by Stephen Cervera | May 29, 2025 | Falsifying Psalmic Symmetry, Psalmic Symmetry, Scriptural Analysis
One of the most intriguing features of the Psalmic Symmetry theory is the recurring thematic and linguistic unity that seems to surface when reading the Psalms in the 30-day sequence—starting with the psalm that matches the day of the month and adding 30 four times....
by Stephen Cervera | May 28, 2025 | Falsifying Psalmic Symmetry, Psalmic Symmetry, Scriptural Analysis
Introduction: Can the Patterns Be Random? Since first proposing the Psalmic Symmetry theory, I have been struck by the compelling emotional and theological arcs that emerge when reading the Psalms in a 30-day pattern—beginning with the psalm matching the day...
by Stephen Cervera | May 27, 2025 | Falsifying Psalmic Symmetry, Psalmic Symmetry
To test whether the unity I’ve observed in the Day 27 reading of my 30-day Psalmic Symmetry cycle is truly remarkable—or simply the kind of insight one might draw from any five randomly selected psalms—I conducted a side-by-side analysis. Using the same structured...
by Stephen Cervera | May 21, 2025 | Falsifying Psalmic Symmetry, Psalmic Symmetry, Scriptural Analysis
Recently, as the AI-assisted analysis continued to reveal striking patterns that support my Psalmic Symmetry theory, I posed a critical question to ChatGPT: “Could these same connections be found in any random set of psalms, or is this structure truly unique to the...
by Stephen Cervera | May 14, 2025 | Falsifying Psalmic Symmetry, Psalmic Symmetry, Scriptural Analysis
Introduction & Purpose of the Test As I’ve been sharing my observations on a 30-day Psalms reading cycle, many readers have been struck by the thematic, linguistic, and emotional coherence found within each day’s five-psalm set. But to evaluate whether this is...
by Stephen Cervera | May 14, 2025 | Falsifying Psalmic Symmetry, Psalmic Symmetry, Scriptural Analysis
What Is Confirmation Bias? Confirmation bias is the tendency to favor information that supports our existing beliefs and to ignore or downplay data that contradicts them. In my case, that would mean seeing thematic or linguistic connections between Psalms in each...