The Geometric Perfection of Phi
As Discovered at Stonehenge

 

Ahatmose April 17, 2021 11:01AM

 

I have made some bold claims. Claim # 1 is that The Romans got their inspiration for their geometric beauty in architecture after their incursions into Britannia. I have claimed that it was not from Greece they got this but only after their travels to Britain. The second claim I have made is that placed in a tomb of a First Dynasty nobleman is an object that shows the Phi proportions perfectly. Now the final beautiful proof of all of this coming from the far distant past and surviving through the ages waiting, waiting for someone to unlock it's d secrets. This I think I have done. The geometry is stunning. It is beyond belief that this geometry has been encoded into a site that has been studied to death but has been missed.

May I present THE BEAUTY THAT IS STONEHENGE



I had become convinced that the phi proportions had been a gift from The Gods as far back as Sumerian times and so set out systematically to see if I could prove this theory. To that end, luckily having several books on Stonehenge in my library I was able to come up with this drawing as proof of Phi in it's construction. With recent discoveries however I was able to go much deeper into the geometry of this amazing site and have come up with what I think has to be the most stunning discovery I have ever made, Bold statement to be sure but you be the judge if I am too bold in my statements.

The first image will show how I figured out that the phi proportions were incorporated into Stonehenge, This should have been enough but there was so much more to be discovered.

Diagram #1 - Proof of Phi at Stonehenge




Amazing to be sure. I then decided, as I had been doing today to make things a bit clearer by using colors.

Here is that image:



But then I saw something else, something that I could see even before I had drawn the lines. this is a diagram for the ages. (Too bad I discovered it, it will go unnoticed I fear)

And now the proof of all my work on Phi ... in all it's glory.



Well not quite. Perhaps it will be more recognizable now with recent threads





db

Amen