Sacred Geometry Oracle - J.Greer
Sacred Geometry Oracle - J.Greer
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GEOMETRIC
TRANSFORMATION
MN
55 164-0383. U.S.A'.
M,rrry,
FOR
rcply coupon.
r's,rrt lr rr s lritvt' wcbsites with additional inforr'r. l rot r ror t' i r li rrrnirtion, please visit our website:
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//www. llowellyn.com
Llewellyn Publications
St. Paul, Minnesota
Confents
litr (laornetric Transformation o
2002 by lohn Michael Greer. All rights rescrvcd. No pirrt of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever,
incltrcling lutcrnct usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Publications except in thc case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Tcchniqucs
2:The Point: 19
3 : The Line:23
First Eclition
Second Printing,2005
4 : The Circle:27
5 : The Spiral : 31
6 : The Ellipse : 35
7 :TheVesica Piscis:39
Greer.-lst
ed.
P. cm'
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 0-7387-0051-7
9 : The Hexagram:51
33.3'33-dc2l
2001046292
12 : The Right
Tiiangle:
71
13 : The Square: 77
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ry lnt(
l6
1'7
The Tetrahedron : 93
The Octahedron: 99
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(!
he Third Circle
23 The Double Square: 141
24
25
26
27
28
The Pentagram:
Introduction to the
l7I
29
3T :
Index:
231
in
'l'lrt'lirrglislrwortl "lgt.onr('lty"(()t)l(.slrrrnt
llrt,(;t(,(,1({(,(,,r,(,ltitt,lil
critf ly "cirrllr rncilsure nl('nt" (lrrrrrr.qr,, "t'lrr-tlr," itrrr.l tttt,lrrttt,',rrtcasrr
rc").
thc'arrcicrrtorigirrs ol'gcornctry, whcu the art was
usccl ttl lay or-rt pattcrns on thc eartlr in order to Ineasure fields and
es_
tablish the ground plans tbr sacred structures.
At that time, all geometry was sacred, for two reasons. on the one
hand, the Earth itself was understood as a living and holy being, and
those who measured it and patterned it recognized their responsibility as mediators between the Earth and the people. Historically we can
'l'lris poirrts
on the other hand, it was recog nized early on that geometry itself
offered pathways into the subtle realm of meaning and spirit that we
call sacred. The play of geometric form obeys laws that unfold from
the nature of experienced reality itself, laws that are not subject to
human whims or prejudices. Mastery of those laws provided knowledgeable individuals with tools to reshape the world, both on a physical
level-for
geometry was the foundation of much of ancient architecture and technology-and on subtler levels as well.
our
bircl< ro
culture's forgetfulness
lt'.
u tt
Still,
c()lnnr()r) thrcurl
ol
siorrs
o1-
the practice of their art. AII of them recognized that beauty and meaning come from the presence of the living spirit in form and matter,
and all of them saw clearly that this comes through the creative mind
(icornctry was only one of a group of ancient arts wi[h the sam
broacl purpose and approach, and most of the cultures that made us
of sacred geometry drew on these other arts as well. In the Westerr
world, from Greek times to the end of the Renaissance, these arts wer
united as the quadrivium or "Four Ways" of arithmetic, geometrl
music, and astronomy.
thi
divination-that is
as a means of tapping into the subtle patterns of existence to gain in
sight into past, present, and future events. Sacred geometry has an
cient connections with the realm of prophecy and divination, reach
ancient tradition, designed to be used as a way of
ing back to the prehistoric stone circles where priests and priestesser
watched the skies for portents.
Turning traditional wisdom into a set of divining cards is not a nev
idea. An old legend claims that the tarot deck came into being wher
priests of an ancient civilization sought ways to transmit their spiritu
ir rt'rrtling
willr
rrrirrr
lt'vt'rst'tl cirrtls isrr't "birtl"; it sirrrply nlcilns thirt tlrc (lucrcnt (tlrc pcl'
sort lirr whorn the rcacling is clone) taces a series of challenges-or, tr
szry tlre same thing in different words, a series of opportunities.
The divinatory meanings for the cards are given in the followin
her
aren't hard and fast rules for interpretation. Rather, they're sugges
tions and hints meant to spur your own intuitive abilities and guid
you to a personal sense of the meaning of each card. Eventually, if yor
work with the Oracle and pay attention to the messages it gives you
you'll develop your own understanding of the cards, and this is exact
ly as it should be. Staying rigidly fixated on the literal meaning of th
texts that follow is like trying to jump off a diving board and han;
onto it at the same time, and the best advice is the same in either case
let go!
