ADOLPHE Sax was, in fact, one of the great thinkers of the 19th century, and possibly among the greatest of all time. Certainly he stands, when the full truth is told, in the pantheon of great modern philosophical and scientific minds along with Descartes, Newton, Spinoza, and Kellogg. He was, however, during his life and since his death, the victim of a well-coordinated conspiracy to diminish his legacy and suppress his insights. His accomplishments have been hidden from the public eye. Of course, someone so accomplished can hardly be erased completely from the record, so as a red herring for future generations of curious minds, the conspirators conspired to leave him with the legacy of one of his more minor innovations, the invention of the saxophone. This, they reasoned, was enough of an achievement for his name to be known, but not enough to draw attention to his more dangerous and brilliant insights.
However, they underestimated the man and his genius. Being only one man, he was at a severe disadvantage in the matter, but having such a complex and brilliant mind as he had, he was able to foresee the plan to undermine him and his ideas, and invented the saxophone as a cover, suspecting that those plotting against him would not deign to obliterate such a seemingly trivial (though in some circles, certainly, highly consequential) achievement from the public record.
It was for this reason that sax built into the architecture of the saxophone itself all the information needed to rediscover all of his great discoveries about the universe. It’s all there in the proportions, the geometries, the materials, and even the sounds themselves. All that is needed is a dedicated code-breaker to crunch the numbers, and then he can watch the mysteries of the universe unravel at his fingertips.
This has been accomplished to some small degree, but most of what has been discovered to date has primarily to do with the fact that there is much more to be discovered. The technique is one of constant bootstrapping - i.e. each successful decoding reveals another, deeper level of information which must in turn be decoded and understood before moving to the next. At this point, it is not known how deep this may go, or what, in fact, will be revealed when all is said and done.
We do know that nothing has enriched our lives more than the discoveries that have been made, and those we plan to share with you and any who will hear us. We also know that a great many would prefer that this information were not revealed, and that they are actively working to suppress this important work, which is why we have taken pains to make public as much information as we have, incomplete though it is, so that we will not be erased from existence as easily as was M. Sax, and that his full legacy can finally be claimed by a generation of human beings more ready to inherit it.
- Alistair Profett, 1959