Joseph
P. Schultz, Ph.D.
(Prof. Emeritus, Oppenstein Brothers Distinguished Professor of Judaic
Studies, U. Missouri, Kansas City)
"[Stan Tenen's] discovery of the geometric
forms and the
mathematical symbols that lie behind the Hebrew letters in the text of
the Hebrew Bible is revolutionary and its implications, once spelled
out, could equal the importance of the discovery of the Dead Sea
Scrolls and perhaps even surpass it."
Rabbi
Dr. Meir Sendor
(Ph.D. Harvard - Medieval Jewish History and Philosophy; Yale, Yeshiva
University; Young Israel of Sharon)
"There are certain texts for a scholar of
Kabbalah which are
almost impossible to interpret and to read properly, without some
awareness of what Stan [Tenen] is doing, and his explorations in these
sacred
geometries. . . . It's as if you get the key to understanding the text
once you grasp what Stan is talking about. There are other scholars of
the history of Kabbalah, as well as practicing Kabbalists who are
excited about Stan's work for this very reason. His work is very
solidly grounded and disciplined thought - it's important to appreciate
this and distinguish this from other things that are out there in the
world."
Jeffrey
Mishlove, Ph.D.
(Psychologist, author; host of the PBS-syndicated TV series,
Thinking
Allowed)
"One of the most sophisticated interpretations
of Kabbalah is that
offered by Stan Tenen of the MERU Foundation in [Sharon, Massachusetts
and] San Anselmo, California. Tenen maintains that the Kabbalists
discovered in the ancient languages a schematic for the unfolding of
the universe from unity to multiplicity. This schematic, he maintains,
is isomorphic to ideas that are currently being generated in
contemporary cosmology."
--Quoted from
The
Roots of Consciousness: Expanded
Edition, ©1993
Jeffrey Mishlove (Council Oak Books), p. 138.
Ralph
Abraham, Ph.D.
(Former Chair of Mathematics, UC Santa Cruz; Founder, Visual
Mathematics Institute)
"I have been following Stan's work for two
decades. He has made
crucial discoveries on the history of the alphabet, the deeper levels
of meaning of sacred texts, and the role of mathematics in the history
of consciousness.
. . . In my opinion, he is among the most important students of
Kabbalah of recent times. I cannot recommend his work too highly."
Louis H. Kauffman,
Ph.D.
(Prof. of Mathematics, U. Illinois at Chicago; Perimeter Institute)
"In attempting to unfold the text of Genesis,
Stan Tenen has
created the beginnings of a wonderful geometric language - using real
and deep mathematical structures. The language is a new alphabet, an
alphabet of geometric forms that may solve the riddle of Genesis. The
geometric alphabet is itself not only of great artistic and conceptual
value, but I believe that it will be seen to hold a key for many other
questions in language and science. This project brings together
the
old and fascinating questions about origins of language and the self
with the rigorous traditions of modern geometric thinking and
mathematical imagination."
Jay
Kappraff, Ph.D.
(Prof. of Mathematics, NJ Institute of Technology; author of popular
books on mathematics)
"Part I of th[is] book explored, through
number and geometry,
man-made systems of language: systems of music, written language, and
design as they may have been expressed at the threshold of these
momentous changes. . . . [R]emnants of these creative impulses
are to
be found in Kepler's attempts to build a planetary system from the
"harmony of the spheres", Brunes' recreations of the methods by which
ancient temples might have been constructed, Michelangelo's
preservation of the principles of an ancient geometry in the pavements
of the Laurentian Library, and Tenen's description of the creation of
the letters of the Hebrew alphabet."
--From Prof. Kappraff's epilogue to his book,
Beyond
Measure: A Guided Tour through Nature, Myth, and Number,
©2004
Jay
Kappraff (World Scientific Publishers), p. 560. Prof. Kappraff's
book
is available from Meru Foundation through
http://www.meetingtent.com.
Menahem Alexenberg,
Ph.D.
(Sculptor, artist, former Chair, Fine Arts Dept., Pratt Institute; MIT
Research Fellow)
"I think [t]his work is an amazing perceptual
leap. It provides a
visual, rather than audial pattern recognition that derives from
contemporary scientific and mathematical thought to illuminate our
understanding and connection to Torah. I believe he is making some
important breakthroughs."