|
1012.30
Indestructibility of Tetrahedron: We have here a pumping
model of the
vector equilibrium. It consists only of the vector lines
of the system formed by 12
uniradius spheres closest packed around one sphere of
the same radius. The
interconnecting lines between those 13 spheres produce
the pumping vector equilibrium
model's skeleton frame. We have also removed the vector
equilibrium's 12 internal double
radii to permit the vector equilibrium system to contract;
thus we have for the moment
removed its nuclear sphere. Every vector equilibrium
has eight tetrahedra with 12 common
edges, a common central vertex, and 12 common exterior
vertexes. Each tetrahedron of
the eight has four planes that are parallel to the corresponding
four planes of the other
seven. Each of the vector equilibrium's eight tetrahedra
has an external face perpendicular
at its center to a radius developed outwardly from the
nucleus. Each of the eight external
triangular faces is interconnected flexibly at each
of its three comers to one other of the
eight triangles. It is found that the whole vector equilibrium
external-vector framework
can contract symmetrically, with the four pairs of the
eight external triangles moving
nontorquingly toward one another's opposite triangle,
which also means toward their
common nucleus. As they do so, each of the four pairs
of exterior triangles approaches its
opposite. When the eight separate but synchronously
contracting tetrahedra diminish in
size to no size at all, then all eight planes of the
eight triangles pass congruently through
the same nuclear center at the same time to form the
four planes of the vector equilibrium.
(See Sec. 623.)
|
|
1012.37
Reviewing the same phenomenon once again, we make further
discovery of
the utter interrelatedness of synergetic accommodation,
as we find the half-spin "tepee"
twist also turning the tetrahedron inside out. (See
Sec.
621.20.) Here we find that the
vector equilibrium, or the vector equilibrium's eight
tetrahedra's external vertexes, all
converged toward one another only to suddenly describe
four half-great-circle spins as
they each turned themselves inside out just before the
convergence: thus accomplishing
sizeless invisibility without ever coming into contact.
Eternal interval is conserved. Thus
the paradox of particle discontinuity and wave continuity
is conceptually reconciled. (See
Sec.
973.30.)
|
1013.00
Geometrical Function of Nine
|
1013.10
Unity as Two: Triangle as One White Triangle and One
Black Triangle
|
|
1013.13
Polarity is inherent in congruence.
|
|
1013.14
Every sphere has a concave inside and a convex outside.
Convex and
concave are not the same: concave reflectors concentrate
energy; radiation and convex
mirrors diffuse the radiant energy.
|
|
1013.15
Unity is plural and at minimum two. Unity does not
mean the number one.
One does not and cannot exist by itself.
|
|
1013.20
Complementarity and Parity
|
|
1013.30
Eight Three-petaled Tetrahedral Flower Buds
|
|
1013.40
Nine Schematic Aspects of the Tetrahedron
|
|
1013.41
Every tetrahedron, every prime structural system in
Universe, has nine
separate and unique states of existence: four positive,
four negative, plus one schematic
unfolded nothingness, unfolded to an infinite, planar,
neither-one-nor-the-other,
equilibrious state. These manifest the same schematic
"game" setups as that of physics'
quantum mechanics. Quantum mechanics provides for four
positive and four negative
quanta as we go from a central nothingness equilibrium
to first one, then two, then three,
then four high-frequency, regenerated, alternate, equiintegrity,
tetrahedral quanta. Each of
the eight tetrahedral quanta also has eight invisible
counterparts. (See Figs.
1012.14A-B, and
1012.15.)
|
|
1013.50
Visible and Invisible Tetrahedral Arrays
|
|
1013.52
Invisible But Thinkable: Metaphysical
|
|
1013.60
Quantum Jump Model
|
|
1013.61
All of the triangularly petaled tetrahedra may have
their 60-degree corners
partially open and pointing out from their bases like
an opening tulip bud. We may take
any two of the 60-degree petaled tetrahedra and hold
them opposite one another while
rotating one of them in a 60-degree turn, which precesses
it axially at 60 degrees, thus
pointing its triangular petals toward the other's 60-degree
openings. If we bring them
together edge to edge, we will produce an octahedron.
(Compare Sec.
1033.73.)
|
|
1013.62
The octahedron thus produced has a volume of four tetrahedra.
Each of the
separate tetrahedra had one energy quantum unit. We
now see how one quantum and one
quantum may be geometrically joined to produce four
quanta. Another quantum jump is
demonstrated.
|
|
1013.63
Each of the two tetrahedra combining to make the octahedron
can consist of
the eight unique combinations of the black and the white
triangular faces and their four
red, green, yellow, and blue center dots. This means
that we have an octahedron of eight
black triangles, one of eight white, and one of four
white plus four black, and that the
alternation of the four different color dots into all
the possible combinations of eight
produces four times
26__which is the 104 possible combinations.
|
|
1013.64
Where N = 8 and there are four sets of 8, the formula
for the number of
combinations is:
|
| Next Section: 1020.00 |