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Documents for download

The silent revolution

pdf

Das Mühlviertel und das Sechseck

pdf

Knowledge is power - about the archetype of the fool

pdf

The numbers and I - the beginning of a love affair

pdf

Who are we?

pdf

The story behind Solaris-Pi

pdf

Solaris-Pi - about us and our visions

Most people probably think of maths when they think of numbers. However, as the primal principles of the universe, numbers represent the spiritual matrix of the world and belong in the field of numerology, which should not be confused with number theory and deals with the unity of being.

Oswald Spengler recognised this early on and formulated it as follows in his main work ‘The Decline of the West’:

‘The real number, as will become increasingly clear, has not the slightest thing to do with mathematical matters’.

 

Even the ancient Central American cultures thought this way, as the following quote from the Mayan prince Pacal Votan shows: ‘Everything is number. God is number. God is in everything’.

 

This point of view understands numbers as fundamental immaterial form-giving forces, which are at the basis of material creation and structure everything that has come into being. An atom therefore derives its properties from the interaction of harmonic patterns of numbers, which also control the bonding behaviour of the elementary particles.

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We realise that our way of perceiving and thinking follows the laws of numbers just as much as the development of societies or states. The numbers themselves are not so much to be interpreted as rigid, unchanging quantities (boundary definitions), but as flexible, interconnected ‘nodes of vibration’. In this sense, our seemingly stable world consists of patterns of changing streams of consciousness, which can be represented abstractly by numbers and help us to understand our own nature.

 

‘Objective reality is a product of the collective thoughts of humanity’

(Brian D. Josephson, Nobel Prize in Physics 1973)

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