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Articles
Mehul Patel (born in 1977) is a video game developer known for founding Echelon Entertainment (Now Swirve) and creating the webgames Earth: 2025 and Utopia.

Previously he developed the successful BBS doorgame Barren Realms Elite, based on his older brother Amit Patel's own Solar Realms Elite.

He currently resides in Texas.
Articles
Dr. M.R. Sreenath is a Professor in the General Management Area at the Indian Institute of Management Indore since June 2006.
He is currently a member of Board of Governors at IIM Indore.

He has 30 years of diverse work experiences-7 years of entrepreneurial experience as the proprietor of his family printing press; 2 years of civil service experience as Assistant Security Commissioner in the Ministry of Railways, Government of India; 15 years of professional experience as an independent practising lawyer and corporate legal consultant; 3 years of general management experience as the Head of a Newspaper Publishing Centre; and 2+ years of academic experience as a Professor at T.A. Pai Management Institute, Manipal, Karnataka, India.

He holds a bachelor's degree in law and a master's degree in economics from the University of Indore and a Ph.D. Degree in Management from Sri Krishnadevaraya University, Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh, India. His doctoral thesis was titled "Performance Evaluation of Regulatory Authorities with special reference to the Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction".

He has presented papers in national and international seminars and conferences and published articles in legal journals. He has co-authored, along with Prof. Lalitha Sreenath, a leading treatise on the law relating to compensation under the Motor Vehicles Act.

His current interest is in the area of intellectual property rights. He has successfully completed the General Course on Intellectual Property, and the Advanced Courses on (i) Copyright and Related Rights, (ii) Electronic Commerce and Intellectual Property, and (iii) Biotechnology and Intellectual Property conducted by the World Intellectual Property Organization Worldwide Academy, Geneva through distance learning.

In the last two years, he has, jointly with wife Prof. Lalitha Sreenath, successfully designed, developed and delivered MBA courses on (i) legal aspects of business, (ii) legal aspects of employee relations, (iii) business ethics, (iv) society, business and management and (v) managing intellectual property. Currently, he is in the process of developing courses on (i)
doing business with India, (ii) strategic stakeholder management and (iii) the thinking manager.

Born on March 21,1955 in Anantapur to the then famous communist leader M.P.Ranaganayakulu and Parvathamma couple. M.P.Ranganayakulu who was a close friend of Tarimala Nagi Reddy and Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy (6th president of India) belongs to Kapu community.
Articles
Melvin Ezell Gorham (1911- 12 April 1994) was an American author, publisher, and philosopher who operated out of the mainstream.

In a series of self-published books he articulated an idiosyncratic world view, the essence of which was that advanced civilization alienates individuals from their actual selves (and their natural connection with nature as a whole) primarily by means of verbal programming, in which entities which Gorham regarded as mere abstractions (like the State, the Nation, or Society) were taken to be substantial existents. Gorham upheld what he regarded as the superior civilizations of pre-Christian Northern Europeans, whom he believed lived in small voluntary tribes without elaborate superstructures of government or law, and recommended a return to that mode of existence.

Although his thinking bears similarities to nominalism and to the thought of Korzybski, Alan W. Watts, and Robert M. Pirsig, Gorham made no impression on academic thinkers whatsoever, likely due to his non-mainstream venues, methods (his books contain next to no citations and are not based on academic thought), and views. He made no evident impact on popular culture, although his book The Pagan Bible is cited now and then in discussions of Asatru, and his writing and thought occasionally in dicussions of individual self-ownership.

Publishing Activities and Associated Authors
His publishing company, Sovereign Press, operated out of Rochester, Washington and as of November 2007 was still engaged in bookselling if not publishing.

From publisher's notes in the backs of some Sovereign Press books, it appears Gorham and at least some of his credited writers had some connection with the controversial Institute for Historical Review, and with such book titles as Censorship in the U.S: I Accuse the Jews (1978) by apparently otherwise-unknown author Marguerite Pedersen and Erik Holden's claim to have founded the American Christian Church, there seems little doubt that Gorham and his group had anti-Semitic leanings. The title of Bowman's Sexual Being Versus Governments That Promote Homosexuality further suggests a leaning, of presently undetermined extent, toward homophobia.

