
In 1882, a New York dentist sat down at a typewriter in a darkened room, placed his fingers on the keys, and something else started writing. For fifty weeks, John Ballou Newbrough claimed his hands moved independently of his conscious mind — producing a 900-page cosmological bible that describes the creation of worlds through spinning vortices, maps an elaborate spiritual bureaucracy governing the heavens, tells the story of humanity across 25,000 years, and lays out a physics of the unseen universe that lines up with material channeled a full century later in the Law of One. The book is called Oahspe. Almost nobody has read it. In this deep dive I crack open this massive text and walk you through what it actually says. Oahspe described electrons fifteen years before J.J. Thomson discovered them. It used the term "the fourth dimension" twenty-three years before Einstein's special relativity. It mapped a lost Pacific continent called Pan forty years before Churchward's Mu books. It...
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