Thursday, November 26, 2015

Numerology, Numbers, and Dreams


Current numerology presently contains aspects of a variety of ancient societies and teachers, including Babylonia, astrological theory from Hellenistic Alexandria, early Christian enchantment, early Gnostics, the Hebrew arrangement of the Kabbalah, The Hindu Vedas, the Chinese Circle of the Dead, the Egyptian Book of the Masters of the Secret House (The Book of the Dead) and, obviously, Pythagoras. 

Pythagoras and other scholars of the time trusted numbers were the universal language given to us by the creator as confirmation of reality. Many mathematicians, physicists and other researchers still trust this today. Pythagoras trusted that everything had numerical relationships and it was up to the brain to search out and investigate the mysteries of these relationships or have them revealed to us by awesome grace. 

Today, numerology is never again thought about a part of mathematics and is considered by most researchers as psuedomathematics or pseudoscience. However, there are numerological-type theories now and then labeled "numerology." The best known example of such a case includes the coincidental resemblance of certain large numbers. These numerical happenstances allude to such quantities as the ratio of the age of the universe to the atomic unit of time, the quantity of electrons in the universe, and the distinction in qualities between gravity and the electric power for the electron and proton. Large number co-occurrences keep on fascinating many mathematical physicists. 

The revelation of atomic triads (dealing with components primarily in the same gathering or section of the occasional table) was viewed as a type of numerology, and ultimately prompted the development of the intermittent table. Here the atomic weight of the lightest component and the heaviest are summed, and averaged, and the average is observed to be near that of the intermediate weight component. This didn't work with each triplet in the same gathering, however worked often enough to allow others to create generalizations. 

Because there are so many diverse numerological frameworks, strategies for calculating or deciding meaning, and even applications for numerology, there has never been a set, or agreed upon, definition or interpretation for an explicit number or letter. This makes understanding the numbers in our dreams more troublesome yet not feasible. On the positive side, there are some normal and largely agreed upon interpretations which include: 



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