Page 1 of 1

Nostradamus?

Posted: Mon Mar 03, 2008 7:45 pm
by Gaia
I was just wondering: has anyone heard of Nostradamus? If you have, may you please give me your opinion on him? I've been reading about him lately and was just curious on what other people think of him. Do you think he really is a prophet of some kind and that his prophecies are coming true? Or should I be skeptical?

Posted: Mon Mar 03, 2008 9:09 pm
by Sobek
I like him, the man knew his stuff ;)

Posted: Mon Mar 03, 2008 10:36 pm
by Gaia
Yes, I think so too. :)

Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 2:43 am
by Tymar
I liked what i have read, of Nostradamus, although the interpretations might be a little out now days.. One of the books I read at school in the 1980s explained the end of the world, and hopping for no more school, I sat waiting… .. But as you guess no end of the world.
But even at that time, they said his predictions only went to 80s..

So even though they keep bringing out new books of his interpretations, I don’t feel I have as much faith in them now days, as I use too.

But mind you, I feel he was very talented man in his day.
And I am fascinated by his talent; I still enjoy watching tv documentaries about him.

Re: Nostradamus?

Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 4:49 am
by hedge*
I was just wondering: has anyone heard of Nostradamus? If you have, may you please give me your opinion on him? I've been reading about him lately and was just curious on what other people think of him. Do you think he really is a prophet of some kind and that his prophecies are coming true? Or should I be skeptical?
He definately had something in my opinion - there's no doubt about that.
There are people who think his predictions were very sketchy and vague but my argument for this is that the man was predicting things in years of technological advancement that most visions would have been complete nonsense to him - so he described things as best he could.

If you want to follow (and make sense out of) his prophecies then I suggest you get Nostradamus and His Prophecies by Edgar Leoni. It is by far the best book on this subject that I've read (and I've read quite a few).

It contains all of the Quatrains with a comprehensive translation which the author then compares with events in history.
All done in an unbiased theological way.

Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 12:23 pm
by Mycroft
Not sure if I could say he's genuine or not. Having read some of his prophecies as a random fact, in school, I can say that those are typical futuristic ideas that can be dissected into multiple suppositions. He uses codes, so basically everything can depend on what we want to understand. Basically it's a personal view.

As prophecies sometimes go, when you hear something, you are influenced by it whether or not you believe. There was a popular joke that presented a scientist who presented his house to visitors. Upon seeing the horseshoe hung above the bed, they asked him if he actually believed in the superstition . He answered "Well they said it works for those who don't believe too".

Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 5:10 pm
by Gaia
Do you believe he has talent or a spiritual gift? Maybe even science?

Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2008 3:09 pm
by Mycroft
Talent? Maybe...science, I doubt it. Spiritual gift? Couldn't really say. He had some interesting ideas, that's for sure.

Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 5:47 pm
by Gaia
True, it's just kind of scary that all of them have come true. Although, it is possible that we are interpretting them it into a similar situation.

Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 6:13 pm
by Eretik
Indeed Gaia.Have all of the predictions come true though? When writing is translated through Latin into French then English,as many of Nostradamus' writings have been, it is likely to lose something in interpretation.Similarly to the Bible and the Aramaic /Greek/Latin/English,cross transfer. I am not that well aquainted with Nostradamus' works, though I do remember great fuss over the disaster of Chernobyl,especially as the great man talked often of Wormwood, in predictions [Chernobyl is Russian for Wormwood].I should check him out.

Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2008 12:00 am
by sunstoneleo
I think that most of his predictions are hard to interpret. It's like "Oh, so that's what he meant by that" meaning you don't find out what they were until after they happened. But considering he lived in a time where witches and prophets were not welcome, I can completely understand why he wrote them the way he did.

Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2008 4:59 pm
by Gaia
It's as I said, we can put them into a similar situation. But you do bring up an excellent point, maybe he didn't want them to be read so easily. He's an interesting man, I enjoying learning about him, even if it is possible he isn't what he seems. I don't think anything is 100% what it seems, actually. Kind of like Stonehenge, it's a wonderous thing to learn about, but we're not even sure what it really is.