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The Priory of Sion fascinates me, because it has all the appearances of being a real conspiracy, and yet if you look at the elements another way, it looks like a very complicated practical joke by a bunch of intellectual French aristocrats. And half of the time I believe it really is a practical joke
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denotes an object of fun, and at the same time, of scorn and derision, and it also denotes a capricious game itself: e.g.,
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by a bunch of intellectual French aristocrats. And then part of the time I think it is a real conspiracy.
83:(1587–1654) in phrases like "the ludibrium of the fictitious Rosicrucian Fraternity" when describing the
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135:(1599–1600) asserts, after the fashion of
104:Paul Arnold translated Andreae's usage as
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129:Similarly, the melancholic Jaques in
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66:), "the plaything of the waves";
175:(Taylor & Francis) 1999:50.
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173:The Rosicrucian Enlightenment
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99:Peregrini in Patria errores
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212:"Mary Mary Quite Contrary"
69:Ludibrio me adhuc habuisti
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237:Latin words and phrases
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186:Histoire des Rose-Croix
149:is a modern ludibrium:
145:has suggested that the
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19:is a word derived from
171:Frances Amelia Yates,
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95:Rosicrucian Manifestos
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143:Robert Anton Wilson
217:2007-11-05 at the
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120:Thirty Years' War
85:Rosicrucian Order
59:ludibrium pelagis
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40:. In Latin
137:Heraclitus
199:Innerview
64:Lucretius
43:ludibrium
17:Ludibrium
231:Category
215:Archived
204:Archived
184:Arnold,
28:(plural
124:Germany
74:Plautus
54:Virgil
159:Notes
107:farce
25:ludus
21:Latin
38:game
32:ludi
122:in
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