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Ningishidda: Mitochondrial DNA is only contained in the egg so the reference to Hadit being represented by "sperm" is sexist and misleading as well as unscientific. Corrected.

Original research

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This site on Horus/Heru [1] is used as a reference to support the claim that 'Hadit' from the Book of the Law is the same as the ancient Egyptian god Horus. The site itself contains no references to 'Hadit'. There is a reference to the Greek name Haidith, but to say that this is equivalent to Hadit based on the similarity alone appears to be original research. No evidence is presented that 'Hadit' from the Book of the Law has an authentic connection with ancient Egyptian religion. Furthermore, there is a reference earlier in the article to DNA. Since DNA was not discovered until decades after the Book of the Law was written, this seems more like an original interpretation or a religious claim rather than encyclopaedic information.--Smcg8374 (talk) 01:45, 26 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

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Overemphasis on Kenneth Grant's interpretations

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The article's bibliography seems to excessively draw from Kenneth Grant's works and interpretations, citing five books by Grant and only two other sources: an archived and no longer online article and one Thelemapedia article. The article itself has many unsourced attributions which seem to have originated with Kenneth Grant. The archived article, found at https://web.archive.org/web/20071117102407/http://fet.egnu.org/wiki/Hadit, also seems to use Kenneth Grant's works as though they are authoritative. Xelkman (talk) 23:03, 14 October 2018 (UTC)Reply