
A Beginner's Guide to Constructing the Universe: Mathematical Archetypes of Nature, Art, and Science. Overlay: Contemporary Art and the Art of Prehistory.


Architectural principles in the age of humanism. (1986), 'A RECURRING GEOMETRICAL PATTERN IN THE EARLY RENAISSANCE IMAGINATION', Symmetry, Elsevier, pp.

^ : Paul Calter, Polygons, Tilings, & Sacred Geometry.Meditating on this is believed to unite the right and left hemispheres of the brain, open the pineal gland (seat of psychic and intuitive awareness), and act as a supreme manifestor – bringing all of our worldly desires into fulfillment and manifestation. Sri Yantra: Found in the Hindu tradition, this is considered by many as the Mother of all geometric symbols. Some believe that keeping this symbol close to electronic devices can dispel harmful electromagnetic frequencies. Meditating on this symbol is believed to help us understand the patterns of the Universe and how it works, bringing us to an unfolding state of enlightenment. Symbol of the Divine Feminine and a foundation for how the infinite, fractal nature of the Universe can be understood.įlower of Life: A continuation of the Seed of Life. Six interlocking circles surround a seventh, representing the seven days of creation, the seven chakras, notes of the musical scale and so on.

Seed of Life: Considered a universal symbol of creation. The following are a few well known Sacred Geometry symbols, their meanings, and the healing powers ascribed to them: It's thought that this alignment can bring us heightened intuition, greater ease, flow and synchronicity into our lives. And when our bodies, minds, and spirits align with the frequencies contained in these shapes, harmony is restored to the being. If all of nature is indeed created from geometric forms, then meditating on these forms can be considered as meditating on the nature of 'all that is'. Meditating on these forms was thought to bring our vibrations back into harmony with the rhythms of nature. Sacred Geometric symbols were believed by Ancient cultures to be visual instruments that have profound healing effects. Modern day consumer-capitalist and technologically driven societies have mostly become disconnected from the organic rhythms of nature, and while this enables societies and industries to thrive in work output, productivity, and economic gain, it more often than not has come at a cost to physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual health and well being. We see the awareness of geometric ratios and forms in the architecture of the Ancient Egyptians, Indians, Greeks, and Romans, who all believed that geometry was pervasive in nature and inherently sacred. Their spiritual practices and ways of creating architecture expressed this reverence and understanding. This includes not only structures of all sizes, but music, cosmology, our DNA, and even space and time, which all resonate with a particular set of harmonics and measurable frequency.Īncient and indigenous cultures around the world have long had this understanding of the fractal nature of the Universe. Sacred Geometry is based on the belief that all things in existence have a geometric and mathematical proportion.
