao Tzu (about 604 BCE –
about 531 BCE) from ancient China, also spelled Lao Zi
or Lao Tze in our alphabet, wrote the book entitled “Tao Te Ching”,
also spelled “Dao De Jing”
or “Tao Teh Ching” in our alphabet, literally meaning: the book (Ching or Jing) on the
inner Force (De, Te, or Teh)
of the Way (Dao or Tao). The probably best way to describe Tao (or Dao) is in the statement: “There is no way home; home is the way.”
(meaning: Tao is the way of our true home.).
Pythagoras
[13]
Pythagoras of Samos (about 570 BCE – about 495 BCE) from ancient
Confucius [3]
Kong Qiu
(551 BCE September 28 – 479 BCE) was most often known as Kongzi
(literally: “Master Kong”). He was also known by the honorific Kong Fuzi (literally: “Grand Master Kong”), which was
Latinized as “Confucius” by 16th-century Jesuit missionaries to
Heraclitus [44]
Heraclitus of Ephesus
(about 535 BCE – about 475 BCE) from ancient
Hippocrates [13]
Hippocrates of Cos (about 460 BCE – about 375 BCE) from ancient
Plato [1]
Plato (429 BCE – 347 BCE)
was perhaps the first Wholly writer on our home planet. Actually, his birth
name was Aristocles.
However, as he was square-built, his nickname became “broad” in Greek, which is
ΠΛΆΤΩΝ or “Platon”
in Latin letters. In English, this name became Plato.
Chuang
Tzu [4]
Chuang Tzu (about 399 BCE
– about 295 BCE) from ancient
Archimedes [13]
Archimedes of Syracuse [1]
(about 287 BCE – about 212 BCE) was an all-round
scientist who became the greatest mathematician ever.
Leonardo
Fibonacci [11]
Leonardo Pisano Bigollo (about 1170 –
about 1250) was also known as Leonardo of Pisa, Leonardo Pisano,
Leonardo Bonacci, Leonardo Fibonacci, or simply
Fibonacci. He was perhaps the first Wholly mathematician.
Roger
Bacon [8]
Roger Bacon (about 1214 – about 1292), Latinized as “Rogerus
Bacon”, was one of the earliest European advocates of the scientific method. He
also discovered the use of concave mirrors for overcoming the limitations by
time and space.
Meister
Eckhart [11]
Eckhart von Hochheim (about 1260 – about 1328), commonly known as
Meister Eckhart, was an enlightened mystic who
understood the essence of God.
Leonardo
da Vinci [11]
Leonardo di ser Piero da
Vinci (1452 April 15 [13] – 1519 May 2 [5]) was an all-round scientist. He
lived in
Paracelsus [7]
Philippus Aureolus
Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim
(1493 November 11 (or December 17) – 1541 September 24) was an all-round
scientist specialized in Alchemy. He believed
that each of the four primary Essences (Earth, Fire, Air, and Water) consisted
of a subtle, vaporous principle and a gross corporeal substance.
Nostradamus [1]
Michel de Nostredame [11] (1503 December14 [8] – 1566 July 2 [9])
developed the horary chart system of Planetary Astrology.
Giordano
Bruno [9]
Filippo Bruno [9] (1548
– 1600 February 17) was an Italian philosopher, mathematician, and astrologer.
He was one of the first to see the stars as distant suns with their own
planets. He also claimed that the universe is infinite.
Galileo
Galilei [8]
Galileo Galilei
(1564 February 15 [6] – 1642 January 8 [4]) was an Italian astronomer,
physicist, engineer, philosopher, and mathematician. His advocacy of heliocentrism was controversial within his lifetime, when
all others still subscribed to the view that Terra stood motionless at the
center of the universe.
Johannes
Kepler [9]
Johannes Kepler (1571 December 27 [17/8] – 1630 November 15 [9]) was
a German mathematician, astronomer, and astrologer, who discovered the elliptic
nature of planetary motion.
