Anonymous ID: 01e08a Aug. 28, 2018, 4 p.m. No.2772956   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2967 >>3112 >>3627

>>2772863

>>2771962 (pb)

>>SUPPRESSED HISTORY

>this needs it's own bread NOW

>i want to know all the shit that was years by years deleted.

 

Here is another extremely important book, which arguable started the Enlightenment, but which few people (including many modern historian's and scholars) even know exist and it is freely available for download on GOOGLE BOOKS right now.

 

The book is New Voyages to North-America (vol 1&2) by French explorer Louis baron de Lahontan published in ENGLISH in the early 1700’s. Despite the fact that it was an extremely popular book and gave birth to the idea known as the "noble savage" which led to the Enlightenment, its existence and historical importance to the Enlightenment has largely been erased from History. The British were obviously so disturbed by the clear and rational thought of "uncivilized" and "uneducated savages" recorded in the lengthy conversations with Native Americans by Louis baron de Lahontan that it was easier to just claim that his entire 10 year voyage in the New World was a complete fabrication!

 

Here is an early account of how Native American Indians viewed “God” as recorded by Louis baron de Lahontan.

 

“ALL the Savages are convinced that there must be a God, because they see nothing among Material Beings that subsists necessarily and by its own Nature. They prove the Existence of a Deity by the frame of the Universe, which naturally leads us to a higher and Omnipotent Being, from whence it follows, say they, that Man was not made by chance, and that he's the Work of a Being superior in Wisdom and Knowledge, which they call the Great Spirit, or the Master of Life, and which they Adore in the most abstracted and spiritual manner. They deliver their Thoughts of him thus, without any satisfactory Definition. The Existence of God being inseparable from his Essence, it contains everything, it appears in everything, acts in everything, and gives motion to everything. In fine, all that you see, all that you can conceive is this Divinity which subsists without Bounds or Limits, and without Body; and ought not to be represented under the Figure of an old Man, nor of any other thing, let it be never so fine or extensive. For this Reason they adore him in everything they see. When they see anything that's fine or curious, especially when they look upon the Sun or Stars, they cry out, Great Spirit, we discern thee in everything.”

 

Excerpted from New Voyages to North-America, Volume 2

 

https://books.google.com/