People's imaginations have continued to work, right up to our own day; hence the incredible crop of fanciful allegations attributing to the Templars every kind of esoteric rite and belief, from the most ancient to the most vulgar, every variety of alchemical or magical knowledge, all kinds of initiation and affiliation rituals, those already in existence at the time and those yet to be conceived–in a word, all the "secrets" devised the slake the thirst for mystery inherent in human nature. This thirst, by a kind of instinctual reaction, seems never to be stronger than in those eras when people appear to reject all mysteries: let us recall that it was in Descartes' own day that trials for witchcraft were most numerous; that it was at the beginning of the rationalistic eighteenth century that Freemasonry was born; that our own scientific twentieth century is equally the century in which sects have proliferated, occultism has undergone a renaissance, and so on. Anonymous
About This Quote

The belief that all things are connected is a truth that has been understood by philosophers, poets, and sages since the beginning of time. This idea is the basis for many other universal truths. However, it is not until relatively recently that science has begun to study this idea in depth. The reason for this is that science is built upon the belief that everything can be explained through natural laws.

These laws are simple and universal, but they are very difficult to understand because they are so abstract. Without the belief in these laws, science would not have been able to progress as far as it has.

Source: The Templars: Knights Of Christ

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