The Exercises
Each card also comes
with
the pages that follow. The prospect of actually doing sacred geome
try-rather than just reading about it, thinking about it, or looking a
diagrams that make use of
it should
be said first of
that you don't have to do the exercises in order to use the Oracle fo
divination.
school, with a little yellow pencil that clips to one side, is fine). You
can get all ofthese in the school supplies section ofyour local drug-
store for a few dollars. These three things, along with a supply of unlined paper, will be all you'll need for most of the geometric exercises
The Meditotions
tlran simply using the Oracle for divination, carrying out the exercises
is cssential. Trying to learn sacred geometry without drawing diagrams in the traditional way is like trying to become a musician without ever picking up an instrument.
.
.
a length
of string;
bulletin boards;
.
.
.
.
Each of the cards also has a meditation associated with it. Again, a
with the geometric exercise, it should be said right at the beginninl
that you don't need to do the meditations to used the Sacred Geome
try Oracle for divination-but again, as with the exercises, those wh<
venture into this phase of the system will be rewarded by deeper in
sights into the cards, as well as a solid introduction to the practice o
Western meditation.
It's not often realized that the Western world has meditation tradi.
tions of its own, and that these are different from the systems of India
clear tape;
tral difference.
This lies in the attitudes of these different systems toward tht
thinking mind. In the East, most systems of meditation teach the stu
dent to stop the thinking process altogether, by repeating mantrar
(special patterns of spoken sound), constructing complex symbolir
visualizations, or concentrating on thought-stopping paradoxes sucl
as the koans of Zen.
tt'rrliorr t() y()ur lrrt'rrllr, lrlcirtlrirrg irr ;rrrtl orrt slowly, cvcrrly, irrrrl lrrlly.
ll you wislt, rt trrtdititlrral [rrcatlrirrg cxcrcisc callccl the F'ourlirl
The counts should all be at the same pace, and the breath should
held in or out with the muscles of the chest and diaphragm, not
After you've paid attention to your breathing for perhaps five mir
utes, turn your attention to the subject of the meditation. Each of th
meditations given in this book will give you specific instructions fc
how to go on from there. In every case, though, keep your mind fc
cused on the subject, and
if it strays-as it will,
firstattention t
especially at
The date, the time, the length of the session, the subject on which yo
were meditating, and any results or conclusions you may have reache
against the back of the chair. Your feet should be flat on the floor, and
the floor, and your lower legs vertical from knee to ankle. Straighten
your back without stiffening it, and hold your head upright, as though
you were balancing something on it. Your hands should rest palms-
down on your thighs, and your elbows should be against your sides.
This is the standard Western posture for meditation.
Once you've settled into your position, consciously relax each part
of your body, starting with your feet and moving step by step up to
t0
il
l5
Itltt in1', lrolurls; "lr,rt irrli lro,ttrl" rr'rtt,tins ,l (()nrn()n l('r nr rr s()nl('
nrotlt'r n trirtliliorrs ol slrt rctl 11t'orrtctly.
( lrrltl l,'l'lrc tJrrrrrlr'l<ctl ()itr.tl, rc[)rcscnts thc Ir'ircirrg lroar-rl ol worl<ing sr.rrfhcc ol'thc sarcrecl gconreter, ready for use but not yet marked in
any way. What patterns will you draw on it?
situation is entirely open. No points, lines, or patterns have yet been drawn on the tracing board before you, and
you can make whatever designs you wish. Do you want to create a
simple diagram or a complex one, or plan a cottage, a palace, or a
pyramid? It's up to you.
gests that the
rr
Unmarked Card
suggests that the tracing board is not as blank as it appears at first
glance.'v\4rile it looks as though nothing has been decided or determined yet, there are lines and patterns you can't see, and they
will have effects on your design that you cannot calculate with the
information on hand.
Wsp,N
It
t6
sitcrcd gcor.nctcr
rlcn(ionecl ir-r the Introcluctiorl-pen, straightedge, and compassbut you won't actually use any of them! Simply set them down in
front of you, along with a piece of blank, unlined paper. Look at the
paper, and think about the various patterns you could draw on it with
the tools you have. Imagine points, lines, arcs, circles, triangles,
squares, and more complex designs as well. Picture them on the paper
. . . and then let the images fade, and return your attention to the
plain, blank surface of the paper in front of you. Do this for a few
minutes at least, and do something else before you go on to any of the
other exercises in this book.
