Prophezeiungen : Alter Aberglaube oder neue Wahrheit?

audiobook

Prophezeiungen : Alter Aberglaube oder neue Wahrheit?

by Max Kemmerich

DE·~10 hours·19 chapters

Chapters

19 total

Anmerkungen zur Transkription:

0:40

Prophezeiungen Alter Aberglaube oder neue Wahrheit?

0:09

Vorwort

2:05

Inhaltsverzeichnis

0:01

Einleitung

32:43

Erstes Kapitel Einzelne Prophezeiungen und Vorahnungen Das Altertum

1:16:53

Zweites Kapitel Einzelne Prophezeiungen und Vorzeichen Mittelalter und Neuzeit

1:29:42

Drittes Kapitel Unsere Beweisführung Einwände und deren Widerlegung

27:47

Viertes Kapitel Die lehninsche Weissagung - I. Der Text

32:14

Fünftes Kapitel Christina Ponitowssken

16:59

Description

The opening pages plunge listeners into a scholarly yet provocative quest: can humanity really glimpse the future as easily as we view a moving picture? Dr. Kemmerich, a physicist‑turned‑historian, stacks the evidence of medieval superstition against the dazzling breakthroughs of his own era—X‑rays, radio, airships—to argue that what was once dismissed as myth may now have a scientific footing. His tone is earnest, peppered with thanks to fellow scholars, and the narrative balances dense argumentation with moments of personal revelation, inviting the audience to follow his own transformation from skeptic to convinced advocate.

As the work unfolds, the author sketches the intellectual battlefield where modern academics scoff at “temporal television” while quietly acknowledging the limits of their own doctrines. Listeners are drawn into a lively discussion of philosophy, physics, and the lingering shadows of ancient belief, setting the stage for a deeper exploration of prophecy that promises to challenge long‑held assumptions without yet revealing the final conclusions.

Details

Language

de

Duration

~10 hours (595K characters)

Release date

2026-02-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

MK

Max Kemmerich

1876–1932

A German art and cultural historian who turned curiosity into a career, he became widely known in the 1910s and 1920s for books on strange beliefs, prophecy, and the odd corners of human history. His work blends scholarship with a fascination for the unusual, making him an intriguing guide to the intellectual fringes of his time.

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