Among authors affiliated with Sovereign (not to be confused with the publisher of the same name involved in Dragonlance publishing) besides Gorham, were:

* John Harland, (author of Word Controlled Humans: A Brief History (Sovereign Press, 1981 - ISBN 978-0914752127), Brave New World: A Different Projection (Sovereign Press, rev. ed. 1984 - ISBN 978-0914752172), and The Life and Crucifixion of Julian and the Threat of Group-Entities (Sovereign Press, 1994 - ISBN 978-0914752332).
* Jill von Konen, author of the memoir Camp 38 (Sovereign Press, 1984 - ISBN 9780914752196) and possibly the co-protagonist Jill in memoir sections of Harland's Brave New World: A Different Projection.
* Marguerite Pedersen, author of Censorship in the U.S: I accuse the Jews (Sovereign Press, 1978 - ASIN B0006X5ZXS) The Cruise of the Skuld (Sovereign Press, 1987 - ISBN 978-0914752257), and Life's Meaning (Sovereign Press, 1989 - ISBN 978-0914752271).
* possibly pseudonymous author Erik Holden, author of An American Christian Bible, Extracted by Thomas Jefferson, Together with a New Declaration of Independence for Today's Americans (1982).
* possibly pseudonymous author Karl Bowman, author of Sexual Being Versus Governments That Promote Homosexuality (1983).

Associated Groups
An inspection of Sovereign Press books suggests that Gorham was the guiding spirit of the Valorian Society, who appears as author of the Sovereign Press books Human History Viewed As Sovereign Individuals Versus Manipulated Masses (1986 - ASIN B000O3PF9E) and Gangs and Governments: The Human Predicament (1991 - ISBN 978-0914752318). As noted above, Erik Holden claims to have been founder of the American Christian Church, and at least one Sovereign Press book contains an endorsement from the Institute for Historical Review.

Bibliography of Gorham's Books and Booklets


(probably not complete, does not include possible pseudonymous works)

The Culture of Individual Integrity - Metropolitan Press (1951) - ASIN B0007FA288

The Pagan Bible - Binfords & Mort (1962) - B0007E6RVU

Sovereign Manifesto - Sovereign Press (1968) - ASIN B0007EVMT2

Pagan Reality - Sovereign Press (1970) - ASIN B000NVG3FM

The Ancient Story of Selentag - Sovereign Press (1970) - ASIN B000G9FFW8

The Six Disciplines of Man's Being and Man's Relation to Government - Sovereign Press (1974) - ASIN B0006WBI8K

Curse of the Ring: An Archetypal Translation of Richard Wagner's the Rhinegold - Sovereign Press (1975) - ISBN 978-0914752066

Melvin Gorham's Interpretation of Richard Wagner's The Valkyrie: A Play in Three Acts - Sovereign Press (1976) - ISBN 978-0914752073

The Ring Cycle - Sovereign Press (1979) - ISBN 978-0914752110

Atomic War And You: As An individual - Sovereign Press (1982) - ASIN B00073CNP0

Melvin Gorhan's Interpretation of Richard Wagner's The Rhinegold - Sovereign Press (rev. ed. 1990) - illus. Sanghuine - ISBN 978-0914752240

Kris Krinkle and the Moon Princess - Sovereign Press (1991) - ISBN 978-0914752295 (rev ed. of The Ancient Story of Selentag (1970), above)

Web References

http://www.worldtrans.org/sov/stepsovereign.txt - Sexual Being and Human History cited in 1994 email list posting as as eccentric but useful books on matters of individual sovereignity. (Set text search string "Sovereign Press.")

http://groups.google.com/group/alt.religion.asatru/browse_thread/thread/3730f51ec5987885/e3fe43b8630f99ce?hlen&lnkst&q=%22valorian+society%22#e3fe43b8630f99ce - 1996 discussion on alt.religion.asatru regarding Valorian Society. One writer mentions as associated group Individual Sovereignty Society.
Articles
Dating the Exodus

The Exodus, as the second book of the Pentateuch or Book of the Law, is a great story from an early time right at the beginning of history. Its inclusion of a wide range of textual artifacts has been often discussed as having close historical parallels. Whether it’s considered literature or history has a lot to do with whether or not it’s properly dated.

What The Bible Story says about the Dates

1.) Exodus references a dynastic change (a Pharaoh who had not known Joseph) around the time of the birth of Moses.

2.) Moses leads the Exodus at age 80 which is 430 years after the Sons of Israel first entered Egypt (Exodus 12:40);

3.) That’s a date which is 40 years before the Conquest the Amarna letters describe and

4.) That’s a date that’s 480 years before the building of the temple in Solomon’s 4th year, (c 974 BC).

5.) That places the arrival of the sons of Israel c 1964 BC which is just a little t00 early.

