The Secret Cipher of the UFOnauts
Secret Cipher of the UFOnauts, a book published in 1994 and written by occultist and ufologist Allen H. Greenfield seeks to help elucidate the nature of the mysterious Aiwass that dictated Liber AL to Crowley, and the myriad entities encountered by UFO contactees in the 20th and 21st century. His theory was that ultraterrestrials - a term used by researcher and author John Keel used to describe the beings - transmitted information to humans in a secret, enciphered format, in the guise of enlightened messages. These entities often used authors to produce voluminous works, such as Jane Roberts' “Seth” and the “Ephraim” that communicated with poet James Merrill during his writing of The Changing Light at Sandover. In particular, Greenfield conjectures that Liber AL was the ultimate key to this secret cipher utilized by the ultraterrestrials.
Greenfield believed that by utilizing the ALW cipher/New Aeon English Qabalah (or NAEQ for short) you could take the names of these entities, or information they provided and compare their cipher value using the values of phrases or words from Liber AL as a key. By analyzing words or phrases in Liber AL that had the same values, one could arrive at further insight, or obtain major revelations about the nature of these entities or their motivations.
As an example of this analysis, here's a few quotes from Secret Cipher of the UFOnauts:
ASHTAR = 47 = STARS in Liber AL repeated many times, but also FLAP, a word which came to mean “UFO wave” in military and UFOlogy circles.
Recall that contactee George Adamski’s contacts included the Jesus-like ORTHON. ORTHON = 68 = JESUS, but also CHOSEN and LIFE.
The ill-fated Hunrath and Wilkinsin, or FIRKON and RAMU, are also of interest. FIRKON = 83 = MY STARS, MY FLAP and, interestingly, AMONG GODS. RAMU = 51 = SINK and SORROWS and A LIE. It is of interest that the space names given Hunrath and Wilkinsin suggest their apparently unhappy future; to create a UFO furor or flap by chasing flying saucers in a rented plane into the desert, perhaps abducted and coming to grief for having believed a lie. Perhaps they are among the gods indeed, but not via a spaceship headed for Mars. Perhaps, instead, they were food for the gods.
Those interested in this application are highly encouraged to purchase and read Greenfield's fascinating book and its followup Secret Rituals of the Men In Black to gain further insight into how he uses the NAEQ to further examine UFO phenomena and instances of ultraterrestrial communication.
Gematria and Qabalah
Hermetic Qabalah is a derivative of a school of Jewish mysticism called Kabbalah that was developed by modern Western esotericists as a way to explore the divine and the nature of the universe. One aspect of Qabalah is Gematria, a mystical interpretation of a holy text using specific mathematical laws. A Gematria is a system used to assign a numeric value for each letter of a word, which is then summed. This sum can be referred to as the “key” of that word, or phrase. Words and phrases that have the same numeric value are thought to have similar properties and can be used to meditate on hidden meanings or relationships contained within those similarities.
The Book of the Law
The Book of the Law — or Liber AL vel Legis — (enumerated as Liber CCXX) is the central holy text of Thelema, a spiritual and social philosophy derived from Western esotericism and founded by magician Aleister Crowley. Liber AL vel Legis was dictated to Crowley over the course of three days in 1904 by a discarnate entity called Aiwass.
The New Aeon English Qabalah
Since Hebrew Gematria uses the Hebrew script to derive values, it does not neccessarily apply as well to English or Roman scripts and thus efforts have been made over the years to develop an “English Qabalah” that could be utilized with texts in those languages.
In Chapter II verse 55 of Liber AL vel Legis, Crowley writes: “Thou shalt obtain the order & value of the English Alphabet, thou shalt find new symbols to attribute them unto”. When analyzing this information later, Crowley realized that this implied there was a cipher contained within Liber AL that had yet to be discovered or developed. Later on, in Chapter III sheet 16 of the original documents, there is a unique page that contains a grid of numbers, a slash through it, and a circle within a cross.
This page in particular is where the ALW cipher, or New Aeon English Qabalah, is derived. James Lees discovered in 1976 that this key was based on the magical number 11. By taking every eleventh letter of the alphabet as the order, and then assigning them sequential values you are able to arrive at this cipher:
A=1 L=2 W=3 H=4 S=5 D=6 O=7 Z=8 K=9 V=10 G=11 R=12 C=13 N=14 Y=15 J=16 U=17 F=18 Q=19 B=20 M=21 X=22 I=23 T=24 E=25 P=26
Further proof of the validity of this cipher is obtained through the odd passage in Chapter II verse 76:
4 6 3 8 A B K 2 4 A L G M O R 3 Y X 24 89 R P S T O V A L. What meaneth this, o prophet? Thou knowest not; nor shalt thou know ever. There cometh one to follow thee: he shall expound it.