The point of this exercise may be clear to you as soon as you do it,
or it may not. This actually doesn't matter that much. It's useful to remember that in sacred geometry, as in so much of life, it's more important to do things than to understand them intellectually. If you
have a strongly visual imagination and pay attention to the instructions, it's possible to do any of the exercises in this book in your head
. . . but most of the lessons they have to teach will remain hidden from
you unless you actually pick up the tools of sacred geometry and do
the exercises right here in the material world.
as
five minutes of silence and solitude without becoming bored and un-
that meditation is one of the most borine activities there is, and this is
l:
Irrrt'
lrrrl il's rr lrrrll trrrllr, rrol llrt'wlrolc trrrllr. lt's lry tltr'prtttitt'ol
rrrctlitllion tlrrrl wc crln lcarn (() pily il(lclrliort to wltrtt is irctullly goirtli
orr irrsiclc us ancl around Lls . . . and that quickly leads to discclvcrics
that are anything but boring. The following meditation is a way to
begin this work.
As mentioned in the Introduction, each of the meditations on the
cards focuses on a particular subject. For Card 1, the subject is-nothing at all! Once you've finished the opening process outlined earlier,
simply let your mind empty itself of thoughts, and do your best to
keep it that way.
As soon as you try this, of course, various kinds of mental chatter
will spring up to fill the emptiness. Images, ideas, fantasies, worries,
things you need to do as soon as the meditation is over and things you
should be doing instead of meditating will all come rushing into your
awareness. This sort of mental static is one of the constants of meditation, at least in the early stages.
The cure for it is simple . . . though "simple," here as elsewhere in
life, is not the same thing as "easy." As soon as you notice that your
awareness has strayed away from emptiness, simply bring it back and
let the thought go. Odds are you'll have to do it again, and again, and
again as you take the first steps toward clarity.
To begin with, five minutes of this meditation is enough. With
practice, you'll find yourself achieving a relaxed yet vigilant state of
inner clarity, in which your awareness reflects only itself and intruding
thoughts don't arise. This state is one of the great gifts of meditation,
and you'll want to try to achieve it for a few moments at the start of
each of the other meditations in this book, between the period of
rhythmic breathing and the time you spend exploring the actual subiect of the meditation.
IB
z: The Point
The journey of a thousand miles, it's been well said, begins with a sin-
gle step. Every human being unfolds like a geornetric design from a
single point-a fertilized ovun, smaller than the period at the end of
this sentence. In one sense, this is the image of the divine in which
each of us is made. In the same way, every design in sacred geometry-simple or cornplex, basic or advanced, abstract or practical-begins with a single point.
Geometrically speaking, the point has neither length, width, nor
depth; it is pure existence, u'ithout any dimensions or qualities at all.
19
All wt'(iur siry irlrorrl il is llrrrl il is,.rrrtl tlrrrl t'vt'r'yllrirrli t'l:,r',1.'pt'ntls ott
il rrrrtl urrlirlrls lrorrr it. l)ocs tlris sorrrrtl lrrrrrilirrri lrr rrr;ury ol llrc
w()l'l(l's spiritr-ral lraclitiorrs, sagcs ancl nrysLics hitve poitttt'tl ottt tlrat
thcsc sanrc staternents are also true of that crcativc Mystcry which, for
want of a better word, we may as well call "God."
In the symbolism of sacred geometry, the point corresponds to the
concept of unity. Every point is exactly the same as every other point;
the only difference is where any given point happens to be located.
From ancient times, this has been used as a metaphor for the presence
of the divine in the universe.
rr
that
you have already made the first mark on the tracing board before
you, and whatever patterns you will be drawing from now on will
have to take that initial point into account. The marking of the
20
tlltt wlltlcvcr
y()u nriry hrtvc itttt'rttlt'tl, yott'r'c rrlrcittly too tlccply irrvolvcr'l in llrc
situaliorr to bc ablc to bacl< out with any degree of grace or eff-ectivcness. Like it or not, you've committed yourself, and one way
or another you are going to have to deal with the results of that
commitment.
