Hypatia
Hypatia the Immortal, who sat in the chair of philosophy occupied by her father Theon the mathematician, was for many years the central figure in the Alexandrian school of Neo-Platonism.
The charm of her character, beloved by the citizens of Alexandria, and frequently consulted by the rulers of that city, distinguishes this noble woman from all.
Hapitaya was recorded in the pages of history as the greatest pagan martyrs.
Hypatia, a personal pupil of the magician Plutarch, and well versed in the depths of the Platonic school, excels in argument and public estimation every supporter of Christian doctrines in northern Egypt. While its writings perished at the time of the burning of the Library of Alexandria by the Jesuits and Mohammedans, some hints as to its nature can be gleaned from the statements of contemporary authors. Hypatia evidently wrote a commentary on Diophantus' Arithmetic, another on Ptolemy's Astronomical Law, and a third on Apollonius' Conics.
Synesius, Bishop of Ptolemy, and her loyal friend, wrote to Hypatia asking for help in building the astrolabe and hydroscope. Realizing the superiority of her intelligence, learned people from many countries flocked to the academy where she lectured.
A number of writers have credited Hypatia's teachings with being kimite of the spirit. In fact, she removed the veil of mystery with which the new sect had covered itself, and spoke so clearly of its more complex principles that many recent converts to the Christian faith deserted her to become her disciples. Hypatia not only conclusively proved the pagan origin of Christian doctrine, but also exposed the alleged miracles that Christians presented as symbols of divine favor by demonstrating the natural laws controlling phenomena.
At that time, Cyril - the bishop of Alexandria who later became famous as the founder of the Christian doctrine of the Trinity and was beatified for his zeal - was in power. When Cyril saw in Hypatia the continuing threat to the spread of the Christian faith, he was the cause of her tragic end - at least indirectly. Despite all subsequent efforts to exonerate him from the stigma of her murder, the indisputable fact remains that he made no effort to avert the heinous and brutal crime. The only excuse that can be offered in his defense is that Cyril, blinded by the magic of fanaticism, considered Hypatia a witch in league with the devil. In contrast to the general excellence of Charles Kingsley's literary works is perhaps noted his boyish portrayal of the character Hypatia in his book of that name. Without exception, the scant historical references to this virgin philosopher attest to her virtue, integrity, and absolute devotion to the principles of right and right.
While it is true that the best Christian minds of the period could easily be acquitted of charges of criminal complicity, Cyril's implacable hatred undoubtedly passed on to the more fanatical members of his faith, and especially to a group of monks from the church. Nitrian Desert (currently Wadi Natrun). Led by Peter the Reader, a wild and illiterate man, they attacked Hypatia in the open street as she passed from the Academy (the Library of Alexandria) to her home. They pulled the defenseless woman from her carriage and took her to the Tsarist Church. They tore her clothes and bludgeoned her to death, after which they scraped the flesh from her bones with oyster shells and carried the mutilated remains to a place called Cendron, where they burned them to ashes.
Thus the greatest woman in the ancient world perished in 415 AD, and with her the Neo-Platonist school of Alexandria fell. Hypatia may have been commemorated in the cult of the Roman Catholic Church in the person of Saint Hypatia.
Catherine of Alexandria.
The pagans are no different from the monotheists in killing their distinguished scholars, and this is the biggest reason for withholding knowledge and not disclosing it for fear of abuse and persecution. Freedom on planet Earth is exercised in complete secrecy because it is forbidden and not granted. Only a few thousand people enjoy it. The rest are workers and slaves whose fate is much worse than the fate of the loyal Habitaya, as her mind cannot accept the realization that the loyal people are hated with the utmost hatred.
Raya and Sakina did the same thing and were accused of killing women for gold, but they were from secret pockets of resistance to the British. They buried many of them in the basement of their house. They were the first females in Egypt to be executed among Egyptians who believed they were criminals. This is the fate of everyone who has a cause that he fights for. He will perish, and his cause will continue to circulate between generations as a curse that develops faster than the evolution of humans.
I wish you to emerge from the darkness of archaic ignorance, and this will not happen before you come to terms with the painful reality.
Medication kemet
#Missing_Awareness
#Nabil_Kamal
