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Torah and Computer

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Once, there was a time when the world was unacquainted with the numerical signs we use today. One wrote numbers with the signs with which one also wrote words. The Ro­mans still used a limited number of letters, whereby, by combinations of these letters, they wrote­ the numbers. The Greeks still used all the let­ters of the Greek al­pha­bet plus a few dummies to write all the numbers­, as did the Hebrews and probably most ancient peoples.

The values of the letters of the Hebrew and Greek alphabets were­ arranged in such ­a way that all the numbers up to 1000 could be written.

As a result, every word and sentence, and phrase of­ the Hebrew Bible has a numerical value. These so it appears to reflect unambiguously and consistently the deeper meanings and intentions of the text although not everywhere in the ­"Ta­nakh" = "the Old Testament" but fully in the "Torah" = "the five books of Mo­ses". In the Jewish world, the Torah is seen as the representation of the human body to why it is kept in a mantle. And indeed, the straightforward stories can be compared to the immediately recognizable exterior of the human appearance for even the simplest individuals. In contrast, under that "skin", the "deeper reality" represented by the numerical values can be compared to the fact that even the knowledge of what is beneath the skin of the human body is limited for medical doctors. As here, the subcutaneous and not the exterior forms the actual reality of a functioning human body; thus, the often seemingly primitive texts intended for all and the pre-scientific people do not reflect reality. Still, the underlying numerical values and other special text constructions do.

Jakob ben Luria was given the primal keys to the subcutaneous part of the To­rah, and thanks to the possibilities of the contemporary com­pu­­ter tech­nology, further areas can be unlocked with these keys.
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