911:Occult symbolism VI

From Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search

Site menu:


Circles

Circle


  • Circle automaker logo's:

Intertwined circles

2 intertwined circles




Vesica piscis

  • Various notes:
    • The shape which is the intersection two circles of the same radius, intersecting in such a way that the center of each circle lies on the circumference of the other. The name literally means the bladder of the fish in Latin. The shape is also called mandorla ("almond" in Italian).
    • Vesica Piscis is a step to building the Seed of Life
    • Also represents a woman’s vagina
    • video:Sacred Geometry 101B: The Vesica Piscis

Infinity

  • Various notes:
    • In occult circles, the number 8 is the symbol for immortality.
    • Introduced to mathematics by John Wallis (1616-1703), an English mathematician who is given partial credit for the development of modern calculus.
  • Infinity symbol basic:


  • Infinity as a logo:


  • Infinity used as a word:

3 intertwined circles

4 intertwined circles

5 intertwined circles

6 or more intertwined circles

Energy spiral

Historical:

  • Modern culture spirals (exluding company logo's):
  • Company logo's:

Wheel

  • A universal symbol of cosmic unity, astrology, "the circle of life," evolution, etc. The pagan sacred circle plus any number of radiating spokes or petals form the wheel - a Wheel of Life to Buddhists, a Medicine Wheel to Native Americans, a Mandala to Hindus. It symbolizes unity, movement, the sun, the zodiac, reincarnation, and earth's cycles of renewal. Pagans use it in astrology, magic, and many kinds of rituals. [20]
  • Also see:

Hecate’s wheel

  • The Strophalos, or Hecate’s wheel is an ancient Greek symbol, and is an emblem of the initiatory lunar Goddess Hecate (Diana Lucifera), and her triple aspect. Only one ancient source remains to shed any light on the emblem’s meaning. The second century Alexandrian text known as the “Chaldean oracle” describes the emblem as a labyrinthine serpent (emblematic of rebirth) surrounding a spiral, symbolic of the Iynges- “whirlings” or emanations of divine thought. Today, it is generally used by practitioners of Hellenic Recon or Dianic Traditions of Wicca as an emblem of religious identification. Other emblems of Hecate include torches, dogs (generally female), keys, serpents, and of course, the crossroads. [21]
  • Hecate is one of the most important figures in the so-called Chaldaean Oracles (2nd-3rd century CE)[29], where she is associated in fragment 194 with a strophalos (usually translated as a spinning top, or wheel, used in magic) "Labour thou around the Strophalos of Hecate."[30] This appears to refer to a variant of the device mentioned by Psellus. (wikipedia)
  • Strophalos of Hecate (Hecate's Wheel)

Circled dot

  • Various notes
    • The Masons of the Blue Lodge are taught that the Point within a Circle represents the individual Mason (the Point), contained and restricted by the boundary line of his duty (the Circle). Its real meaning, however, is that of the phallus, positioned within the female generative principle (sex organ), the climactic act of Sun-god worship. Dr. Albert Mackey, already quoted herein, also writes in his classic work "Symbolism of Freemasonry," page 352, "Phallus, a representation of the virile member which was venerated as a religious symbol… It was one of the modifications of sun worship, and was a symbol of the fecundating power of that luminary. The Masonic point within a circle is undoubtedly of phallic origin."
    • "Point Within A Circle", another commonly used symbol in Black Magick; in fact, it is so commonly used, Adam Weishaupt -- the founder of the Masters of the Illuminati -- adopted it as one symbols of the Illuminati. Because of the inherent secrecy of the Illuminati, Weishaupt insisted that individual members identify themselves only with "the astrological symbol for the sun, a circle with a dot in the middle." [Legenda, 32 Degree, Hermes, p. 109; also quoted in Burns, "Masonic and Occult Symbols Illustrated", p. 29; also quoted by Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma, p. 503.][22]
    • The "Point Within A Circle" is so beloved by the Illuminati because it symbolizes both Sun Worship [J.S.M. Ward, "Genuine Secrets In Freemasonry Prior To 1717", p. 256] and the sex act, with the circle representing the female and the dot in the middle representing the "erect" phallus [Masonic Short Talk Bulletin, "Point Within A Circle", to be read in Lodge meetings].[23]
  • Since the Satanist worships the Sex Act, he must have a symbol of the female organ, to go along with the male organ -- the Obelisk. And, indeed, Satanists do have a symbol of the female organ -- the Circle. And, when a point is added to the middle of the circle, you have the complete sex act, the male being the point and the female being the circle ["Point Within A Circle", Masonic Short Talk Bulletin, August, 1931, Vol. 9, No. 8, Reprinted July, 1990, p. 4.]
    • Albert Mackey, a 33 Degree Mason, describe this Satanic belief: "The point within the circle is an interesting and important symbol in Freemasonry ... The symbol is really a beautiful but somewhat abstruse allusion to the old Sun-Worship, and introduces us for the first time to that modification of it, known among the ancients as the worship of the Phallus." [Short Talk Bulletin, February, 1936; Vol. 14, No. 2, Reprinted July, 1980, p. 7]. Mackey tells us that this point within a circle is really the old Sun Worship which Masons have copied the Ancient Mysteries Religions to modify it as a phallus symbol.[24]
  • See Also: Bindu (dot) represents the male force. Together, the circle and the bindu symbolize the merging of male and female forces.[25]
  • This is also the symbol for gold in Alchemy
  • This is the symbol of the sun in Astrology

Circled dot symbolism in non-logo's

Circled dot symbolism in logo's