A Fire Not Blown
Author: Alfred de Grazia
Year: c. 1984
Series: Quantavolution & Catastrophe
Local Files
| File | Type | Words | Size |
|---|---|---|---|
../fire_not_blown.txt | Plain text | ~42,900 | 240 KB |
Source: https://grazian-archive.com/quantavolution/QuantaHTML/plaintext/fire_not_blown.txt
Subtitle
Investigations of Sacral Electrical Roots in Ancient Languages of the Mediterranean Region
Synopsis
A Fire Not Blown investigates the linguistic and etymological roots of ancient Mediterranean languages as evidence for an era of ubiquitous electrical and plasma phenomena in the sky. The title alludes to the ancient description of a sacred fire that burns without being blown — interpreted as a plasma discharge or sustained electrical arc in the primordial atmosphere.
De Grazia traces roots across Greek, Latin, Hebrew, Egyptian, and other languages to identify a shared archaic vocabulary of electrical, luminous, and violent celestial events. The book argues that ancient sacred language is not metaphorical but descriptive — that "fire," "lightning," "serpent," "bull," and other stock symbols in myth encode direct observation of plasma events.
This is the most linguistically focused volume in the Quantavolution series, complementing Livio Stecchini's and H. Crosthwaite's work on archaic metrology and sacred number.
Key Themes
- Etymology of fire, lightning, and plasma across ancient Mediterranean languages
- Sacral vocabulary as encoded collective memory of catastrophic sky events
- Parallels between ancient sacred language and plasma physics terminology
- The electrical hypothesis for the origin of mythological symbolism
- Cross-cultural linguistic convergence as evidence for shared catastrophic experience
See Also
- Author Index
- KA — companion linguistic study by H. Crosthwaite
- Chaos and Creation — foundational catastrophist framework