Exercise for Cord 2
As you did with the exercise for Card 1, take the three tools of sacred
geometry-the pen, the straightedge, and the compass-and set them
down in front of you, along with a sheet of plain, unlined paper. In
this exercise, you'll be using only the first of the tools, the pen. The
point and the pen are linked symbolically as well as practically; in
both senses, the business end of the pen is nothing but a point, a way
of marking position in the unbounded, undefined space of the blank
tracing board.
Start out by considering the sheet ofpaper in front ofyou, as you
did in the exercise for Card 1, imagining the different patterns you can
bring into being on its blank surface. Then slowly, deliberately, and
with intent, make a mark somewhere on the paper: a single dot, as
as you can make it.
Now consider the paper again. Whatever you do with the paper
from this time on, that point will play a role. Even if you deliberately
draw a pattern that doesn't relate to it at all, it will be there, suggesting
connections and relationships by its simple presence. Go ahead and
imagine different patterns on the paper, as before, but see how the
point you have drawn interacts with them and shapes them.
When you've done this for a few minutes, set the paper aside. Don't
throw it out; you'll need it for the next exercise.
small
2: The Poinl
3: The Line
Once the first step has been taken, the next one follows. Once a
process has been set in motion, it unfolds according to the innate laws
of its development, unless some other factor cornes into play. In the
same way, after the point comes the lirie.
The line is one of the two basic constructions unfolding from the
point, and along with the other-the circle-it gives rise to all other
patterns. In geometrical terrns, a line can be drawn between any two
points, and once drawn it extends to infinity in both directions. It has
22
23
u l)lllN,u
growth.
For this exercise, you'll need your pen and straightedge, and the sheet
of paper marked with a single point from the exercise for Card 2. Set
the paper before you, consider it, and then mark a second point on the
paper, wherever you like. (The only requirement is that it shouldn't be
precisely on top of the first point!)
Once you've drawn the second point, take your straightedge and
line it up on the two points. If at all possible, the straightedge should
extend off the edge of the paper on both sides. With your pen, draw
the line that connects the two points, and extend it out to the edge of
the paper in both directions. Set the straightedge aside, and consider
the line for a few moments; try to see how it unites and separates at
the same time.
If you like, repeat this exercise several different times, marking your
two points in different places on the paper and extending the lines accordingly. Practice positioning the straightedge so that the line you
draw with it goes exactly through the two points; if you don't have
much experience with practical geometry or drafting, this will help a
good deal with some of the more detailed geometric exercises to come.
WunN
rr
you're
24
/lv t,ti,rr l l(
3: The Line
Sl,trI
,r
as in the
meditation for Card 2. When this image is solidly built up in your
mind's eye, imagine another point, some distance away from the first
one. Tiy to hold both points at once in your imagination; be aware of
the relationship between them, and the endless space opening up to
either side.
Then allow a perfectly straight line to form between the points,
connecting them and shooting off in both directions, past the points
and toward infinity. Follow the line with your mind's eye in one direction, and then in another, then return to the two points and the line
connecting them.
Now think about the line and the points it connects, and allow the
image to suggest ideas to you. Make use of any ideas that interested
you in the discussion of the card above. Are there parts of your life
that remind you of the interaction between the points and the line?
What does that interaction look like from the perspective of each of
the points? How about from that of the line?
As before, choose one train of thought and follow it as far as you
can; if your thoughts stray off the topic, take them back to the image,
and then bring them back on track. \Alhen you've taken the train of
thought as far as it can go, close the meditation as before.
4: The Circle
The line,
as
geometry; the circle is the other. Both line and circle start out from the
26
27
s()tlt(('ol .rll lirowllt lttttl t'xlrltnsirrrt, llrt't irt lt' is llrt'sotrrtt'ol rtll ton
trtitttttertt itntl lintitrrtiorr.
Sorrrc rroclcnl wirys o['thirrl<irrg trcat linritatiorr irs tlrough it's always ar bad thing, but this is just another example of how far out of
touch we sometimes get with the realities of the cosmos. It's worth recalling that in living things, unlimited growth has a special name; we
call it "cancer." Limitation and growth, expansion and contractionboth have their necessary place in the dance of life, unfolding step by
step in ever more complex relationships out of the creative freedom
symbolized by the point.
rr
WunN
28
rrr'rv- /\ll<
you've already done before. This can be a necessary thing, but it's
y'
For this exercise, you'll need your pen and compass, and several sheets
of unlined paper. As in the exercise for Card 3, mark one point on the
paper, then another; the two should be close enough together that the
two points of your conpass can reach easily from one to the other.
