The Bible Code

by Michael Drosnin

Hardcover, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

221.68 DRO

Publication

Simon & Schuster (1997), Hardcover, 272 pages

Description

The original THE BIBLE CODE - a phenomenal bestseller across the world For 3000 years a code in the Bible has remained hidden. Now it has been unlocked by computer - and it may reveal our future. The code, broken by an Israeli mathematician, foretells events that happened thousands of years after the Bible was written. It foresaw both Kennedy assassinations, the Oklahoma bombing - everything from World War II to Watergate, from the Holocaust to the Moon landing. Published to a frenzy of media attention, THE BIBLE CODE became a Number One bestseller.

Media reviews

knjigainfo.com
Ova knjiga vam otkriva kod skriven u Bibliji, u Danilovm proročanstvu, poruku koju su naučnici poput Njutna i Lajbnica pokušavali da otkriju, a dešifrovana je tek u moderno doba uz pomoć računara. Novinar, autor ove knjige, isprva je sumnjao u ovu formulu, ali su ga predviđeni događaji
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uverili u njenu istinitost. U dodatku knjige je i matematička formula koju su egzaktno proverili matematički stručnjaci, formula koja je otvorila vrata univerzalnom proročanstvu skrivenom u Bibliji.
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Barcode

2248

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member DubiousDisciple
You knew I’d get to this book eventually, right? Well, I’m here to tell you it’s absolutely brilliant. Drosnin is my idol. With a savvy grasp of human nature, a little computer programming, and a mathematician’s insight into probabilities, he put together a best seller.

The book’s premise
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is that the Bible contains a secret code, and that he has cracked the code to reveal its hidden messages. Simply start at any letter in the Bible, skip ahead a fixed number of letters to the next, and continue until it spells out … well, whatever you like. Start with the first T in Genesis, skip 49 letters to an O, skip 49 more to an R, 49 more to H. Lo and behold, you’ve spelled TORH, the Hebrew word for the first five books of the Bible. Miraculous, isn’t it?

No, it’s neither miraculous nor unexpected. As Keith Devlin demonstrated about a year after The Bible Code hit the bookstores, the word TORH appears 56,768 more times in the software, searching just the book of Genesis alone. TORH appeared in an issue of the Wall Street Journal 15,000 times. But might there be more impressive words than TORH? Yes, several! The first encoded phrase the book mentions is “Yitzhak Rabin,” which he uncovers in Deuteronomy. Drosnin carefully lays out his analysis in matrix form so that it looks like a word find puzzle, and crossing Yitzhak Rabin is the phrase “Assassin that will assassinate.” Need more evidence? The phrase “Rabin assassination” crosses “Tel Aviv” in the book of Exodus. Yep, that’s where Amir assassinated Rabin. Oh, the name “Amir” appears in the book of Numbers.

A code of equidistant letters buried within the Bible is not a new idea. See Wikipedia for a full discussion. But with a little computer programming, Drosnin pushes it to the limit. He uncovers prophecies about Watergate, Hitler, Shakespeare’s writings, Edison’s inventions, the holocaust, Roosevelt, Kennedy, communism, Armageddon, and, amazingly, the promise of a future book named “Bible Code.”

It all sounds convincing, until a little experimentation verifies the same probabilistic expectations in other works of literature. Moby Dick revealed much of the same prophecies and many more. So, mathematicians turned back to the Bible to see what else they could learn by the using the software. Several more startling prophecies surfaced: “Code is bunk.” “Drosnin Fraud.” “Darwin was right.” Sigh.

Please don’t read the book, but do gain inspiration from the genius of Drosnin. Millions of dollars are waiting for the next great sham.
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LibraryThing member perrigoue
What can I say? This was the book that got me interested in the Bible. I read the whole thing with my wife (then girlfriend) over a couple evenings in Barnes & Noble.
LibraryThing member tuckerresearch
Intriguing, but a bit nutty. Drosnin lets his biases show in later works.
LibraryThing member CurioCollective
Fascinating..insightful...but like most modern day theories, it must be taken with a grain of salt. Skeptical or not, it's still interesting enough to hold your attention for a bit..until it gets bogged down and too wordy. Not bad. Considering reading the second volume, as this one is about 13
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years outdated.
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LibraryThing member Farree
Heh, When was the first time I saw something like Drosnin's theory? Ignatius Donnelly, 'The Great Cryptogram." Where Donnelly tries to prove that Sir Francis Bacon wrote Shakespeare's works (in the 1880s) and finds all kinds of 'secret' messages. Of course, there is also Moby Dick, where modern
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mathematicians uncovered even *more* prophetic 'crosswords.' I'm not saying don't read the book, because Drosnin is a decent writer and will hold your attention. It reads, in places, almost like a thriller. plus, it might get some people to learn how to read Hebrew (which is not a bad thing!) Enjoy. But -
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ISBN

0684810794 / 9780684810799
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