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Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
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Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:23:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() Post 168 of 305 Since 7/29/2005 |
the twelfth Fibonacci number is 144, since they start counting the sequence with zero. that just seems an neat "coincidence" eh? All this religious stuff has its roots in the study of mathematics and the stars, doesnt it? Does anyone remember the old computer program LOGO, the line drawing turtle? In the 8th grade we had computer labs, and this was the program they used to teach basic geometry. Through trial and error I discovered a pentagram has to have five 144 degree angles to be perfect. that made me stop and think. I dont really have a reason for this thread, not really. But does anyone think, as i do, that the very root of religion is the study of the movements of the stars, but not the stars themselves? Early astronomers probably didnt have to work too long to notice some very apparent "laws" that governed their movements, then wondered what intelligence must has set them there? sorry for the disjointed rambling, its just how my brain works. |
only me
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:37:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() New YorkPost 40 of 370 Since 10/12/2007 |
Interesting Pentograms show balance between the elements and spirit. I think I have to add this to my research. |
james_woods
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:40:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() TexasPost 2365 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
I was taught that the Fibbonachi sequence did not really include the zero, but there were two ones at the beginning, which ould make 144 the twelfth entry... 1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34,55,89,144 - edited because I mistyped the 144! On a darker note, it has been discovered that the 3,184th Fibonacci number has 666 digits. So, I guess you can make most any kind of coincidence look somewhat spooky. |
james_woods
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:44:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() TexasPost 2366 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
And of course, there is an important and fundamental relationship between the Fibonacci series, the "Golden Ratio" phi, and the pentagram. In a pentagram, on each of the iso triangles making up the points, the ratio of the long side to the short is the golden ratio - 1.618...(a continuing fraction). The Fibonacci sequence slowly converges on this ratio also, if you consider the ratio of two subsequent numbers: 144/89 = 1.617978, and so on. |
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:45:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() Post 169 of 305 Since 7/29/2005 |
i dont know about "spooky" james. i just think the bible writers took information relating to astronomy/astrology/geometry and based their understanding and definition of god on that. these numbers have no "power" in and of themselves, ala "sacred geometry". I just took that all as proof of its roots, that is, the study/worship of the stars and their movements. |
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:50:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() Post 170 of 305 Since 7/29/2005 |
i should of said instead of defining GOD using these mathematical rules, they defined how his heavenly court is oragainzed. that makes more sense.
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james_woods
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 15:58:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() TexasPost 2367 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
I agree, Beta. Many "bible purists" are not willing to admit how much of Jewish Mysticism (which relied on numerology quite a lot) and later Hellenistic number theory found its way into the currently accepted Bible. The Pythagoreans of approximately 5 B.C., for example, used the five-pointed star as the symbol of their sect, and they called it "Health". Even the WT magazines have speculated on numerology in the bible - what was the significance of 5,6,7, 10, 12, 13, 1000, and other such famous biblical numbers mean? They do not seem to be at all squeamish about it, even if ancient "pagan" people freely used the same numers in religious literature. They even made up one of their own - the 7,000 year long "creative day"...and that led them indirectly to 1975. |
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 19:26:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() Post 171 of 305 Since 7/29/2005 |
something else too; the inferior conjunctions of Venus, also known as Lucifer, or "light bringer", form a five-pointed star shape in relation to earth. Thusly: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Venus_pentagram.png btw, thanks for knowing what i was getting at, James. |
james_woods
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 19:47:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() TexasPost 2374 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
You are quite welcome, Beta Male. I had not looked at this stuff in a while and you sent me into some interesting books this afternoon at lunch with your thread. BTW, that Pythagorean date should have said 5 centuries B.C., not just 5 B.C. Another interesting idea is the seeming biblio-military obsession with the number 3. Some commentators note that in 2 Samuel, it comes up again and again: David is said to have had "three warriors", later "thirty chiefs went down to meet David at the cave of Adulum", Gideon chose "three hundred men who lapped water with their tongues" to fight the Midianites, Saul chose "3 thousand men" to fight the Phillistines - who themselves had "thirty thousand chariots", and finally David as King later chose 30,000 Israelite men to fight the Phillistines. The number 4 was thought to be that of "justice and order", for example - the four directions, the four winds, etc. The number 6, the first so-called perfect number, also represented Creation, according to Hellinistic Jewish 1st century A.D. scholars, because God created earth & man in 6 days. They claimed that this time was not to be viewed as just "how long the job took", but rather how long God chose to do the creation in because this number was perfect. St. Augustine went along with this centuries later. All pretty fascinating stuff, and it makes me wonder if a lot of this biblical notion of numbers might be more linked to other ancient religions than we think today. James |
james_woods
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 19:51:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() TexasPost 2375 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
OH, and BTW, Beta Male - yes of course I remember LOGO. My first computer was a 1975 Altair 8800 with the switches, so I was machine language only back then. But I did later get a copy of LISP ( a real horror of a language, IMHO, but popular with the computer science guys and AI enthusiasts at the time ). And then, on to the CPM machines and the old Borland Pascal, and so on. Still a computer systems architect today, working in C++ now though. |
wha happened?