Decide which of the two points will be the center of your circle,
and put the metal point of the compass exactly onto it, pressing the
point into the paper. Widen or narrow the compass until the pencil
point comes exactly to the other point, and then twist the handle
around to draw
4: The Circle
a circle,
ll
il rn,ty l,tlit'\'ott ,t
(('r lirin :lrrrorrrrI ol Pr';lrlitt' llt'lirrt' y()u (ln tlo so willr .rrry tlt't',tt't'ol
g,r'rlce.'l:rl(c tltc tirrrc yott rtcctl; you'll [rc tlrirwing rt lot ol circlt's irr (lrc
yotr lr rvt'rt'l trst'tl ,t t',t'orrrt'lt'r s (()nrl),rss lrt'lott',
cxclcrscs to corltc.
A couple of technical terrrs will help rlake things cleirrer in latcr cxercises; if you managed to miss geometry in school, or have forgotten
whatever you learned then, you may want to make mental notes. The
curved line that you draw with the pencil point of the compass, marking the outer edge of the circle, is called the circumference. A straight
line that goes through the center of the circle, dividing the circle in
half, is called a diameter. Half a diameter-that is, a line going from the
center to the circumference in one direction-is called a radius. An arc,
finally, is simply part of a circle: a curved line, drawn with a compass,
30
t: The Spiral
One of the most ancient patterus in sacred geometry is the spiral. In
the ancient chambered tomb at Newgrange in lreland, which was designed so that a sir-rgle ray of light shone the full length of the underground passage on one day of the year, spirals carved in the stone
serve as markers tbr the sunlight's position artd express teachings now
forgotten. Found all through nature as well-in the shells of sea animals, the heads of sunflowers, and many other places-the spiral
serves as a powerful image of the unfolding of what is hidden.
3l
llrt'sl,rrrtl.trtl st'l ol
tools tltt' P1'11, strlrir3lrtt'tlgc', rrrrtl t()nrl)irss lrrrl lrrrollrt'r
Illctlt()(l was usc(l irt rtt.rle iulcicnt tirrres, wlrcrr tlrc totllliit ol tlrc sitcrcd gcol'nctcr consistecl of a length of rope ancl scvcral woodcn
rr:,irr1',
gr'otttt'tl itrtl
stakes, and the working surface was the living earth itself. A stake or
staff would be driven into the earth, and a rope wound around it; an-
other stake would be tied to the free end, and used to inscribe a spiral
in the earth as its holder moved around and around the central stake
in ever-widening arcs. A variant of this process will be put to use
below in the exercise for this card.
the design you are drawing is spiralling inwards, tracing eversmaller arcs around the point where it will finally come to rest.
The same inner dgramics that once sent it spinning outward in
expanding curves now bring it back again, and attempting to
force it around into a circle will only break the continuity of the
32
,rr
1rl;;11'
ol llrt' tt.tlttrtl
tt:.,tt r)tvtNA't ro,,v, tl-ris card reversecl means that the situa-
tion or some important part of it is winding down and approaching an end. lf you've committed yourself too strongly to the idea
that it can circle around endlessly, you may be left turning about
in empty
of
Start by sticking the pushpin into the center of the paper, and
through it, so that it's firmly seated in the working surface beneath. Thpe
one end of the string securely to the side of the pushpin's head, and the
other end to the pencil-the closer to the point, the better. Then, without making a mark on the paper, wrap the string around the pushpin
until the pencil is held tight against it (see Diagram E-5).
Now put the pencil point against the paper, and unwind the string
by moving the pencil around and around the pushpin. Do it slowly,
paying attention to the spiral as it forms. \Mhen the string is entirely
unwound, stop for a few moments, considering the spiral, and then
keep going in the same direction, winding the string back around the
pushpin, and producing another spiral that cuts across the first. Finish
when the pencil is again held snugly up against the pushpin.
5: The Spirol
6: The Ellipse
A more complex figure, relatecl to the circle but with properties of its
own, is the ellipse. An ellipse can be thought of, in some ways, as a cir-
with two centers. Where a circle is defined by all the points located
around a single point (the ceriter) ;rt somc particular distance (the raclius), an ellipse is definecl by all the points located around two points
(the foci of the ellipse) in such a way that the total distance from either focus to any of thc points ancl back to tl-re other focus is always
cle
the same.
