Nostradamus' explanation of the mechanics of future seeing. © Allan Webber April 2016
When Nostradamus presented his Preface
in 1555 he expressed strong ideas about the origin of his prophecies and
the ability of man to see the future. Throughout this work he presents
a non-orthodox Trinity involving the created universe, nature and the
isolated realm of man. In presenting his case he draws on ideas that
don't come out of the 16th century. In many ways they rely on
concepts from future times and many of them seem shaped by the
understanding of our own age rather than his own.
In any written work there are
conventional forms of address that are used throughout and Nostradamus'
work is no different but this means his references to God and Christ
have to be examined closely to remove those that are just formalities
unrelated to his deeper beliefs. This need is illustrated right from the
beginning as can be seen from the following selections.
[My writings ] for the common benefit of humans [are] about the divine essence by which the astronomic revolutions have given me cognizance.And since you cried to the immortal God as you came into natural light and this earthly shore...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE1).Consider also the maxim from the true Saviour: (Lat: 'Do not give what is holy to the gods or cast pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, turn upon you and tear you in pieces' - Matthew 7:6,)...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE2).
And by the Prophets and by means of immortal God and the good angels I have received the spirit of vaticination [Lat: prophecy] by which is seen distant things and I have come to predict future events.
However nothing can be perfect without him whose power is so great and the goodness to his subjects [is such] and while the spirit remains in them it always effects other subjects since the similarity of the cause of their good genius gives the seer's heat and power approaching us as that of the rays thrown out by the Sun, thereby influencing bodies that are elementary and not elementary...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE3).
Nostradamus' belief that he
was a genuine prophet is conveyed by his attempts to explain the
dilemmas involved in future seeing. In doing this he draws a distinct
difference in the relation between his Creator-God and man. The first
paragraph states that human mechanisms have no way of tapping into the
secret workings of the universe but as implied in the second some
understanding may come as a legacy implanted in the human mind.
As for us who are human, we can know nothing via our natural cognizance and inclination of our mechanisms that lets us know the deepest secrets of God the creator. (Latin: Because he does not know about our times, or dates, etc.)However it is also possible that present happenings and personalities exist that God the Creator chooses to reveal by imaginative impressions some of the secrets that are [about] to happen...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE3).
The above also indicates
that Nostradamus considered the prime creation agent of the universe has
natural bounds so removed from the senses of man that our understanding
of that agent is fragmentary. It also suggests that whatever connections
there are between the two they are natural parts of the universe
manifested through the filters of the human mind. But in the quote below
there is a hint of God's role in Nostradamus experience and that comes
as an indirect judgement tool that steers the final outcome of the
prophecy. He relates that both good and bad visions arise within the
mind and the right choice by the prophet relies on God but this God
doesn't do it himself. Nostradamus sees angels and fallen angels
as God's agents with such an approach being consistent with his second
verse in the prophecies. Each of these references presents an image of
virtual-beings capable of communicating with his mind and thereby hints
at the possible sources of his foreseen knowledge.
This accords with judicial-astrology [astronomy] where as in the past certain powers and voluntary faculties come to them like flames of fire that appear inspiring that person to judge human and divine inspirations. Because these divine works are to be absolutely complete, God comes to perfect them and while the normal is the work of the angels the third [class delivers] the bad...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE3).C1 Q2
The wand in the hand is placed in the middle of the branches
With water he sprinkles the hem of his garments
A voice, fear he trembles in his robes.
Divine splendor; the God sits nearby.
In the Preface Nostradamus then tries to bring these
thoughts to bear on his own experience and his way of readying his mind
for detection of the spirit of prophecy. Once again his wording
the great eternal God's divine
power is a thoughtful choice that equates the remote
qualities of the cosmos to the acceptable religious values of his time.
But my son I speak to you a little too deeply however the hidden prophecies that I received were by the subtle spirit of fire, which sometimes comes from restless understanding while attentively contemplating the stars above, the surprise of which leads me to write pronouncements without fear or expectation of shameless loquacity and what emerges is the product of the great eternal God's divine power from which all goodness proceeds...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE4).
From this foundation Nostradamus begins to structure
his ideas on prophecy and his own part in the scheme of things. It is a
humble expression of the limitations of man when dealing with matters of
future time.
Although my son, I have inserted the name of Prophet, I do not assign such sublimity to myself for the present, since Prophetâ dicitur hodie, olim vocabatur videns -I Samuel 9:9 (Latin: The Prophet of today was once called a seer) because my son a Prophet is properly one who sees things beyond the natural cognizance of every creature. And in the event that the Prophet through the perfect light of prophecy clearly appears to be divine as well as human, then it can't be, since the effects of future prediction extend very far...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE4).
It is in the next paragraph
that Nostradamus spells out the two seemingly incompatible dimensions
which prophecy must straddle with eternity being the aspect of time that
defines the cosmos while the linearity of momentary experiences defines
man's awareness of existence. His bridge is that the two things coexist
so part of the eternal may well fleetingly influence the momentary state
of the human mind.
