Various texts from antiquity with descriptions of the meditation system originally taught by the Buddha were corrupted, or passages with evidence were adjusted or deleted, the lacunae can often be filled in as the texts followed the system of numbers illustrated on the Phaistos Disk.

Texts that reveal an alternative history of Europe

Phaistos Disk system of numbers

Plato dialogues

Plato The Philosopher, Epinomis

The outlines of the meditation system as taught by the Buddha were described in The Philosopher, Epinomis: the dialectics of philosophy. The meditation techniques, unwritten doctrines, are still taught, following the same order as described by Plato, unchanged after 2,500 years.

Plato The Republic

a Buddhist perspective, dialogue divided into10 books

Were Plato’s dialogues Buddhist Dhamma Talks, packed with details about the 6th sense (hadaya vatthu in Pali), how to see Ultimate Reality on mind-materiality (5 clinging aggregates) and liberation from rebirth through practice of Dependent Origination- metempsychosis in Greek – and Vipassanā, to “see the truth with the mind’s eye”?

Dipylon Inscription, Plato Cratylus

Was the oldest inscription in archaic Greek found on a clay jug at the Dipylon Gate in Athens the prize for dancers — or a coded description of Plato’s unwritten doctrines?

Philosopher Plato described in his “enigmatic dialogue” about the meaning of names and symbols, the Cratylus, that letters can be used as symbols in a conventional way, but also as images and numbers to represent higher knowledge through “intimation” when glyphs become signs rather than sounds.

12th century Ireland:

Book of Leinster and Book of Ballymote

In the Book of Leinster and Book of Ballymote an alternative history was presented in an attempt to replace the original Ogham Hand Signs used to illustrate the meditation system with the Beith-luis-nin tree alphabet: common Latin letters placed in a new order. The origins of the hand signs in Babylonia, Egypt and Athens were replaced with an alternative version to promote the Christian religion.

Fionn's window in the Book of Leinster and Book of Ballymote with Phaistos Disk codes
Ogham hand signs in Ireland

14th century Rome: Dante Divine Comedy

1,800 years after the meditation system was introduced in Greece, a masterpiece of European literature was written by a poet from Florence, Dante Alighieri, living in Rome under protection of the Roman Catholic Pope. Dante meticulously followed the numbers and the meaning of the symbols on the Phaistos Disk, which were also described as riddles in the Scandinavian rune poems. Dante’s Divine Comedy was not an original work, but a Commentary to introduce new goals to replace the old system that was illustrated on the Phaistos Disk.

Phaistos Disk numbers followed by Dante as structure to write the Divine Comedy