34
35
n('('(l l() nl()v('willr it.'l'lris is rrcrtr.ly rtlwrtys rr positivc sigrr irt tliv
irrirliorr, prrrrrrisirrg rtot ottly succcss llut rtlso sttt<loth sailing ort tltc
wiry thcrc. As lortg ils you pay attention to the flow of events, and
try to respond to them (rather than to your own preconceptions
about the situation), things are very likely to work out well.
Reversed Meoning: Adiustment
Wttp,N
All this may seem unnecessarily complicated, but ellipses are all
around us. Planets and moons move in elliptical paths as they dance
through space, and any object thrown or shot through the air (or
through outer space) will follow a curye that's a portion of an ellipse.
The ellipse, in fact, is the natural curve of movement and of dynamic
energy in the universe of our experience, and it has subtle and impor-
AppEARs REVERSED
rNA
that
IN pn,A.ct'tc,\L DrvrNATtoru, this card reversed means that the situation you are facing will require you to make adjustments, in yourself or in other aspects of your life. While large-scale changes
aren't needed at this time, plenty of minor changes may be needed in order for you to deal with the situation effectively. Sensitivity to subtle factors is important here, and so is attention to detail.
IN pn,q.crrc,q.L DrvrNA'rror;, this card upright means that the situation around you is moving in the right direction, and you simply
JO
This exercise, like the last one, requires a working surface into which
you can stick pins without causing damage you or anyone else will regret. You'll need two pushpins this time, and a piece of string perhaps
eight inches long, as well as a pencil or pen and a piece of unlined
paper.
Start by tying the two ends of the string together with a knot that
won't slip-a square knot works well-to form a loop. Next, stick the
two pushpins into the paper, a few inches apart, and make sure they're
fixed firmly in the working surface. Loop the string around the pushpins, and put the pen or pencil in the loop and pull it out until the
6: The Elliose
At this point, all you need to do is move the pen or pencil to one
side, keeping the string loop taut at all times. Let the string slide freely
around the pen or pencil and the pushpins. The movement of the pen
or pencil and the pull of the string loop will combine to trace a perfect
ellipse on the paper, with the two pushpins as its two foci.
?a
The term vesica piscis is Latin, and literally n-reans "vessel of the
fish." In Roman times, subtle movements of the Earth's axis were
39
[rringirrg tlrc zodilcitl sign l)isecs to thc point ol'lrcirvcn whcrc thc surr
starrds at thc sprirrg ccluinox, ancl thc followcrs ol'a rrcw rcligion-
one religion, though, or for that matter to any one of the twelve
months of the Great Year. Wherever two factors or forces combine to
create a more complex uniry the vesica abounds. At every moment,
for example, cells in every part of your body are forming and reforming the vesica as they reproduce themselves. In the process of human
reproduction and birth, the same thing happens on many different
scales. In fact, there's a fully developed sexual symbolism to these basic
geometric patterns, with the point as the ovum, the line as the penis,
the circle as the vagina, the vesica as the sexual act uniting male and
female, and so on. As the ancient masters of sacred geometry taught,
everything comes down to geometry in one way or another.
The vesica is especially important because it is the easiest way to
generate one of the three primary root relationships of traditional sacred geometry, the {3 relationship. About these roots and their meaning, we'll have much more to say as we go on. For now, the important
point is that r/3, the square root of 3, is a very odd number. Mathematicians call it "irrational." It can't be expressed exactly by any fraction or any decimal figure; it "falls between" any measurement in
number, no matter how precise. As we'll see, though, it can be expressed exactly in geometrical terms, and it takes on an extraordinary
importance in the realm of sacred geometry.
that the process set in motion with the drawing of the first point
40
IN
cess, especially in any question where the actions of others are important. It means that you are not alone, and that other factors,
to
with
give
IT
gests that the circle you have drawn around yourself no longer
your reach. Where there was one, there is now two, and this other
is not a reflection or a subset, but an equal.