Calculating the ALW cipher values above for the line 4 6 3 8 A B K 2 4 A L G M O R 3 Y X 24 89 R P S T O V A L
(adding the numbers as they are) you arrive at the total 351. You can also arrive at the total 351 by adding A + B + C + D + E + F + G + H + I + J + K + L + M + N + O + P + Q + R + S + T + U + V + W + X + Y + Z
, or the value of the English alphabet.
In addition, Jake Stratton-Kent noticed that the separation of the passage into two lines seemed intentional, and the X as the first character of the second line brought to mind a multiplication symbol. Sure enough, multiplying the number of words on the first line (17) by the number of words on the second (11) equals 187. 187 is also the numerical value of "ENGLISH ALPHABET"
in the ALW cipher.
How to Use This Tool
Type a word or phrase into the search bar. The ALW cipher value will automatically be calculated and a list of letters, words and phrases (of up to 16 words) from Liber AL of equal value will be shown.
How you interpret this data is up to you. We have found insight stringing together multiple phrases or words with the same value that fit grammatically into something resembling cut-up method poetry, as well as picking out phrases that resonated with the name or phrase we were analyzing. Results are open to interpretation and a bit of psychic intuition plays part. Use your imagination.
Do not read deeply into the order of the results displayed. Individual matches are not neccessarily meant to be interpreted as one string of text; indeed, results will often make little grammatical sense, though occasional happy accidents occur.
Notes on Changes to the Text
In order to generate the substrings from Liber AL for the database, several changes needed to be made to the source text to facilitate analysis.
The full text of Liber AL vel Legis along with scans of the original handwritten pages can be found at the OTO USA Library.
The following alterations were made to process the text for analysis:
- Removed verse numbers and chapter titles.
- Replaced all punctuation and symbols, save ampersands and apostrophes. Since Crowley deliberately uses both “and” as well as ampersands, we took this to mean that ampersands are meant to be interpreted as a symbol with 0 value and have been added to the cipher text parsing as such.
- Preserved any hyphenated words so that they are summed as one word.
- Preserved any numbers that are listed as numerals and not spelled out. Because of the encrypted proof discussed above, it would seem their value should be calculated as the numerals themselves. For example, 418 should be seen as that number and added to the total of a phrase, rather than analyzed as “four hundred eighteen”.
- Removed “The Comment” from analysis consideration. The text is as follows:
The Comment
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.
All questions of the Law are to be decided only by appeal to my writings, each for himself.
There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt.
Love is the law, love under will.
The priest of the princes, Ankh-f-n-khonsu
Addditional Texts
Beyond the text of the Book of the Law (listed here as Liber CCXX), this search optionally includes all of the other A∴A∴ Class A texts as well as Liber 49 (listed as Liber XLIX) by Jack Parsons to the search results, plus optionally a collection of various interesting fortian phrases which can help in comparing the results generated by various Fortian phenomena.
Later addition by Luís Gonçalves (@Alektryon):
A "Typhonian" category, under which can be found the received texts "Liber Pennae Praenumbra" (by Soror Nema / Andahadna) and "Wisdom of S'lba" (by Kenneth Grant).
Addtional Ciphers
Beyond parsing the New Aeon English Qabalah cipher values, this version of this tool has been expanded to also include a limited selection of additional Latan characters in order to parse some of the characters found in certain included A∴A∴ Class A texts. These have been matched as closely as possible to their relevant English cipher values. (For example, Ā is set to the value of 1, the same as the English letter A.) In the case of hybrid Latin characters, they have been calculated based on the addition of their base English caracters. (For example for the hybrid character Æ, it's value has been set to 26, the same as A + E or 1 + 25.) Additionally the full Hebrew Gematria and Greek Isopsephy ciphers have also been added to the search algorithm using Unicode character sets as these characters also appear in the A∴A∴ Class A texts. The search does not parse Hebrew vowel values or Greek characters with accent marks beyond tonos as they do not appear in the A∴A∴ Class A texts.
Who is Responsible
This tool was built by Wren Collier and Alynne Keith, and is made available for review on GitHub.
An expansion of the database was implemented by Luís Gonçalves, and the respective repository can be found here.
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