We are hearing more and more about the correlation between sound and numbers. We could also make a case for the other senses and their value of numbers. We see in patterns, like the Golden Mean. We smell and taste in proportions. We touch with memories of pleasure and pain.
A very good friend, John Michell, wrote The View Over Atlantis in 1969. “It is not so easy to dismiss the hard evidence of identical systems of number and measure in places of ritual throughout the world, nor to avoid the conclusion to which they obviously point: that a single code of knowledge, philosophical, religious, and scientific, once flourished universally.”
He also contributed to the “black hole” theory.
Mind-altering experiences such as plant medicine can open previously blocked channels of understanding. The risks are sometimes scary. Fear is the emotion we all wish to disperse. Hope is the antidote. The polarity of emotions are nevertheless present.
It is believed that the pyramids and not just the Egyptian ones, have dimensions that showed the builders understood the earth and the solar system.
The momentum of music and its ability to alter our heartbeat, again is a measurement of a universal state of consciousness.
John Michell was intrigued by anonymous phenomena. Charles Fort was an observer of this. His book was a collection of articles discovered in newspapers that defied the unusual.
Ley lines and Feng Shue have similarities. The concept of earth energy influencing events and the building of monuments. From Glastonbury Tor to the Coal Castle, the manifestation of these portals are of unknown systems, theories and explanations. The ancient concept, as above, so below, expands the scope of numbers. The connection between disparate events and contrary explanations is most certainly a point of view.
The value of the letters in the word love and hate are the same. The number 7, which represents finding faith, not necessarily knowledge.
There is truth in knowledge but also in magic and miracles.