The Book of Fluids

 

Summa Fluidus

Page history last edited by Joe 1 mo ago

Summa Fluidus

ORIGINALLY THE SUMMARIA THEOLOGICA ET MYTHOLOGICA

By Irwin, With Additions By Tredert, Vaecrius & Edited By Joe

 

The science behind the Book of Fluids has frequently been referred to as Fluidology, which is a way of explaining away inconsistencies that occur between our fictional Fluids world and the reality in which it is based on.

 

One of the challenges in building a universe is creating the rules by which the universe governs itself. This is not easy to do, especially when you’re making things up as you go along. Just look at major comic book publisher canon. DC comics explains their discrepancies through the character Ambush Bug: a mentally unstable character whose own psychological delusions are used to explain the nonsensical nature of some characters and plots.

 

Fluids has no character that exemplifies our inconsistencies (except for perhaps Agent Maximille). Rather, we have a science. But it is important to realize that all the mythology, theology and philosophy that appears in Fluids do have connections to the –ologies of our own world.

 

And that’s our starting point for a truly fascinating read: the Summa Fluidus. Based on the original Summaria Theologica et Mythologica, a web-based publication written by Fluids author Irwin in an attempt to explain the hidden references and meanings within the story.

 

Disclaimer: the following is a collection of information and opinions gathered from various individuals and sources and should not be construed as absolute truth.

 

          "Common sense is what tells us the world is flat."

                                                  â€“ Principia Discordia

 


 

  • Introduction
  • Part I - The Cthulhu Mythos
  • Part II - The Gaia Hypothesis
  • Part III - Christoconspiratology
  • Part IV - Miriam’s Christian and Hebrew Biblical Theology, and The Book of Enoch
  • Part V - The Gnostics, The Alchemists, The Hermetics, and Crowley and The OTO
  • Part VI - The Qabala and The Angelic Realms
  • Part VII - Celtic Mythology and Christianity, the SanGreal, and The Arthurian Cycles
  • Part VIII - Norse Mythology
  • Part IX - Draco Nobilis: The Noble Dragon
  • Part X - Hindu and Eastern Philosophy
  • Part XI - Jung and The Archetypes
  • Part XII - Vodoun and The Zombi
  • Part XIII - Tarot References
  • Part XIV - The Lore of Love and Loss Enigma
  • Part XV - Pyramid Theory
  • Summa Notes
  • Summa Glossary

 


 

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