I am a mechanical engineer who worked for 15 years at the Defence Research & Development Laboratory (DRDL) in Hyderabad. There, I developed the Trishul and Akash missile airframes and Titanium Airbottles…
The Mystical Language of Numbers
The Mystical Language of Numbers
Is there an occult, divine or mystical relationship between a number and one or more coinciding events? In ancient Greece, Pythagoras propagated the idea that reality at the deepest level is essentially mathematical. He and many after him believed that a system of principles existed behind numbers. One of his most basic notions revolves around the symbolism and beauty associated with the Divine Proportion, and conversely, some numbers were considered inauspicious and representing beasts.
Pythagoras found harmony in numbers. Everything started with a centre, and the creation was a circle around it. A circle is, therefore, number 1. The circle is the most stable: the First, the Essence, the Foundation, the Monad, the Unity, representing God and the good. The number 1 is the seed of a tree, and all other numbers grow out of it. Number 1 preserves the identity of every other number or anything it encounters.Whether multiplied or divided by number 1, all numbers remain unchanged.
For ‘one to become many’, the one contemplating upon itselfcreated its reflection. That which connects the two centres of the circles becomes a line. The line represented two of one – the dyad – subject and object, bhakta and bhagwan, teacher and student, father and son, lover and beloved – numbers 1 and 2 are forever entwined. Then, three lines made a triangle – joining the centres of two circles and their intersecting points.
The triangle contains the smallest area within the greater perimeter. Number 3 is the only number equal to the sum and product of the previous numbers. A triangle is a sign of stability and represents strength. The triad, number 3, is family and organisation, and besides stability, it also signifies prudence and purity. There is Trinity, Tridev, Trishul, and Triveni.
When a circle was drawn along a line that connects the two centres, the perfect shape of a square – a tetrad – emergedwithin the circle. A square stands for democracy, equality and completion. There are four seasons for ages in a person’s life and four directions.
All the previous numerical symbols – the monad’s point, the dyad’s line, the triad’s surface, and the tetrad’s three-dimensional volume – created the pentad – the symbol of life itself – five fingers, five toes, five elements – water, earth, air, fire, and space. The five-pointed stars represent the divine; when the point is directed downwards, it is a sign of Satan.
The hexagram can be formed by joining two inverted triangles, considered a symbol of the divine origin of mankind. Number 6 is, therefore, associated with harmony, love and responsibility. It is also considered for service and compassion.
A centred hexagram gives the number 7. As a circle can never be divided into seven equal parts, 7 is not a divisor of the 360degrees that make a circle; it is considered inconsistent. God carried out Creation in 6 days, and the 7th was the day of rest, or repositioning in the centre. No wonder 7 is considered to represent mysteries and reflections. There are seven sages – Sapta Rishis and Seven Seas.
Number 8 is associated with a cube, a solid formed by the union of six equal squares. The number 8 is also represented by a wheel with 8 branches. The Octagram is made of two tilted squares, and the number 8 is associated with success and material abundance.
A centred octagram gives the number 9. It is created by a triangle to each arm of a hexagon. Being the last number, 9 is an end-of-cycle number – the end of something and the beginning of something new – a mark of completion, conclusion and resolution. It is generally associated withuniversality and altruism. No wonder it is called the number of the alchemists.
My friend Kiran Raju, a computer scientist in the AI business, presented to me The Complete Book of Numerology: Discovering the Inner Self by British teacher David Phillips. It is a book based on observations and claims no science. Dealing with deep data, Kiran accepts ancient sciences like Numerology, Ayurveda, and Vastu. They may not pass the test of modern science based on observation and evidence. Still, science still needs to provide reasons for the evidence of several apparent things like consciences, chance, and the general unpredictability of phenomena; he feels the maturity of AI will validate most of these ancient sciences.
I read the book not as a sceptic but with faith. The birth date is converted into a life chart of nine numbers. The birth date DD/MM/YYYY numbers are placed on a chart of two vertical lines crossing over two horizontal lines, like a noughts-and-crosses layout. Each number – 1 to 9 – has given a position – the first column is 1/2/3, the second 4/5/6, and the third 6/7/8, rising bottom upwards. Consequently, the first row is 3/4/7, the second is 2/5/8, and the third is 1/4/7. Phillips called the first row indicative of the mind, the second, the soul and the third, the body.
The numbers in the birthdate occupy their assigned place, or the position of a number remains vacant. On my birthday – February 10, 1955, for example – 1 and 5 come twice, and there are no numbers 3, 4, 6, 7 and 8. So, the first row in my chart turns out to be x/x/9, the second row is 2/55/x, and the third is 11/x/x. This leads to different interpretations, which are purely speculative, and no one knows if they are supported by which observations and by whom. Number 9 in my first row explains my idealism, number 2 and the two fives in the middle row, driving intensity, and two 1s in the bottom line show my balanced self-expression. I can vouch for their accuracy in the late phase of my life now. Are all the people born on the same day? No, they are all different and are given different names.
Each number can be seen hidden in names, in nature and in events, making them auspicious, inauspicious, lucky, unlucky, favourable, or unfavourable, seeded with opportunities or bringing calamities. Most importantly, matching or conflicting. In Indian and Chaldean systems, the number 9 is not assigned to any letter in the English alphabet. So as we go numbering letters, A, I, Q, J, and Y are 1; B, K, and R are 2; C, G, L and S are 3; D, M, and T are 4; E, H, N and X are 5; F, U, V and W are 6; O and Z are 7; P and W are 8. So, my name, Arun Tiwari is 6. APJ Abdul Kalam is 6. No wonder he found me resonating with his sense of service and compassion. Our book Wings of Fire is 4, a book of wholeness and completion.
The book also presents the concept of a life pyramid. The numbers in the birth date form a pyramid which gives a pattern of life. An example of the long life of the British monarch Queen Elizabeth is cited. I made my pyramid out of the month, date, and year of my birth. It shows 1986, 1995, 2004, 2013, and 2022 as significant years that shaped my life. Undoubtedly, I was appointed Project Manager in the Akash Missile Project in 1986, developed the Coronary Stent in 1995, survived a cardiac arrest in 2004, had to close an Indo-US venture in 2013, and again survived health crises in 2022. Number 3 for 1986, 1995 and 2004 indicated directions toward intellectual pursuits, which means new beginnings. After 2004, the number 6 in 2013 brought awakening, and 4 in 2022 marked a period of health loss rather than gain.
What is random for an ignorant observer can be strictly following an exact intelligent pattern. All our life decisions and outcomes can be viewed as functions and accumulated as our personal history, regardless of their characteristics. Similar to the Human Genome Project, which unlocked the secrets of our genetic makeup and led to advancements in medicine and biology, this approach can serve as an initial grounding source to explore whether our decisions influence the fate of others and whether numbers could be the signposts towards the ultimate destination. Seeing numbers behind things, people can take a lot of subjectivity out of the equation and make decisions rationally rather than egotistically.
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