HOME
Depictions of actual source material presented in this website are made available as a free service to the general public.
All images are entirely true; meaning that they represent scans, or digitized photographic images which were taken of actual antique artifacts.
Because TrueScans are technically accurate, they allow readers to scrutinize other references which might attempt to describe certain aspects about them. Accordingly, they may be used to assess the adequacy of records which logically would be considered to stem from them.
In particular, this website provides TrueScans of:
- Important historical works
- John Dickinson’s 1764 pamphlet entitled, A Reply to a Piece called the Speech of Joseph Galloway, Esquire
- An undocumented 1885-6 German edition of War and Peace
- Nineteenth century artwork from Paris — featuring portraits of notables such as:
Benjamin Franklin | General Washington | Goethe | Henry VIII | ||
Jeanne D’Arc | Lord Byron | Mozart | Napoleon | ||
Oliver Cromwell | Raphael | Rubens | Shakespeare | ||
Sir Isaac Newton | Thomas Jefferson | Voltaire | William Pitt |
Meaningful present-day works also are included as an entirely new feature; thereby introducing:
- A patent for performing trisection over a wide range of device settings, as validated by geomtric forming
- An important mathematical discovery called, The Principles of Equation Sub-element Theory
- A First Lessons in Geometry coursework which is based upon a person’s ability to perceive
- A revealing novel about engineers who worked for the Defense Industry in the 1970’s entitled, The Body Game
- Music of the 1970’s which finally got released, including a copyrighted version of Watergate
- Juicytwist — a device that allows consumers to drink fresh from the fruit
- A video which accounts for the first three bullets above by discussing:
- How to convert mathematics into visible form
- The Principles of Equation Sub-element Theory
- A new geometry coursework for grade school, as based upon familiar concepts