Genesis 4:1

Science Rendition

And the dynamic aspect of the ADM-ic mind and consciousness conjugates with the elemental conceiver of life, its creative mentative power, and she conceives and gives birth to a mighty transformative power of the mind that centralizes, appropriates and assimilates all to itself; and she says, I have formed by a centralizing action a rational faculty of the same nature as the eternal living essence.

KJV: And Adam knew Eve his wife; and she conceived, and bare Cain, and said, I have gotten a man from the LORD.

Key Words: HADM HWH ASHH QYN KNYTHY AYSH YHWH


Q-Y-N – ‘strong desire that draws all to itself; compressive and centralizing power’

The root of the name Kain, is קן, which is composed of the eminently compressive and trenchant sign ק, and that of produced being ן. It develops the idea of strongest compression and of most centralized existence. In the proper name under consideration, it is presented animated by the sign of manifested power: thus קין, can can signify the strong, the powerful, the rigid, the vehement, and also the central, that which serves as basis, rule, measure; that which agglomerates, appropriates, seizes, comprehends, assimilates with itself. It is in this last sense that Moses appears to have represented it in the verb which follows. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 122-123)

For this is the progression of the signs: ה, universal life; ח, elementary existence, the effort of nature; כ, assimilated life holding the natural forms; ק, material existence giving the means of forms. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 98)

The main root of Kain is קן, to which is added the sign of power. The root has the idea of a covetous, desiring force that seeks to draw all to itself, to compress (render material).

It contains the central force, profound basis, rule and measure of things; also the faculty which seizes, usurps, agglomerates, appropriates and assimilates with itself. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 442)

It makes sense that the first conception of the intellect is the power to materialize all thoughts into a thought-form that can be grasped and communicated, the basis for self-consciousness. This centralizing power is derived from and in the image of God Himself.

K-N-Y-TH-Y – ‘to forge, form by centripetal force’

This is the verb קנוה … by which Moses explains the name of Kain… The Arabic words…which have the same root, signify to forge, to agglomerate, to equalize, to form… in a multitude of tongues, the idea of power and of royalty has come from the root Kan, Kin, or Kain. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 123)

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:20

Science Rendition

And the dynamic aspect of the ADM-ic mind re-names the rational creative power, elementary existence, because she is the mother of all that constitutes existence for the mind in the new state of the awareness and processing of sensory experience.

KJV: And Adam called his wife’s name Eve; because she was the mother of all living.

Key Words: HADM ASHH HWH


H-W-H – ‘elemental existence’

Here is a name where the changing of the vowel into consonant has caused a strange metamorphosis. This name which, according to the allusion that Moses makes, ought to signify, and signify effectively, elementary existence, being derived from the absolute verb הוה, to be-being, by the sole reinforcement of the initial vowel ה into ח, has come to designate no more than a formless heap of matter, its aggregation, its mass; and by the hardening of the convertible sign sanctioned by the Chaldaic punctuation, serves as verb only to indicate the inert and passive existence of things. The change brought about in the derivative verb הוה, has been even more terrible in the absolute verb הוח; for this verb, destined to represent the Immutable Being, expresses only an endless calamity, as I have explained in speaking of the Sacred Name יהוה, in v. 4 ch. II. As to the reasons for the alterations undergone by this proper noun I can only refer the reader to the name of the volitive faculty, אשה which, as we have seen, had preceded that of elementary existence חיה. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 117-118)