This entry really exists so I don't explode the size of other entries with repeated examples of debates. I think it's interesting to look at, but I'm probably biased.
When in the pursuit of knowledge, agreement is evidence (sorta) and disagreement is information. In the spirit of this idea, my language modeling efforts have debate and solo analysis modes—let's talk about why.
Words like hanging around their word friends when they're about the same thing. Some words wear multiple hats and hang out with different crowds—maybe they're spies? Word-artifacts are fractals mapping to the narratives of human life. Anyway, this is about clustering.
Dee & Kelley: “Here's 1,500 words of God-given celestial speech.” Me: “That's not enough to do anything with, we need more words!” In a nutshell, spelling spaghetti → substitution map → slightly less OHIO.
These are really, really hard to find on the Internet for some reason. For your convenience, I have decided to provide the Enochian Keys and their translations in this entry.
In order to understand Enochiana, it is worth your while to understand the context in which it arose. This is a fairly short entry on 16th century Britain—which is not a special interest of mine so I've spent less time with it directly.
There's a lot of pieces to Enochiana. I think I did a decent enough job giving a refresher about what Enochiana is, what it entails, and the context it sits in. Even if you're not familiar, it's worth a read because it lays out the main, relevant pieces.
If you were curious about the Enochian language, but wanted to digest it in a less technical way, this is not a bad place to start. Like I say in the beginning: the goal is to approach it from the perspective of curiosity and mystery.
One day I thought to myself, "Liber Loagaeth is a lot of maybe-words and it hasn't been decoded in any real capacity. What if, perchance, I threw AI at it??" This entry is an organized directory of my thoughts, records, experiments, and general misadventures in using AI to out what looks like neatly organized alphabet soup.
Okay, so hear me out here: I wrote an Excel spreadsheet that draws what are only partially random words from the Enochian Keys for the composition of a ritual, where the words both describe the outcome of the ritual and how to perform it. Curious? Take a look.
I like making music and I have been low-key obsessed with the Enochian language for a while. I normally have a hard time coming up with lyrics for songs, so I thought to myself, why not use Enochian passages I wrote for a ritual in lieu of writing something normal? And here we are—a whole, great project.