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Created page with "On kuitenkin niin, kuten Saint Germain kertoo meille tänä päivänä teoksessaan ''Alkemian opintoja'', että "ihmeet" syntyvät universaalien lakien täsmällisellä soveltamisella. Samoin Roger Bacon tarkoitti ennustustensa osoittavan, että lentokoneet ja maagiset laitteet olisivat luonnonlakien soveltamisen tulosta, minkä ihmiset aikanaan ymmärtäisivät."
(Created page with "== Tieteen profeetta ==")
(Created page with "On kuitenkin niin, kuten Saint Germain kertoo meille tänä päivänä teoksessaan ''Alkemian opintoja'', että "ihmeet" syntyvät universaalien lakien täsmällisellä soveltamisella. Samoin Roger Bacon tarkoitti ennustustensa osoittavan, että lentokoneet ja maagiset laitteet olisivat luonnonlakien soveltamisen tulosta, minkä ihmiset aikanaan ymmärtäisivät.")
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[[File:Friar Bacon in His Study (Roger Bacon).jpg|thumb|''“Friar” Bacon in His Study (Roger Bacon)'', Howard Pyle (1903)]]
[[File:Friar Bacon in His Study (Roger Bacon).jpg|thumb|''“Friar” Bacon in His Study (Roger Bacon)'', Howard Pyle (1903)]]


However, just as Saint Germain tells us today in his ''Studies in Alchemy'' that “miracles” are wrought by the precise application of universal laws, so Roger Bacon meant his prophecies to demonstrate that flying machines and magical apparatus were products of the employment of natural law which men would figure out in time.   
On kuitenkin niin, kuten Saint Germain kertoo meille tänä päivänä teoksessaan ''Alkemian opintoja'', että "ihmeet" syntyvät universaalien lakien täsmällisellä soveltamisella. Samoin Roger Bacon tarkoitti ennustustensa osoittavan, että lentokoneet ja maagiset laitteet olisivat luonnonlakien soveltamisen tulosta, minkä ihmiset aikanaan ymmärtäisivät.   


From whence did Bacon believe he derived his amazing awareness? “True knowledge stems not from the authority of others, nor from a blind allegiance to antiquated dogmas,” he said. Two of his biographers write that he believed knowledge “is a highly personal experience—a light that is communicated only to the innermost privacy of the individual through the impartial channels of all knowledge and of all thought.”<ref>Henry Thomas and Dana Lee Thomas, ''Living Biographies of Great Scientists'' (Garden City, N.Y.: Nelson Doubleday, 1941), p. 15.</ref>   
From whence did Bacon believe he derived his amazing awareness? “True knowledge stems not from the authority of others, nor from a blind allegiance to antiquated dogmas,” he said. Two of his biographers write that he believed knowledge “is a highly personal experience—a light that is communicated only to the innermost privacy of the individual through the impartial channels of all knowledge and of all thought.”<ref>Henry Thomas and Dana Lee Thomas, ''Living Biographies of Great Scientists'' (Garden City, N.Y.: Nelson Doubleday, 1941), p. 15.</ref>   
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