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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Thoughts and Numbers ~

"To sleep perchance to dream..." is the thought of Hamlet, but he of course speaks of death. Yet Donne also spoke of death in that it "be not proud" for it accomplishes nothing. "Waking Life" and dreaming life are akin if pondered. Are we but dreams of self? Decartes thought about this too.

Perhaps it is insane to believe that thoughts can manifest, but that is exactly what I believe. The schematics are run in my head where it is rather abstract like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle where I know it forms a picture as I see it, but I have to place the pieces together so that another can see it without looking at the box cover. It is by my own means transmitted.

Not that I know much of anything, but what are the chances of me figuring out in my head the same shit that I am just now just reading about? Math and numbers are my worst subject and I never took science save for an unfinished class in anatomy and physiology in college. By the way, I did enjoy dissecting a rat’s kidneys. They were a lovely shade of blue. What if what I am thinking conceptually, is a reality that had come to be at another time or has yet to be? I will not insinuate that I know for sure anything about which I speak, but I do find that the order of my reading is bringing to light that which I pondered a year earlier and have been trying to grasp via images in abstract vision in regard to time, reality, space, death, life, and their relation to one another.

To anyone who has been reading me, you will know that I have been looking at time and numbers not exceeding 9. It is odd that I am currently on 5's in the book by Lance Storm called The Enigma of Numbers and I skipped ahead to 9 and then 10. Ten is ONE or unity. Zero is the Uroboros or the serpent who eats its own tail. It is not a number per se. It is life and death one and the same. It came to me as zero’s, circles, and eights equating to continuum. It is also odd, that the manner in which I came to see something could only be defined as liquid mercury falling upon itself turning rainbow and then devoid of color on the last two levels being 1 and 2. From what I gather, ancient alchemists used mercury, salt, and sulphur. I don’t know why I am thinking what I think nor do I understand how and why I am going through the motions of finding an answer, except perhaps there is one. It need not be the answer for everyone, but it will be mine.

0 = Void symbolic only. More at Uroboros - no beginning - no end like a circle.

1 = Monad (point/unity/infinity) The philosopher Zeno (342-270 BC) dealt with the problem of infinity by postulating the existence of conceptual entia such as the point, which had position, but no magnitude (i.e., it had location without extension). The point could not be increased by addition, or decreased by subtraction, and therefore did not exist in actuality.

2 = Dyad = squared = circle

3 = Triad = circle

4 = Tetrad = square = circle

5 = Pentad = circle

6 = Hexad = circle

7 = Heptad ?

8 = Ogdoad = continuum and contains two 45 degree angles = 9 or circle

9 = Ennead = thrice tri or complete cycle = circle

10 = Decad forms a triangle by adding 1+2+3+4 (tetractys) as thus and it exists in religion, alchemy, biology, psychology, and PHYSICS in regard to quarks:

   *
  * *
 * * *
* * * *

The Decad rather looks like the head of a pin or Monad. Virtual point to infinity.

The only thing I can’t figure is 7 other than it being prime and it comes to PI which occurs on MY level ONE in MY personal charts, but I did not skip ahead in the book to read up on this one. By the way, pi is 3.14159265358979323846...

When "PI[ED]" (simple past tense and past participle of pi) occurs at level 2 in time of 9, it then goes into restart on level 3 in time of 2.

Pi or ð is a mathematical constant whose value is the ratio of any circle's circumference to its diameter in Euclidean space, it is the same value as the ratio of a circle's area to the square of its radius. It is approximately equal to 3.14159 in the usual decimal notation (see the table for its representation in some other bases). Pi is one of the most important mathematical and physical constants: many formulae from mathematics, science, and engineering involve ð. Pi is an irrational number, which means that its value cannot be expressed exactly as a fraction m/n, where m and n are integers. Consequently, its decimal representation never ends or repeats. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi

Currently on page 245. ~ Maggie ~ January 21, 2009 @ 10:07 p.m. EST

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