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/sci/ - Science & Math


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1975757 No.1975757 [Reply] [Original]

What's the illuminati?

>> No.1975765

http://lmgtfy.com/?q=illuminati

>> No.1975775

>>1975765
>he still uses Google

>> No.1975776

>>1975765

That's too much words. I need a simple explanation. Why do you think I came here instead of googling nonsense wikipedia shit?

>> No.1975779

>>1975775
what?
Do you use Yahoo or something?

>> No.1975781

illuminati = bs

>> No.1975783
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1975783

>>1975779
>he still thinks Yahoo! is an alternative

>> No.1975787

>>1975757
An old atheist terrorist militia (Galileo was one of them), didn't last very long, didn't do much either.

>> No.1975788
File: 31 KB, 400x675, 1254853460202.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1975788

http://itanimulli.com

>> No.1975791

Satanist cult, wants to control every aspect of your life. Do more research yourself cause I cannot explain it all in the text box given.

>> No.1975792

I never did quite understood this conspiracy notion that "the signs are everywhere" or something. I mean, if you were a top secret organization with lots of influence, why the fuck would you go through all the trouble to leave hidden signs all over the place pointing back to you? Someone's bound to notice and figure them all out sooner or later, and then blow your entire cover.

>> No.1975810

>>1975792

Hiding something in plain sight is sometimes the best place to put it. Ex: I decided to test how unobservant my roommates are, so I moved our car keys from the key rack onto the dining room table (which is right next to the key rack) and it took all of them at least 10 mins to find the keys. Back on topic, it is possible the Illuminati did this to make people think what you did, to then dismiss all their markings as nothing but coincidence or conspiracy theory nonsense.

>> No.1975812
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1975812

"It's not the most obvious answer"

>> No.1975831

>>1975787
>retard who thinks dan brown is non-fiction.

>> No.1975838

>>1975831
What does Dan Brown have to do with anything?

>> No.1975849

>>1975787
>atheist terrorist militia
>terrorist militia
>implying atheists can be either

>> No.1976427

>>1975849
>implying you know what terrorist or militia means

>> No.1976438

>>1975838
because only in his book is the intelligence an atheist militia. And Galileo was obviously not an atheist, as it was his biblical interpretations and theology that he mixed in with his heliocentrism that ultimately got him in trouble.

>> No.1976557

the illuminati is not an organization so much as an idea revived throughout time. the idea of absolutely centralized power.

the worlds pretty whack at the moment, has been for a while (the history we're taught would place the two most relevant paradigm shifts at the Renaisance and then post-WWII period, for whatever that's worth. but the shallowest examination reveals much of the world to surely be illusion). it's about to implode again to make way for a great expansion into the cosmos. and once we're in the void the stars will be revealed as the only real illumination (as it has always been).

>> No.1976587

Bavarian Illuminati, an Enlightenment-era secret society founded on May 1, 1776.

The movement was founded on May 1, 1776, in Ingolstadt (Upper Bavaria), by Jesuit-taught Adam Weishaupt (d. 1830), who was the first lay professor of canon law at the University of Ingolstadt. The movement was made up of freethinkers, as an offshoot of the Enlightenment, and seems to have been modeled on the Freemasons. Some observers at the time, such as Seth Payson, believed the movement represented a conspiracy to infiltrate and overthrow the governments of European states. Some writers, such as Augustin Barruel and John Robison, even claimed that the Illuminati were behind the French Revolution.

During the period when the Illuminati were legally allowed to operate, many influential intellectuals and progressive politicians counted themselves as members, including Ferdinand of Brunswick and the diplomat Xavier von Zwack, who was number two in the operation and was found with much of the group's documentation when his home was searched. The Illuminati's members pledged obedience to their superiors, and were divided into three main classes, each with several degrees. The order had its branches in most countries of the European continent; it reportedly had around 2,000 members over the span of ten years. The organization had its attraction for literary men, such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Johann Gottfried Herder, and even for the reigning dukes of Gotha and Weimar. Weishaupt had modeled his group to some extent on Freemasonry, and many Illuminati chapters drew membership from existing Masonic lodges. Internal rupture and panic over succession preceded its downfall, which was effected by the Secular Edict made by the Bavarian government in 1785.

>> No.1976596
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1976596

>>1975757