6.) Taking 974 BC plus 480 years = 1454 BC.

7.) Eighty years before that is 1534 BC in the reign of Ahmose

8.) In Exodus, no one goes into Canaan immediately but rather arrives at a point between Midian and Rephidim called Mt Horab and then spend the next 40 years fighting their way north along the border between Moab and Edom.

Matching internal consistency in the story to geopolitical dynastic changes

1. Baines and Malek "Ancient Egypt" provides the chronology for Egyptian Dynasties.

2.) Ahmose is the founder of the 18th Dynasty

3.) Ahmose is credited with having driven out the Hyksos and having been the first to campaign into Palestine against the then emerging power of the Mittani

4.) His campaigns and those of the pharaohs of his Dynasty took place on the Orontes and Jordan Rivers in a region known as Kadesh between the headwaters of the two rivers.

5.) From 1525 to 1285 BC when a treaty is signed after the battle of Kadesh, the region known as the djadi (the Jordan river watershed in modern Israel and Palestine) is an Egyptian province and the conflict is ongoing.

6.) Given a Biblical date calculated as c 1964 BC for the arrival of the sons of Israel in Egypt, which is a little too early for agreement, some scholars apply a correction for Semitic calendars having a year of 355 days as opposed to Egyptian calendars using 365 days for a year giving an arrival c 1859 BC, an Exodus c 1441 BC in the reign of Thutmosis III and a date for the Conquest of c 1401

7.) Hatshepsut who had been regent for Thutmoses III while building her Red Sea fleet wrote extensively of her hatred of the Hyksos as much as thirty years after they left.

8.) 1401 BC is the date when the reign of Amenophis II is ended in favor of Thutmosis IV.

9.) Many contemporary scholars have discussed the forty years of wandering in the desert in terms of archaeology and based on potshards have dated it to be contemporary with Joshua and Judges so that Exodus represents a southern campaign while the stories of Joshua and Judges are ongoing.
If the Events of the Conquest are matched with Egyptian campaigns against the Nahrain and especially the King of Kadesh, these begin c

10. Given the story provides Moses birth in a time of Dynastic change it is consistent with the historical facts that it may have occurred around the end of the Hyksos era (1648–1540 BC) and the beginning of the 18th Dynasty

11.) Exodus may have occurred around 1400 BC, providing a consistency with the time of the Amarna letters.

12.) The Amarna letters written ca. forty years later to Pharaohs Amenhotep III and Amenhotep IV (Akhenaten) indicate that Canaan was being invaded by the "Habiru" — whom some scholars in the 1950s to 1970s interpret to mean "Hebrews".

13.) The Hebrew patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are also recorded as having conducted military activities in Canaan some centuries before the Exodus.

14.) Dating Abraham by Genesis 14 would place him in the time of Rim Sin and Shamsi Adad of Mari

15.) Using The Cambridge Atlas of Mesopotamia by Michael Roaf for ANE chronology we would be c 1850 BC

19th Century Speculations

1.) Some archaeologist speculated that Exodus might have occurred during the 13th century BC, as the pharaoh of that time, Rameses II, is commonly considered to be the pharaoh with whom Moses squabbled — either as the 'Pharaoh of the Exodus' himself, or the preceding 'Pharaoh of the Oppression', who is said to have commissioned the Hebrews to "(build) for Pharaoh treasure cities, Pithom and Rameses."

2.) The traditional view that Rameses II was the Pharaoh of either the Oppression or the Exodus was speculated as affirmed by the Merneptah Stele. The speculation that "forty years" was a common expression in the Old Testament for "a long period of time", allowed many scholars to avoid consistency with the stories chronology in their speculations and to view the Habiru as members of a social underclass of people present throughout the Ancient Near East at this time, rather than a number of gene oinkos and phratre loosely organized along the borders of Egypt’s provinces as mercenaries, pirates, bandits, and occasional agricultural workers.

3.) Under this scenario, the Israelites would have been a nation without a state of their own who existed on the fringes of Canaan in Year 5 of Merneptah.

4.) It was speculated that this might be suggested by the determinative sign written in the stele for Israel — "a throw stick plus a man and a woman over the three vertical plural lines".

5.) The man and woman are the determinative for foreign people while the three parallel lines are the sign for plural giving the meaning many foreign people

6.) This determinative was "typically used by the Egyptians to signify any foreign people with or without a fixed city-state,"

7.) Over the last century a few facts have emerged that create problems for the hypothesis that the Sons of Israel marched across the bitter reeds route to reach Canaan. Not the least would be the fact that the Egyptians fortified all the wells along the route and that it took a couple of weeks to traverse it. It’s also in conflict with the inherent consistency of the story

8.) In the 19th Century these cities were thought to have been built under Seti I and Rameses II.

