User:Rune3master

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According to Brad Lorenz, in his ground-breaking book, Rune3Master - Into The Depths, the runes contain an ancient geometric code, he says:


 * ' A mid an extensive body of work that has enveloped these ancient glyphs, none consider the importance of geometry; to analyse their shapes for consistencies that may reveal an underlying intelligence. In the eyes of science, runic geometry has little value. Science has conceptualised the rune without considering the significant function of geometry – a naive and erroneous approach.'

Runic symbols are predominantly linear (built up from a mixture of vertical and/or diagonal lines that coalesce to give the rune its characteristic shape). While science believes this peculiarity is consistent with the period of carving in wood or stone, Lorenz proves otherwise:


 * ' T he rune underwent a major transition to become the form we see today. Contrary to popular belief, a rune is not a flat two-dimensional glyph, like those purportedly carved by the famous Rune-Masters in the Middle Ages – carved into mediums such as wood or stone for either magic formulation or as a written script. The two-dimensional rune is a common misconception that extends back many centuries. To fully appreciate a rune’s complexity, it is necessary to view it as a three-dimensional object..'

Underlying the rune is a well known geometric shape. Most runes take their shape from the contours and dimensions of a single cube; hereafter called a Rune3, and rotation was one of three basic types of three-dimensional transformation used by the ancient Rune3Masters to manufacture, bind and shape-shift Rune3s.