The Book By Simon Miles Is Meaningless

Paul Smith

16 April 2025

Someone has got to put a critical word in about the crazy “Sacred Geometry” of Rennes-le-Château and the fake “parchments” of Philippe de Chérisey, and the nutty identification of the “Poussin Tomb” with the Les Pontils Tomb.

Someone has to say that the book by Simon Miles is totally meaningless and is beyond being provable, just as are the books about “Sacred Landscape Geometry” by David Wood, Henry Lincoln, Ron Weighell and other English writers, as well as the books by French authors – every one of those books lie beyond the means of provability simply because they all reflect the writers own personal impressions rather than what can be objectively proved and verified. There is no historical evidence to prove any of it – except wishful thinking. It all boils down to nothing more than the existence of scribbles on maps and parchments.

There is no difference between what has been referred to here than the Monas Hieroglyphica (1564) of John Dee (1527-1608/1609), who described everyone as being “profane” who did not understand his thinking. Needless to say, John Dee disappeared from the British Radar following the death of Elizabeth I in 1603 (even though the succeeding Monarch was a closet Roman Catholic).

Abbé Boudet was only one author who fantasised about the Original Language. Umberto Eco wrote a book about it.

It has to be concluded again: “Everybody has the perfect right to believe in anything they want, however illogical.”




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