Tech | September 24, 2009 | 20 comments

Sacred Geometry - The Bridge between Science and Religion Part 1

jkw077
The ability to locate records of knowledge dating back thousands of years has increased with the growth of the internet. Hidden among billions of internet searches is a growing movement to bring what is commonly known as sacred geometry back into mainstream consciousness.

The yin/yang, Star of David, and flower of life symbols are three of the most recognized symbols in the world, but few know of their connection to the bridge between the studies of science and religion around the world. There are dozens of user uploaded videos and articles regarding the ancient history of the relation between geometry, science, religion, and their correlation with the unfolding events we are currently experiencing in this modern age so heavily influenced by the use of technology as the basis for communication, food production, and healthcare.

As the fields of genetics and quantum physics grows in complexity, links have been rediscovered between the building blocks of the smallest particles of matter and what has long been percieved to be the building blocks of nature: sacred geometry. (Scroll down to view examples)
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20 comments // Sacred Geometry - The Bridge between Science and Religion Part 1 // Video

  • royulery
    • 0
      royulery  
    • amazing post!
      i have had a vision of the nature of the universe, in someways similar to the electric universe, in 2000 while i was lying in the hospital, dying. my hallucination haunts me and i want to express it but i don't know how. mostly i fear being the fool. the few i have told this to do not get it at all.

    • 2 years ago
  • jubal
    • 0
      jubal  
    • royulery:

      royulery, I had a near death experience in 1996 and I called it a hallucination at first, but now I call it what it was, a near death experience. Mine involved being in two places at the same time. Would love to hear yours. If you want, lets email.

      cheers.

    • 2 years ago
  • csmonut
  • csmonut
    • 0
      csmonut  
    • royulery:

      Also, I once had an experience in which I was given a brief glimpse of the universe, and every living entity place in it. It was a flash of insight, and I have not been given that gift again.
      I was trimming a pine tree, which a friend of mine says has much spirit in it.
      Many things in this universe cannot be explained, and your experience is unique, but also not uncommon.

    • 2 years ago
  • Sam_the_Wizer
  • jkw077
  • Sam_the_Wizer
    • 0
      Sam_the_Wizer  
    • I didn't mean that there do not exist interesting ratios, or that there is not a significance to those ratios, I just think that calling it sacred and bringing God into the equation adds unneccessary complications.

      I think that the use of the golden ratio in Da Vinci's artwork and in the construction of the pyramids is due to an abstract appreciation of ratios that nature has incorporated due to various factors, such as crystal formation, or the fractals found in many living systems. Early scholars and artists recognized this ratio and incorporated it into their work.

      If you look at abstract mathematics Fibonacci sequence is prevalent, despite being completely independent of the physical world. One interesting property of the Fibonacci numbers: if you take 2 consecutive Fibonacci numbers and apply the Euclidian Algorithm to determine the Greatest Common Divisor, you generate the entire list of Fibonacci numbers up to the two starting numbers.

      Religion, Science, and Mathematics have the same impetus: our desire to know why. Without logic to temper this desire, we are left with superstition and fairy tales.

    • 2 years ago
  • rndm5
    • 0
      rndm5  
    • Sam_the_Wizer:

      I don't believe that the person who wrote the commentary was implying that this is about "God" but more or less to help bridge between Christians who might have a hard time seeing that this has anything to do with god and math being "God's" language i.e insert>>religion _here_ kinda deal.

      Sacred geometry encompasses all, so it is applicable to all forms of belief and lack of.

      Imagination is key and and fairy tales help to inspire.

    • 2 years ago
  • carmalite
  • jkw077
  • Incredulous
  • jkw077
  • jkw077
  • jkw077
  • jkw077
  • jkw077
    • 0
      jkw077  
    • Image
    • There is nothing false about the ratio of the moon to the earth relating to the dimension of the pyramid of giza, Da Vinci's Vitruvian man, and the star of David.

    • 2 years ago
  • jkw077
  • carmalite
  • Sam_the_Wizer
    • 0
      Sam_the_Wizer  
    • I think that people are drawn to the natural beauty of mathematics, but attempt to assign a false meaning to the numbers and patterns through things like Sacred Geometry, and in doing so miss the true beauty of mathematics. Mathematics is the only beauty I've ever encountered that is completely abstract, and is more pure in that it is absolute and immutable.

    • 2 years ago
  • rndm5
    • 0
      rndm5  
    • The singularity theory with additional spheres and the process moving further outward from itself, hun... I don't claim to know the spectrum of physics or quantum physics but i understand the basic principles as described here. I have been studying this for years i.e the golden ratio, Fibonacci sequence and the tree of life. I see it everywhere and find myself constantly relating the sequence to EVERYTHING. Do you think that "God" for lack of a better word may have opted to destroy itself in order to become the swallowing singularity in order to create mass and thus recollect itself. Possible? maybe. I just can't get over the order in what appears to be randomness. Oh well, i enjoy the mystery too.

      Thank you for posting this.

    • 2 years ago
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