|
609.00
Instability of Polyhedra from Polygons of More Than
Three Sides
|
![]() Fig. 609.01 |
609.01
Any polygon with more than three sides is unstable.
Only the triangle is
inherently stable. Any polyhedron bounded by polygonal
faces with more than three sides
is unstable. Only polyhedra bounded by triangular faces
are inherently stable.
|
|
610.01
By structure, we mean a self-stabilizing pattern.
The triangle is the only self-
stabilizing polygon.
|
|
610.02
By structure, we mean omnitriangulated. The triangle
is the only structure.
Unless it is self-regeneratively stabilized, it is not
a structure.
|
|
610.10
Structural Functions
|
|
610.12
If we want to have a structure, we have to have triangles.
To have a
structural system requires a minimum of four triangles.
The tetrahedron is the simplest
structure.
|
|
610.13
Every triangle has two faces: obverse and reverse.
Every structural system
has omni-intertriangulated division of Universe into
insideness and outsideness.
|
![]() Fig. 610.20 |
610.20
Omnitriangular Symmetry: Three Prime Structural Systems
|
|
610.21
There are three types of omnitriangular, symmetrical
structural systems. We
can have three triangles around each vertex; a tetrahedron.
Or we can have four triangles
around each vertex; the octahedron. Finally we can have
five triangles around each vertex;
the icosahedron. (See Secs.
532.40,
610.20,
724,
1010.20,
1011.30 and
1031.13.)
|
|
610.22
The tetrahedron, octahedron, and icosahedron are made
up, respectively, of
one, two, and five pairs of positively and negatively
functioning open triangles.
|
|
610.23
We cannot have six symmetrical or equiangular triangles
around each vertex
because the angles add up to 360 degrees-thus forming
an infinite edgeless plane. The
system with six equiangular triangles "flat out" around
each vertex never comes back upon
itself. It can have no withinness or withoutness. It
cannot be constructed with pairs of
positively and negatively functioning open triangles.
In order to have a system, it must
return upon itself in all directions.
|
|
610.24
Limit Cases: Macro, Medio, and Micro: Considered geometrically,
triangles are the only self-stabilizing polygonal patterns__ergo,
only triangles are
structurally stable. Since we cannot construct a polyhedral
system of only two triangles
around each corner (because a polyhedral system must
by definition have an insideness
and an outsideness in order definitively and closingly
to separate the Universe into
macrocosm and microcosm), and since we cannot have six
equilateral triangles around
each vertex of a polyhedral system (for each of the
six would themselves separate out
from the others to form flat planes and could not close
back to join one another to
separate Universe definitively into macrocosm and microcosm)__ergo,
the tetrahedron,
octahedron, and icosahedron constitute the minimum,
middle, and maximum cases of
omnitriangulated__ergo, stabilized__structural subdividings
of Universe into macro,
medio, and micro Universe divisions.
|
|
610.30
Structural Harmonics
|
|
610.31
The conceptual sequence in the left column of Fig.
610.20
illustrates the
basic octave behavior of structural transformations.
The first three figures__tetra, octa,
icosa__represent the positive outside-out set of primitive
structural systems. Three
equiangular triangles around each corner add to tetra;
four around each corner add to
octa; five around each corner add to icosa; but six
60-degree angles around each corner
add to 360 degrees; ergo, produce an infinitely extendible
plane; ergo, fail to return upon
themselves embracingly to produce a system's insideness
and outsideness; ergo, thus act
as the zerophase of maximum evolution changing to the
involution phase of maximum
nothingness. As the transformation sequence changes
from divergent evolution to
convergent involution, from five, then four, then three
equiangular triangles around each
corner, it thereby produces successively the inside-out
icosa, octa, and tetra, until the
convergent involutional contraction attains the phase
of maximum nothingness. At the
minimum zero bottom of the sequence the inside-out tetra
revolves outside-out to
minimum somethingness of tetravolume I as the transformation
diverges expansively to the
maximum vector-equilibrium somethingness of tetravolume
20, thereafter attaining
maximum nothingness and evolution-to-involution conversion.
(See Sec.
1033.)
|
|
610.32
At six-vector hexagonality we have the vector equilibrium
at maximum zero
evolution-to-involution conversion.
|
|
610.33
The minimum zero tetrahedron with which the series
commences repeats
itself beneath the bottom figure to permit the accomplishment
of octave harmony at
minimum zero conversion whose terminal nothingnesses
accommodate the overlapping
interlinkages of the octave terminals: thus do-remi-fa-solla-ti
do.
|
|
611.00
Structural Quanta
|
|
611.01
If the system's openings are all triangulated, it
is structured with minimum
effort. There are only three possible omnisymmetrical,
omnitriangulated, least-effort
structural systems in nature. They are the tetrahedron,
octahedron, and icosahedron. When
their edges are all equal in length, the volumes of
these three structures are, respectively,
one, requiring one structural quantum; four, requiring
two structural quanta; and 18.51,
requiring five structural quanta. Six edge vectors equal
one minimum-structural system: 6
edge vectors = 1 structural quantum.
|
|
611.02
Six edge vectors = one tetrahedron. One tetrahedron=one
structural
quantum.
1 Tetrahedron (volume 1) = 6 edge vectors = 1 structural quantum; 1 Octahedron (volume 4) = 12 edge vectors = 2 structural quanta; 1 Icosahedron (volume 18.51) =30 edge vectors =5 structural quanta. Therefore: with tetrahedron, 1 structural quantum provides 1 unit of volume; with octahedron, 1 structural quantum provides 2 units of volume; with icosahedron, 1 structural quantum provides 3.7 units of volume. |
|
612.00
ubtriangulation: Icosahedron
|
|
612.01
Of the three fundamental structures, the tetrahedron
contains the most
surface and the most structural quanta per volume; it
is therefore the strongest structure
per unit of volume. On the other hand, the icosahedron
provides the most volume with the
least surface and least structural quanta per units
of volume and, though least strong, it is
structurally stable and gives therefore the most efficient
volume per units of invested
structural quanta.
|
|
612.10
Units of Environment Control: The tetrahedron gives
one unit of
environment control per structural quantum. The octahedron
gives two units of
environment control per structural quantum. The icosahedron
gives 3.7 units of
environment control per structural quantum.
|
![]() Fig. 612.11 |
612.11
That is the reason for the employment of the triangulated
icosahedron as the
most efficient fundamental volume-controlling device
of nature. This is the way I
developed the multifrequency-modulated icosahedron and
geodesic structuring. This is
probably the same reason that nature used the multifrequency-modulated
icosahedron for
the protein shells of the viruses to house most efficiently
and safely all the DNA-RNA
genetic code design control of all biological species
development. I decided also to obtain
high local strength on the icosahedron by subtriangulating
its 20 basic Icosa LCD
spherical triangles with locally superimposed tetrahedra,
i.e., an octahedron-tetrahedron
truss, which would take highly concentrated local loads
or impacts with minimum effort
while the surrounding rings of triangles would swiftly
distribute and diminishingly inhibit
the outward waves of stress from the point of concentrated
loading. I had also discovered
the foregoing structural mathematics of structural quanta
topology and reduced it to
demonstrated geodesic dome practice before the virologists
discovered that the viruses
were using geodesic spheres for their protein shell
structuring. (See Sec.
901.)
|
| Next Section: 613.00 |