![]() ![]() This exact pattern is mirrored by the most fundamental processes of sacred geometry. Like plants, people are born, grow up, bear fruit, decay, and then die in order to feed that which is being born. This cycle ought to be painfully familiar to anyone with even the briefest human experience. The flesh rots into compost that then feeds the new seeds now underground, just waiting for the day when the process starts anew. When ripe, a fraction of fruits fall to the earth. A stable trunk grows up and the tree eventually flowers, portending of abundant fruits to come. Its cells divide and the seed expands into a baby plant. Fair warning: visceral engagement with these shapes can be irrationally rewarding what begins as strictly formulaic may soon become more magical than ever expected.īy way of introduction, let us consider the life cycle of any fruit-bearing tree.ĭown from the ancestors a seed reaches Earth, is buried, and germinates. Now, we will embark on a journey through creation as it arises in spheres, lines, and spirals. In order to fully appreciate this article, I would encourage you to procure paper, pencil, compass and straight edge in order to perform at home the experiments here described. The best way to study the fundamental shapes of nature is to draw them yourself. It offers a scientific method for philosophical inquiry, complete with hypotheses, experiments, and repeatable results. Sacred geometry arises from the desire to express philosophical truths through concrete means. Elegant expressions of compelling proportional relationships simultaneously activate the intellectual and artistic functions, merging the rational with the abstract. The true beauty of sacred geometry is that it satisfies both the right and left brain. It is the realm where infinities live within finite forms, and the chaos of creation is brought to order. Sacred geometry is the nexus point between physics and mysticism. ![]()
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