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 20:21:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() CaliforniaPost 1684 of 11251 Since 10/2/2004 |
Where's Obves when u need him
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 20:23:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() Post 174 of 305 Since 7/29/2005 |
i was actually more worried about JCanon showing up.
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wha happened?
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 20:25:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() CaliforniaPost 1686 of 11251 Since 10/2/2004 |
yep, and then your thread gets buried under 15 pages of "I am the naked Messiah"
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Amha·â€™aret
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Wed, 06 Aug 2008 20:48:00 GMT
(8/6/2008)
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![]() Post 59 of 458 Since 7/17/2008 |
Aren't pentagrams "demonic"? I'm sure I remember my dub parents telling me to throw out a pair of earings because they had pentagrams on them. The sacrifices I made for that religion... *sighs* |
james_woods
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Re: Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Thu, 07 Aug 2008 14:42:00 GMT
(8/7/2008)
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![]() TexasPost 2376 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
Aren't pentagrams "demonic"? I'm sure I remember my dub parents telling me to throw out a pair of earings because they had pentagrams on them. The sacrifices I made for that religion... *sighs* It is certainly the universal symbol for the stars in the sky - ask any kid, including a JW, to draw a star and they will draw you a 5 sided pentagram. We talk about "five-star restaurants", "five-star movies", and so on - the more stars the better. There was even a 5-star General as a military rank. Philosophers sometimes tell you to "reach for the stars". For me, the good-looking factory wheels on my Ferrari Testarossa are made in a star pattern (the spokes inside the circular rim). Mine has only the one centerlock bolt in the middle to attach the wheel, but later models (and almost all other cars now, except the smallest econoboxes) attach their wheels with five lugnuts arranged in a pentagon shape. Important companies with much more than demonism or wicca on their PR minds have chosen this figure as a symbol - Chrysler, Texaco, etc. The earliest pentagrams seem to have come from around 4000 years B.C. in Mesopotamia, and they have been around ever since. They have not exactly taken much heat over this, unlike Proctor & Gamble with their "man in the moon". Sometimes a geometric shape is just a geometric shape, right? |
jaguarbass
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Fri, 08 Aug 2008 01:29:00 GMT
(8/8/2008)
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![]() FloridaPost 4940 of 7179 Since 8/15/2006 |
Religion. 12 apostles of the son. 12 months movements of the earth around the sun. |
dorayakii
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Fri, 08 Aug 2008 10:58:00 GMT
(8/8/2008)
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![]() Post 583 of 652 Since 6/10/2004 |
144 is the smallest number with exactly 15 divisors. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 12, 16, 18, 24, 36, 48, 72, 144... It is the 12th number of the Fibonacci sequence: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144... Roman numeral - CXLIV It is a dozen dozens (aka. a gross)... and is the telephone number for directory enquiries in Israel. In bases other than 10, the number 666 it doesn't look so special (or scary). Roman numeral - DCLXVI It is a member of the Indices of prime Padovan sequence, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 14, 19, 30, 37, 84, 128, 469, 666, 1262, 1573, 2003, 2210... The Roman numeral representation of the number 666 (DCLXVI: 500 + 100 + 50 + 10 + 5 + 1) uses each of the Roman numeral symbols with values under 1,000 once , occurring in descending order of their respective values. A alpha = 1 The fear of the number 666 is called "hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia". |
james_woods
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Re: Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Fri, 08 Aug 2008 15:37:00 GMT
(8/8/2008)
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![]() TexasPost 2389 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
The square of the "golden ratio number" 1.6180339887...(continuing fraction, like - forever) is : get this... 2.6180338887. So it's square is itself plus one. Now, check this out - the reciprocal of this number - I.E. = 1/1.6180339887 = 0.618033987... CONTINUTING FRACTION!!!. This is the only number that has this unique quality - you can square it by just adding one. You can obtain the reciprocal by just subtracting one. This is the number of the Fibonacci series..the ultimate ratio between two of the members. This is the number of the pentagon, the ratio of the longest versus the shortest sides. This is not mysticism...this is just a very special number. In my thinking, it is much closer to God than the number 1914, or the one 1975. |
james_woods
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Tue, 12 Oct 2010 20:53:00 GMT
(10/12/2010)
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![]() TexasPost 2916 of 15810 Since 10/26/2005 |
THANK YOU SYLVIA for bringing this thread back from the dead. I did learn this from the Fermat's Theorem book up at the cabin - Pythagoras did not invent the pythagoran theorem (exactly in that way). The X^2 + Y^2 = Z^2 was already known for years before his time. What he did was PROVE MATHEMATICALLY that this formula was true for all the infinity of possible right triangles. See everyone in the morning - James |
streets76
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Re: Fibonacci numbers and 144,000
posted Tue, 12 Oct 2010 21:11:00 GMT
(10/12/2010)
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![]() Post 227 of 476 Since 1/18/2006 |
Two things (I think) I know. 1. Everything is mathmatical. 2. Evolution explains everything. (That only took me 50+ years!)
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