Sacred Geometry

GEOMETRY IS SOUND SUSPENDED, MATTER IS LIGHT SUSPENDED, GEOMETRY IS FROZEN MUSIC, LANGUAGE OF PATTERN.

The term “sacred geometry” is often used by archaeologists, anthropologists, geometricians, and metaphysicians to encompass the religious, philosophical, and spiritual beliefs that have sprung up around this geometry in various cultures during the course of the human biogenetic experiment.

Geometry Underlies The Structure Of All Things, From Galaxies To Molecules. Each Time A Geometrical Form Is Created, An Expression Of This Universal Oneness Is Made, And From The Dawn Of Time Religious Structures Have Expressed This Unity In Their Every Detail. Sacred Geometry Is Responsible For The Feeling Of Awe Generated By A Gothic Cathedral As Well As For The ‘Rightness’ Of A Georgian Drawing-Room. Sacred Geometry Traces The Rise And Fall Of This Transcendent Art From Megalithic Stone Circles To Art Nouveau And Reveals How Buildings That Conform To Its Timeless Principles Mirror The Geometry Of The Cosmos.

Sacred geometry is another term for the Algorithm, Matrix, Illusion, or simulation that unites and creates all realities even those we are not aware of but speculate on such a string theory.

Sacred geometry involves sacred universal patterns used in the design of everything most often seen in sacred architecture and sacred art. The basic belief is that geometry and mathematical ratios, harmonics and proportion are also found in music, light, cosmology. This value system is seen as widespread even in prehistory, a cultural universal of the human condition.

Sacred geometry is considered foundational to building sacred structures such as temples, mosques, megaliths, monuments and churches; sacred spaces such as altars, temenoi and tabernacles; meeting places such as sacred groves, village greens and holy wells and the creation of religious art, iconography and using “divine” proportions. Alternatively, sacred geometry based arts may be ephemeral, such as visualization, sand painting and medicine wheels.

In ancient civilizations the golden ratio (sacred geometry) was often employed in the design of art and architecture – from the simple spiral to more complex designs. Today sacred geometry is still used in the planning and construction of many structures such as churches, temples, mosques, religious monuments, altars, tabernacles, sacred spaces and the creation of religious art.

Sacred geometry may be understood as a worldview of pattern recognition, a complex system of religious symbols and structures involving space, time and form. According to this view the basic patterns of existence are perceived as sacred. By connecting with these, a believer contemplates the Great Mysteries, and the Great Design. By studying the nature of these patterns, forms and relationships and their connections, insight may be gained into the mysteries – the laws and lore of the Universe.