Athanasius Kircher [77]
Athanasius Kircher (1602 May 2 [7] – 1680 November 27 [7]) was a
Jesuit scholar and polymath from Germany who followed a syncretic
approach to subjects like Egyptology, geology, music theory, and magnetism, and
published around 40 major works.
Benedict
de Spinoza
Baruch Spinoza (1632
November 24 – 1677 February 21) said that whole of nature was the conscious
body of God.
Gottfried
Leibniz
Gottfried Wilhelm von
Leibniz (1646 July 1 – 1716 November 14) postulated the idea of a monad, being a natural conscious unit.
Goethe [33]
Johann Wolfgang (von)
Goethe (1749 August 28 – 1832 March 22) was a poet, playwright, novelist,
statesman, theatre director, critic, artist, and most certainly also a
scientist (article).
Wilhelm
Schüssler [5]
Wilhelm Heinrich Schüssler (1821 August 21 – 1898 March 30) endeavored to
find natural remedies, leading to a list of 12 Biochemic
cell salts.
John
Keely [6]
John Ernst Worrell Keely (1827 September 3 – 1898 November 18) invented the “Keely Engine”.
Édouard
Lucas [11]
François Édouard Anatole Lucas [17] (1842
April 4 – 1891 October 3) was a French mathematician (link) who rediscovered the Khemitian
number sequence, commonly known as ‘Lucas numbers’.
Julius
Hensel [11]
Julius Hensel
(1844 April 30 – 1903) propagated mineral field fertilization with rock flour.
Friedrich
Nietzsche [9]
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
(1844 October 15 – 1900 August 25) understood that the
world above (“the stars”) is mirrored in the world within (“the psyche”), named
“Astro-Psychology”. He also wrote the philosophical
novel titled Also sprach
Zarathustra (Thus spoke Zarathustra),
“a Book for All and None”.
Ottoman
Zar-Adusht Ha’nish [5]
In 1902, the German
immigrant from
Guido
von List [5]
Guido von List (1848
October 5 – 1919 May 17) wrote the German book titled ‘Das Geheimnis der Runen’ (The Secret of the Runes).
Nikola
Tesla [11]
Nikola Tesla (1856
July 10 [1] – 1943 January 7 [7]) was the greatest inventor of modern time (article).
William Bates [9]
William Horatio Bates [5]
(1860 December 23 – 1931 July 10,) developed an educational method for
improving vision by undoing the habitual strain to see.
Alfred
Whitehead [3]
Alfred North Whitehead
(1861 February 15 – 1947 December 30) stated that all self-organizing systems
are processes in time. He considered matter to be the past, and mind to be the
future.
Rudolf
Steiner [13]
Rudolf Joseph Lorenz
Steiner [5] (1861 February 25 – 1925 March 30) developed anthroposophy.
G.I.
Gurdjieff [66]
George Ivanovitch
Gurdjieff [5] (1866 January 13 [8] – 1949 October 29
[8]) {some say his year of birth was in 1872, others claim 1877: link} transferred the mystical Wholly
knowledge from the east to the west (video). Mister Gurdjieff wrote
three volumes of his written work under the title All and Everything (1. “Beelzebub's Tales to His Grandson”, 2. “Meetings with Remarkable Men”, and 3. “Life Is Real Only Then, When 'I Am' ”).
Mister Gurdjieff never revealed the whole truth,
especially not to those who were not ready for it. Also the parts Mister Gurdjieff deliberately left out, are included in Wholly Science. Pyotr
Demianovich Ouspenskii [2]
(1878 March 4 [4] – 1947 October 2) assisted the dissemination of the ideas of
Mister Gurdjieff by also writing books about this
so-called “
Kristian Birkeland [6]
Kristian Olaf Birkeland (1867 December 13
– 1917 June 15) from
Georges
Lakhovsky [11]
Georges Lakhovsky
(1869 – 1942) was a bioelectric pioneer who invented the Multi Wave Oscillator.