9.) Some speculated that this might make Merneptah the 'Pharaoh of the Exodus.'

10.) This is considered plausible by those who view the famous claim of the Year 5 Merneptah Stele (ca. 1208 BC) that "Israel is wasted, bare of seed," as propaganda to cover up this king's own loss of an army in the Red Sea.

11.) Unfortunately for this speculation the refers to Syria. Read from right to left it reads s:y:r*i*a 10,000 det people. What some people think is a throw stick is actually the symbol for the number 10,000 and there is no l in the spelling. (Y is never used as an initial consonant in Middle Egyptian Gardiner § 20)(p 456 D50 10,000 apt to be confused with T41 throwstick in Hieroglyphic texts

12.) In the 19th century it was appreciated that the stele commemorated Merneptah's victory over the Libyans and their Sea People allies.

13.) The reference to Canaan which occurs in the final lines of the stele where Syria rather than Israel is mentioned after the city states of Ashkelon, Gezer and Yanoam evidences the Mitanni expansion from the Orontes south along the Jordan through Hamath, Hazor, Yanoam, Beth Shean.

14.) This is another datable textual artifact documented in both the Biblical Conquest and the Egyptian campaign records of Merneptahs predecessors.

15.) It was speculated that given Biblical reference to the Son's of Israel’s settlement in the Goshen and the declaration in Exodus that their numbers had increased it was speculated that there might be enough of them by this time to be labeled a people.

16.) It was speculated that the line "wasted, bare of seed" referred to the time when the infants of the Sons of Israel are said to have been thrown into the Nile when Moses was born.

17.) It was speculated that the birth and/or adoption of Moses during a minor oppression in the reign of Amenhotep III, which was soon lifted, and claims that the more well-known oppression occurred during the reign of Horemheb.

18.) It was speculated that the Exodus followed the reign of Horemheb and occurred during the reign of Rameses I.

19.) This speculation is supported by the Haggada, which speculated that they were oppressed and then re-oppressed quite a few years later by Pharaoh.

20.) There is also an incorrect interpretation of an inscription from the very beginning of Seti I's reign that says that upon the death of Rameses I, many of the Shasu (a word as a collective for many of the nomadic groups of the time) left Egypt, traveled through Sinai, into northern Arabia, and, as recorded in other inscriptions, after about forty years, entered Canaan. The Shasu are documented by archaeologists to have been nomads of the Negev rather than the Sinai.

21. It was speculated that the Bible, Quran, and Haggada all suggested that the Pharaoh of the Exodus died in year 2 of his reign, matching Rameses I.

22.) The speculation that Pi-Tum and Rameses were built during the reign of Rameses I also supported this view.

23.) Seti I recorded that during his reign the Shasu warred with each other, which some saw as a reference to the Midyan and Moab wars.

24.) Seti's campaigns against the Mittani and Nahrain were confused with campaigns against the Shasu and it was speculated that they might be compared with Balaam's exploits. A remote and unverified possibility is that the line "wasted, bare of seed" refers to the time when the infants of Israel are said to have been thrown into the Nile when Moses was born. An unverified theory places the birth and/or adoption of Moses during a minor oppression in the reign of Amenhotep III.

25.)This speculation claims there was oppression during the reign of Horemheb, followed by the Exodus itself during the reign of Rameses I. This speculation by the Haggada, expects that their was constant worker oppression by various Pharaohs. More recent evidence suggests Egyptian workers were highly skilled, certified, unionized and well looked after.

26.) An inscription from the beginning of Seti I's reign says that upon the death of Rameses I, many of the Shasu (a word as a collective for many of the nomadic groups of the time) left Egypt, traveled through Sinai, into northern Arabia, and, as recorded in other inscriptions, after about forty years, entered Canaan. The Bible, Quran, and Haggada all suggest that the Pharaoh of the Exodus died in year 2 of his reign, matching Rameses I. The fact that Pi-Tum and Rameses were built during the reign of Rameses I also supports this view.

27.) Seti I records that during his reign the Shasu warred with each other, which some see as a reference to the Midyan and Moab wars. Seti's campaigns with the Shasu have also been compared with Balaam's exploits.

28.) Today most Egyptologists reject these 19th century speculations as unsuportable.