For the incomprehensible secrets of God and their efficient virtue depends on the long expansion of natural knowledge, deriving their origin from free will. They bring about the appearance of causes which of themselves could not attract enough attention to be known, neither by human augury, nor by any other hidden knowledge or virtue comprised under the concavity of heaven, even from the present fact of all eternity, which comes in itself to embrace all time. But through some indivisible eternity and by means of Hiraclienne agitation the causes are made known alongside the celestial movement...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE4).
There is a dilemma in such a
union of eternity with the moment and Nostradamus shows his
understanding of these issues. He starts by stating that although the
dimensions between the eternal and the momentary are vast that doesn't
mean linking is impossible but rather that they are subliminally present
in everything we do. (Author's comment: However if this is true modern
science has not yet found convincing evidence.)
I do not say, my son, that the knowledge of this matter cannot impress itself upon your feeble brain, nor do I say that very distant future causes are not knowable by a reasoning creature. If they are simply the creation of a goodly creature's intellectual soul out of current events, then they are not too greatly hidden from him nor, on the other hand can they be said to be revealed at all...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE4).
Nostradamus goes on to acknowledge that although this
connectivity may be universal the means of utilising it is not. The
passage below implies that it is a product of specific individual's
[genetic] inheritance and only then when specific meditative mechanisms
are employed.
But the perfect causes cannot be acquired without divine inspiration since all prophetic inspiration receives its prime motivating force from God the Creator, then from happiness and nature. Wherefore causes that are indifferent are produced indifferently the presage only partly comes true where it has been predicted. Because where human understanding is created intellectually it cannot see hidden things except by the voice coming from limbo via the thin flame, showing in what direction part of the future causes will be inclined...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE4).
The Preface ostensibly is directed at his son Cesar
for reading when he was old enough to understand but it reads like a
document meant for a distant time when the art of future-seeing was
better understood. The paragraph that follows on from the material
already presented sees Nostradamus caution against the use of drugs
which he considers even worse than the art of astrology.
And also my son, I beg you never to apply your mind to things such as reveries and vanities that drain the body and put the soul into perdition thereby giving way to the foible of a vanity that is worse than the abominable magic that was first condemned by the holy Scriptures and the divine cannons. The chief exception to this is the judgement of judicial Astrology (i.e. astronomy) whereby with inspiration, divine revelation and continual calculation, our prophetic script has been written...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE5)
In the next paragraph he
amplifies his views expressing his dislike for astrology and disdain for
its practitioners. It recounts how in order to prevent his methods from
falling into the wrong hands he destroys his own records. In stating
I have hidden from the long centuries that [which] my own works cover
his wording tells us that this Preface was aimed at a future
audience
And how is it that occult philosophy was condemned. I have never wanted to present their frantic persuasions [to the public], so many of volumes [on these topics I] have hidden from the long centuries that my own works cover. Doubting that some of [my predictions] will happen because of acts that might follow I presented the literature to Vulcan. Nevertheless as [the god] came to devour them, the flame rendered an unusual clarity to samples of the air. Clearer than a natural flame of fire, a clytre of dazzling lightning suddenly illuminated the house, as if it was in a sudden conflagration. Wherefore in the end what happened was that there was a violent explosion, striking perfectly the transformation in the same way as salt is formed from solitary incorruptible metals and occult waves that are converted to ashes...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE5).
Having delivered his caution about wrongful use
Nostradamus returns to describing the outcomes and limitations of
successful future-seeing. Throughout his work he sees the continuity of
the stars as the timing mechanism linking what is momentarily seen to
the eternal stream. It is the immutable revolution of the universes
elements that provide eternity with the means of identifying between
past, present and future.
But when judgement comes to perfection with the celestial judgement that you wish to show: you will gain knowledge of future causes. Rejecting distant fantasies from the imaginations that will happen limits this feature [of future-seeing] to the premises suited to supernatural divine inspiration. And giving celestial figures, places, and the time the property held by a hidden virtue lies in this power and divine understanding. In the presence of these the three times comprise eternity because the revolution that causes them is the past, present and future: quia omnia funt nuda and aperta, etc. (Latin: because all are naked and exposed)...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE5).
In this way, my son, you can easily understand, not-withstanding your tender brain, that things that need to happen, can be prophesied by the nocturnal and Celestial lights, that are natural objects, and by the spirit of prophecy: Not that I wish to attribute to myself either the name or the role of a prophet, but (rather rely on) inspired revelation, like any man whose senses are no less distant from heaven than his feet are from the ground....Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE5).
The relation between Nostradamus' God,
the universe, natural laws and man can be conveyed quite adequately by a
metaphor of the relation between an organisms parts and a complex
multi-celled organism. Any cell and the organism of which it is
part have no communication directing their functioning yet they function
in the way predestined for the continuance of each. It is nature and
laws of the universe that ensure this result. Within the context of this
metaphor 'God' is the chemistry and the 'good and bad angels' are the
nourishing and destructive chemicals that impact on the cell.