He wrote a book on his discoveries titled “The
Secret of Life” (pdf).
Weston
Price [3]
Weston Andrew Valleau Price (1870 September 6 – 1948 January 23) showed
the relationship between unhealthy nutrition and physical degeneration.
Walter Russell [5]
Walter Bowman Russell [1]
(1871 May 19 [5] – 1963 May 19 [7]) was an all-round scientist, painter,
sculptor, author, and builder (link). On 1894 January
10, the 22-year-old Walter married his the 20-year-old Helen Andrews (1874 –
1953), with whom he had two daughters, and later two granddaughters. In 1946, the
75-year-old Walter met the 42-year old Daisy Stebbing
(born Daisy Eveline Cook; 1904 November 6 [22] – 1988
May 5). On 1948 July 19, the 77-year-old Walter divorced his first wife after
54½ years of marriage. In that same year, Walter married the 43-year-old Daisy,
who he affectionately called Lao, derived from Lao Tzu. Lao and Walter worked
together for fifteen years and founded the
Books (among others): “The Universal One” (1926), “The Secret of Light” (1947), “The Message of the Divine Iliad” (1948),
“A New Concept of the Universe”
(1953), “Atomic Suicide?” (1957), “The One-World Purpose” (1960)
WARNING: The work of Russell might help to break
free from university scientism, in reality however it neither offers genuine
explanations. Further more, he claimed to be the reincarnation of Leonardo da Vinci, while his second wife would have been the
reincarnation of Lao Tzu.
Carl
Jung [5]
Carl Gustav Jung [5] (1875
July 26 – 1961 June 6)
Viktor
Schauberger [13]
Viktor Schauberger
(1885 June 30 [4] – 1958 September 5)
Edward
Leedskalnin [8]
Edward Leedskalnin
(1887 August 10 – 1951 December 7)
Royal
Rife [55]
Royal Raymond Rife [1]
(1888 May 16 – 1971 August 5) developed a frequency instrument that restored
the natural ability of self-healing.
Martinus [7]
Martinus Thomsen [11]
(1890 August 11 [1] – 1981 March 8) connected the understanding of the physical
world with the understanding of the spiritual world in what became known “Martinus Cosmology” (website). Simply ignore some errors that he ignorantly
copied from scientism and Christianity (video).
Henry
Moray [7]
Thomas Henry Moray [11]
(1892 August 28 – 1974 May 1) was a talented designer of electronic circuits
who discovered a source of energy transmission apparently available everywhere.
Using advanced ideas in solid state detectors, he developed a power source that
produced 50,000 watts of a cold form of electricity (link).
Dr. Moray named it Radiant Energy (website).
Immanuel
Velikovsky [77]
Immanuel Velikovsky (1895 June 10 – 1979 November 17) claimed that
Venus only relatively recently arrived in her current orbit. That claim is
correct, though however most of his other claims were false.
Wilhelm
Reich [8]
Wilhelm Reich (1897 March 24
– 1957 November 3) discovered how to concentrate life energy through a mixture
of resin, filings (aluminum and copper), crystals, gemstones, and copper, which
he called “Orgonite”
(based on “Orgone”,
which is one of many names for life energy, like Chi, Ki,
Prana, Vril, Pneuma, and Mana).
Dewey
Larson [6]
Dewey Bernard Larson (1898
November 1 – 1990 May 25) was an American engineer and the originator a
comprehensive theoretical framework (named “the Reciprocal System”), claimed to
be capable of explaining all physical phenomena from subatomic particles to
galactic clusters (link).
Hannes Alfvén [44]
Hannes Olof Gösta Alfvén
(1908 May 30 –1995 April 2) from
Nikolai
Kozyrev [13]
Nikolai Aleksandrovich
Kozyrev [11] (1908 September 2 – 1983 February 27)
was a Russian astronomer and astrophysicist who proved the existence of Torsion
Fields. He also developed a Theory of Time (video), however his concept of “time” is related to the Aether. He also referred to Torsion Fields as “flow of
time”.
