Jung Latin Inscription Peculiarities
-
In short, Jung built this stone house with a tower that he called The Tower right on the edge where the forest meets the lake. A: Awesome, right? B: He did a lot of introspection and art there, including The Tower itself, you could say.
In a large stone on the side edge of an entrance is chiseled in Latin "VOCATVS ATQUE NON VOCATUS DEUS ADERIT."
It means "called or not called (the) god will be there."
It's a quote from something ancient and Greek. (Don't make me look it up again.)
The curious thing is the spacing of the letters. I can't help but wonder if he himself pondered the number symbolism of the symmetry.
It's written in five lines without regard to the usual word separations.
VOCATU
SATQUEN
ONVOCA
TUSDEUS
ADERITNotice it is a block of 5 lines. In each line, the number of letters varies symmetrically:
6
7
6
7
6 -
In short, Jung built this stone house with a tower that he called The Tower right on the edge where the forest meets the lake. A: Awesome, right? B: He did a lot of introspection and art there, including The Tower itself, you could say.
In a large stone on the side edge of an entrance is chiseled in Latin "VOCATVS ATQUE NON VOCATUS DEUS ADERIT."
It means "called or not called (the) god will be there."
It's a quote from something ancient and Greek. (Don't make me look it up again.)
The curious thing is the spacing of the letters. I can't help but wonder if he himself pondered the number symbolism of the symmetry.
It's written in five lines without regard to the usual word separations.
VOCATU
SATQUEN
ONVOCA
TUSDEUS
ADERITNotice it is a block of 5 lines. In each line, the number of letters varies symmetrically:
6
7
6
7
6 -
In short, Jung built this stone house with a tower that he called The Tower right on the edge where the forest meets the lake. A: Awesome, right? B: He did a lot of introspection and art there, including The Tower itself, you could say.
In a large stone on the side edge of an entrance is chiseled in Latin "VOCATVS ATQUE NON VOCATUS DEUS ADERIT."
It means "called or not called (the) god will be there."
It's a quote from something ancient and Greek. (Don't make me look it up again.)
The curious thing is the spacing of the letters. I can't help but wonder if he himself pondered the number symbolism of the symmetry.
It's written in five lines without regard to the usual word separations.
VOCATU
SATQUEN
ONVOCA
TUSDEUS
ADERITNotice it is a block of 5 lines. In each line, the number of letters varies symmetrically:
6
7
6
7
6FWIW, by Latin Qabalah Simplex:
VOCATVS = 90
ATQUE = 58
NON = 37
VOCATVS = 90
DEUS = 45
ADERIT = 53Total = 373, a prime number of some distinction in the nature of God
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Register Login