Likewise Nostradamus' view of God
separates the dynamic-cosmos, the holder of eternity, from the moments
of man and just as the cells are functionally but remotely linked to the
organism there is an interface where what happens to one sends ripples
into the other.
These early sections of Nostradamus' 1555
Preface contain the major elements of his understanding the place of
human prophecy in the universe. However he goes on from here to give
detailed mechanisms by which he composes his quatrains. Important among
these are the section I label PCE9 for it is the pragmatic means by
which he is able to project an accurate calendar relying on planetary
positions into the future. It relies on 'perfect' cycles which are
periods in which several planets come to the same position in the sky at
the same time. All of this is covered in detail in the chapter about 'the
order of the chain' (Star-Chain).
This change from the more philosophical
nature of the prophecies to their pragmatic delivery is quite clearly
stated in the following paragraph from the Epistle. And once again there
are pointers that tell us it was unlikely Nostradamus set out to
deceive. For instance the wording They contain perpetual predictions
for (the period) from now until the year 3797 is a bold claim to
reading the future far beyond that required by any charlatan and a date
so disjoint from his present that it is actually counterproductive
advertising.
'Possum non errare falli decipi' [Latin: 'I am able not to err, fail or be deceived']. I am a sinner no greater than anyone of this world and subject to all human afflictions. But being surprised at how sluggishly time flows, I have made long calculation and during the time of night's sweet odours I have composed books of prophecies each containing a hundred quatrains of astronomic prophecies, which I have intentionally arranged a little obscurely. They contain perpetual predictions for (the period) from now until the year 3797...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE6).
The next section begins with Nostradamus challenging
the notion that there is no interaction between the existent-universe
(eternal God) and its components. He then reiterates his claim that
there are humans with minds capable of interacting in the dimensional
time-realm of the cosmos. But he goes further in the subsequent paragraph
and talks of two ways that such interaction is accomplished and these
are by infusion into the mind and then the process of inspired
validation.
How is it that the eternal God is the only one that knows the eternity of its light, proceeding from himself? And [in response] I say frankly that is to those whom he wants to reveal his long inspired melancholy in all its immeasurable, incomprehensible magnitude, that are subject thereof to hidden causes manifested divinely.
They are mainly of two major causes, which are confined to the mind of the inspired one who prophesies. One of these allows the clarity of the supernatural light to infuse the character who predicts by the doctrine of the stars, and the other enables the prophesies to become inspired revelation. All of which is certainly the participation of the divine eternity, by means of which the Prophet comes to judge that his divine spirit has been given to him by means of God the creator, and a natural incitement.
This is [the way] to know that what is predicted is true and has its origin ethereally placed. And such light and emergent flame is very effective. And its altitude is no less than the natural clarity and natural light that makes the philosophers assured that only with the principles of the first cause can they enter into the deeper chasms of the highest doctrines...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE7).
Even after this the
connection is not well established so Nostradamus expands upon the relation
between natural causes and divine manifestation. And as he progresses it
is apparent it is a mental device recognised in modern science. It is
the emotive power of the mind where neuronal resonance resolves shadowy,
blurred vagaries into images of conviction. And the final act performed
by the prophet described by Nostradamus is the proper placing of that
image in the context of human time. By these means the resonance between
two dissimilar systems draws separate meaning within their own
dimensions and according to Nostradamus prophets dream the unthinkable.
How then do these ambiguous opinions exceeding all Mahommedan dreams arise by natural reasons, when God the Creator is timeless; it is by the minister of his messengers of fire. The missive is in their burning flame which comes to offer us external reference. Similarly our eyes then become causes of future prediction, signifying future cases that must occur to him that presages.
Because the exterior light which brings the presage infallibly judges its parts, so truly [is it judged] that the parts seem to use the eye for understanding, which is the purpose of this imaginative lesion. The reason for this is too obvious, since all is predicted by God's outflow, and it is by means of Angelic spirit that the man prophesying is inspired. This means that the prophecies are illuminated in layers starting with the emotions at the front of his phantasies. By various nocturnal visions it is prophesied and made certain by conjoint astronomical calculations administered in the day. Thereby this is a sanctified prediction of the future with no consideration from elsewhere that is based on free will...Cesar 1555 Preface (PCE10).
It is possible to deduce
from the foregoing arguments and evidence that Nostradamus did not set
out to deceive since in the Preface he draws a detailed picture of the
process in which he was involved. Remarkably the placing of a
Deist-style God and a mortal-framed man within two different dimensions
of time places his thoughts in a period well beyond his own.
Additionally his writings develop as a progression describing the
relationships and mechanisms allowing the interchange of images from
different dimensions. This would not have been an easy course to take in
the strait-jacket religiosity of the sixteenth century. And this
structure he describes seems more than a fiction since it is very
similar to modern science's understanding of the workings of the human
mind. It is the modernity that makes the narrative seem obscure because
it doesn't easily fit to our expectation of the age of alchemists,
heretics and old-style religion.