Johanna
Budwig [3]
Johanna Budwig
(1908 September 30 – 2003 May 19) conducted groundbreaking research on cell
respiration.
Alan
Watts [3]
Alan Wilson Watts (1915
January 6 – 1973 November 16) made Eastern philosophy comprehensible for the
Western audience.
Samael Aun Weor [13]
Víctor Manuel Gómez Rodríguez [3] (1917 March 6
[9] – 1977 December 24 [6]), born in
Itzhak Bentov [9]
Itzhak “Ben” Bentov (1923 August 9 – 1979 May 25) revealed important
features of consciousness (video;
WARNING:
please ignore the many references to scientism and its priesthood in this
video).
Viktor
Grebennikov [1]
Viktor Stepanovich
Grebennikov (1927 April 23 – 2001 April 10)
discovered the cavity structural effect (link,
link, video).
Hulda
Clark [1]
Hulda Regehr Clark [8] (1928 October 18 – 2009 September 3)
practiced and described a large variety of natural healing methods.
Les
Brown
Les Brown was a leading
researcher of crystals and the power of geometry to affect the physical world.
He wrote a book about the pyramid (pdf), and shared his
understanding of crystals (video). He died in the 1980’s.
Slim
Spurling [7]
Slim Spurling
(1938 July 3 – 2007 November 12) developed harmonizers that emit a pulsing
cosmic light field, which create a positive harmonizing output (link).
Stanley Allen Meyer [8]
(1940 August 24 – 1998 March 20) developed Water Fuel Cell technology (lecture). At the age of only
57 years, he was murdered by poisoning to put his revealing work to a halt.
Bill
Cooper [8]
William Milton Cooper [99]
(1943 May 6 [1] – 2001 November 6 [2]) wrote the book “Behold a Pale Horse” (1991). Shortly after midnight on 2001
November 6, Bill became deadly wounded in a gunfight with local sheriff's
deputies. He died shortly after. Clearly, he was murdered as he was revealing
the truth about the powers that should not be. Click here to watch a lecture
of Bill.
Masaru
Emoto [6]
Masaru Emoto
(1943 July 22 [9] – 2014 October 17 [7]) proved that water has memory. His
website was Masaru-Emoto.net (link).
Candace
Pert [9]
Candace Beebe Pert (1946
June 26 – 2013 September 12) discovered the cellular binding site for
endorphins in the brain.
Lloyd
Pye [6]
Lloyd Anthony Pye [13] (1946 September 7 [7] – 2013 December 9 [9])
proved that human beings are created via genetic engineering (link). Human DNA has more
than 4,000 defects compared with only a few hundred in chimpanzees and
gorillas. Pye’s work shows that there is evidence of
gene segments that have been cut, flipped, and reinserted upside down back into
genome. Chromosomes have also been fused together which is why human beings
appear to have two fewer than ape beings. Such fusions are only seen in
laboratories.
Ian
Lungold [1]
Ian Xel
Lungold [6] was born on 1949 January 26 (12 Ahau). He died at the age of only 56 years on 2005 November
16 (9 Etznab). His life mission was to restore the
authentic Mayan calendar of the Tzol’kin (link).
Paul
Pantone [9]
Paul Pantone (1950 April 8
– 2015 December 14) invented of a self-induced plasma generator named GEET.
This abbreviation stands for “Global Environmental Energy Technology”. Two
months before his death, he was interviewed on Pateo Radio (link).
John
Burke [5]
John A. Burke (1951
November 13 – 2010 February 26) investigated the electromagnetic features of
ancient buildings (video,
book,
article).
Andreas
Moritz [1]
Andreas Moritz (1954
January 27 – 2012 October 21) developed a liver cleansing method (similar to
the one developed by Hulda Clark (see above). He also
wrote the book titled ‘Cancer is not a
Disease – It's a Survival Mechanism’.
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©
December 19, 2013 – Pateo.nl : Wholly Science – Johan Oldenkamp