840.00
Foldability of Four Great Circles of Vector Equilibrium
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841.00
Foldability Sequence
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841.11
Using the method of establishing perpendiculars produced
by the
overlapping of unit-radius circles in the first instance
of the Greeks' exclusively one-planar
initiation of their geometry (see Illus.
455.11), a
diameter PP' perpendicular to the first
straightedge constructed diameter DD' can be constructed.
If we now fold the paper
circles around DD' and PP', it will be found that every
time the circles are folded, the
points where the perpendicular to that diameter intercept
the perimeter are inherently
congruent with the same perpendicular's diametrically
opposite end.
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841.13
We could also have constructed the same sphere by
keeping point A of the
dividers at one locus in Universe and swinging point
B in a multiplicity of directions
around A (see Illus.
841.15
). We now know that every
point on the surface of an
approximate sphere is equidistant from the same center.
We can now move point A of the
dividers from the center of the constructed sphere to
any point on the surface of the
sphere, but preferably to point P perpendicular to an
equatorially described plane as in
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841.11 and 841.12 . And we can swing the free point B to strike a circle on the surface of the sphere around point P. Every point in the spherical surface circle scribed by B is equidistant chordally from A, which is pivotally located at P, that is, as an apparently straight line from A passing into and through the inside of the spherical surface to emerge again exactly in the surface circle struck by B, which unitary chordal distance is, by construction, the same length as the radius of the sphere, for the opening of our divider's ends with which we constructed the sphere was the same when striking the surface circle around surface point A. |
![]() Fig. 841.15A ![]() Fig. 841.15B |
841.15
We now take any point, J, on the spherical surface
circle scribed by the
divider's point B around its rotated point at P. We
now know that K is equidistant
chordally from P and from the center of the sphere.
With point A of our dividers on J, we
strike point K on the same surface circle as J, which
makes J equidistant from K, P, and X,
the center of the sphere. Now we know by construction
integrity that the spherical radii
XJ, XK, and XP are the same length as one another and
as the spherical chords PK, JK,
and JP. These six equilength lines interlink the four
points X, P, J, and K to form the
regular equiedged tetrahedron. We now take our straightedge
and run it chordally from
point J to another point on the same surface circle
on which JK and K are situated, but
diametrically opposite K. This diametric positioning
is attained by having the chord-
describing straightedge run inwardly of the sphere and
pass through the axis PP',
emerging from the sphere at the surface-greatcircle
point R. With point A of the dividers
on point R of the surface circle__on which also lies
diametrically point K__we swing point
B of the dividers to strike point S also on the same
spherical surface circle around P, on
which now lie also the points J, K and R, with points
diametrically opposite J, as is known
by construction derived information. Points R, S, P,
and X now describe another regular
tetrahedron equiedged with tetrahedron JKPX; there is
one common edge, PX, of both
tetrahedra. PX is the radius of the spherical, octahedrally
constructed sphere on whose
surface the circle was struck around one of its three
perpendicularly intersectioned axes,
and the three planes through them intersect congruently
with the three axes by
construction. PX is perpendicular to the equatorial
plane passing through W, Y, W', Y' of
the spherical octahedron's three axes PP', WW', and
YY'.
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![]() Fig. 841.22 |
841.22
Each of these paired bow-tie assemblies, the orange-green
insiders and the
violet-white insiders, may now be fastened bottom-to-bottom
to each other at the four
external fold ends of the fold cross on their bottoms,
with those radial crosses inherently
congruent. This will reestablish and manifest each of
the four original circles of paper, for
when assembled symmetrically around their common center,
they will be seen to be
constituted of four great circles intersecting each
other through a common center in such a
manner that only two circular planes come together at
any other than their common center
point and in such a manner that each great circle is
divided entirely into six equilateral
triangular areas, with all of the 12 radii of the system
equilengthed to the 24
circumferential chords of the assembly. Inasmuch as
each of the 12 radii is shared by two
great circle planes, but their 24 external chords are
independent of the others, the seeming
loss of 12 radii of the original 24 is accounted for
by the 12 sets of congruent pairs of radii
of the respective four hexagonally subdivided great
circles. This omniequal line and angle
assembly, which is called the vector equilibrium, and
its radii-chord vectors accommodate
rationally and simultaneously all the angular and linear
acceleration forces of physical
Universe experiences.
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![]() Fig. 841.30 |
841.30
Trisection by Inherent Axial Spin of Systems
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842.00
Generation of Bow Ties
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842.06
This sixness corresponds to our six quanta: our six
vectors that make one
quantum.
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| Next Chapter: 900.00 |