29.) A more recent and non-Biblical speculation places Moses as a noble in the court of the Pharaoh Akhenaten (See below).

30.) A significant number of 19th and early 20th century scholars, from Sigmund Freud to Joseph Campbell, suggested that Moses may have fled Egypt after Akhenaten's death (ca. 1334 BC) when many of the pharaoh's monotheistic reforms were being violently reversed.

31.) The principal ideas behind this theory were: the monotheistic religion of Akhenaten being a possible predecessor to Moses’ monotheism, and the "Amarna Letters", written by nobles to Akhenaten, which describe raiding bands of "Habiru" attacking the Egyptian territories in Mesopotamia.

20th Century Speculations

1.) David Rohl, a British historian and archaeologist, author of the book "A Test of Time", places the birth of Moses during the reign of Pharaoh Khaneferre Sobekhotep IV of the 13th Dynasty, and the Exodus during the reign of Pharaoh Dudimose (accession to the throne around 1457–1444), when according to Manetho "a blast from God smote the Egyptians".

2.) It has also been suggested that the Exodus did not occur at all. Some archaeologists have claimed that surveys of ancient settlements in Sinai do not appear to show a great influx of people around the time of the Exodus (given variously as between 1500–1200 BC), as would be expected from the arrival of Joshua and the Israelites in Canaan. This suggests that the biblical Exodus may not be a literal depiction.

3.) Since archaeologists have shown that surveys of ancient settlements in Sinai do not appear to show a great influx of people around the time of the Exodus (given variously as between 1500–1200 BC), this disproves the Exodus entirely.

4.) This causes concerns that the arrival of Joshua and the Israelites in Canaan can't have occurred and suggests that the biblical Exodus may not be a literal depiction.

5.) The "Amarna Letters", written by nobles to Akhenaten, describe raiding bands of "Habiru" attacking the Egyptian territories in Canaan.

The evidence from Present Day Archaeology and History

1.) Taken all together The problem with all this earlier speculation is that if you get the date wrong, you get the place of departure wrong and if you get the place of departure wrong you get the route wrong. Not surprisingly no evidence was ever found for all these theories, but its still a problem in that if you are looking for evidence of an historical Exodus c 1285 BC you tend to discard evidence from two centuries earlier

2.) Much of the uncertainty as to what date the Bible gives for the Exodus taking place are created by the speculations as to Pi Rameses being the capital of Egypt during the Exodus and its bricks being made by Israelite slaves.

3.) Long after archaeologists established that it was part of a 12th Dynasty canal system (Baines and Malek "Ancient Egypt") it continued to be assumed that Rameses chased the Israelites out of Egypt.

4.) The speculations that they left from the Delta and made their way into Canaan overland would follow if the Capital of Egypt were in the Delta rather than at Thebes.

5.) In the Biblical time frame it is at Thebes. Thebes had a Red Sea port at Elim, which provided the ingredients used in the mummification process at Karnack, which lies across the Nile from Thebes.

6.) At Elim Nubian Gold made its way across the Red Sea and up the Gulf of Aqaba to Elat where it paid for linen, cedar and parchment from Byblos, Bitumen and naphtha from the Dead Sea, Juniper oil from Zebulon, Frankincense from Punt and Myrrh from Ethi Ophir.

7.) Near Elat, at Timna the Israeli government has encouraged archeological exploration of 13 sites dating from the right period including a Hathor temple, Egyptian faience and pottery. This sort of exploration following the stations of the Exodus as given goes back to the expeditions of Nelson Glueck "Rivers in the Desert" and has been continuously excavated since the 1980's

8.)The speculation that Rameses II was the Pharaoh of the Exodus or that a named state of Israel existed at or around the time of the Exodus is not supported by the Merneptah Stele.

9.) The Sons of Israel or Israelites would have been a loose collection of tribes living among other people without a state of their own who existed on the fringes of Canaan in Year 5 of Merneptah.

10.) The Merneptah stele refers to a foreign people of Syria, 10,000 strong. This is evidenced by the determinative for foreign people, plural a man and a woman over the three vertical plural lines.

11.) As Gardiner points out its as likely t be a finger D50 meaning 10,000 rather than a throw stick T14 also meaning foreign people. Gardiner describes this as gradually evolving from use with the word rebel to use as a determinative for foreign people living in foreign lands. Carol Redmount says it was used by the Egyptians to signify nomadic groups or peoples without a fixed city-state," such as the Hebrew's previous life in Goshen.

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