Irv pRecrtc,c
rrcccl your
42
Diogrom E-7
l;irr.rlly,
llrtrr
44
45
The triangle is not only the simplest of the regular figures, it's also
the most rigid and predictable. If you know the lengths of the three
if you know
what two of the angles are, you know what the third has to be, and
you know the ratios between the lengths of the different sides. In architecture and engineering, too, the rigidity and stability of the triangle have been used since ancient times. If you look at the trusses used
to support a bridge or the roof of a house, you'll find that they are
composed of a series of triangles for exactly this reason.
sides of a triangle, you know what the angles have to be;
IN pntcrrct.r,
IN
Start by drawing a line somewhere not too far from the middle of the
paper. On the line, mark two points, which should be labeled A and B.
They can be as close or as far apart as you like, but whatever distance
you choose will be the length of the sides of your triangle, so plan accordingly. (For example, don't put them so far apart that the third
point of the resulting triangle will end up off the paperl)
Put the metal point of the compass on point A, and adjust the pen-
wish to consider bringing some order and structure into the situation you're considering. There are times when vagueness, fluidi-
cil point until it rests on point B. Draw an arc up from B until you've
made at least a quarter-circle. Now, without changing the setting of
the compass points, put the metal point on B, set the pencil point on
A, and draw an arc up from A until it crosses the first arc. Mark the
there are times when they lead to confusion and failure instead,
and this is one of these latter. This is a time to turn wishes and
daydreams into step by step plans so that they can unfold into
solid realities.
point where the arcs cross as point C. (If you've been paying attention,
you've probably realized already that this whole process is simply a
matter of drawing half a vesica piscis; if you extend the arcs as far
below line AB as you did above it, the whole vesica will be formed.)
Then, using the straightedge, draw a line to connect A and C, and
another one connecting B and C, to create triangle ABC, just as shown
in Diagram E-8.
46
through space, for now pay attention only to the segment uniting the
two points.
Next, imagine two more lines of exactly the same length, each one
connected to one of the two points but not to the other. Imagine them
lying together with the first line, and then pivoting upwards, crossing
each other. The third line remains in place, unmoving. The two lines
continue to pivot until their ends come into contact. Then they stop,
forming
triangle.
parisons in your mind, and draw on any material from the foregoing
in
the universe, your life, and yourselfr Think about it generally for a
time, and then choose a train of thought and follow it to the end.
discussions that seems useful. What does the triangle bring to mind
48
Diogrom E-8
9: The Hexagram
Another branch of sacred geometry that has been of great importance
down through the years involves regular polygrams, star-shaped patterns drawn according to certain specific rules of geometry. The hexa-
5l
'l'lrt' lrt r.rlir.rnt, olrviott',ly r rrrrrrilr, i', lotrtrt'tl ltrtttt lw() ('(llril,rl('rirl
lrilurqlt's poirrlirtt irr olrp1r5l11 tlitt't liotts. l,t'ss oltviottsly, il lr;rs:r spr'
cial rncl sLrl)tlc rclatiorrship to tlrc ge()llrctrics ol.tlrc cir.clc rrrrrl thc
vesica piscis. From these two sets o1'conncctions, it clraws its principal
meanings in the Oracle: from the first, the conflict between opposed
forms; from the second, the establishment of harmony in place of
conflict.
in opposite directions,
prlcrrca L DrvrNATroru, this card upright means that it's necessary to find a balance between two different factors or forces in
Iry
as
another, both of them have a valid place in your life right now,
and deserve an equal share of your time and attention. The Hexagram upright often means that you're assuming that it's necessary
rr
.4pprARs REvRsEo
I-N,
that the pattern you are creating has come to a parting of the
ways. Like arrows, the two triangles before you point in two different directions, and choosing one means giving up the other.
/N precr-rc,q L DrvrNArroLr, this card reversed generally means that
you're trying to have your cake and eat it too. Like it or not, you
need to make a choice between the alternatives
52
Start the exercise for this card by using your compass to draw a circle
of any convenient size, and mark a point, point A, on the circumference of the circle. With the setting of the compass points unchanged,
put the metal point of the compass on A, and draw an arc as shown in
Diagram E-9, crossing the circle's circumference on both sides. If
you're paying attention, you'll notice that the arc goes through the
mark left by the compass point at the center of the circle, and this may
give you a clue about the deep patterns underlying this construction.
Mark points B and F where the arc crosses the circumference, as
shown. Then move the metal point of the compass to B and draw another arc, crossing the circumference at A and a new point, which
should be marked as point C. Do the same with the metal point at F,
crossing the circumference at A and a new point E.
Now do the same thing twice more, once with the metal point at C
and once with it at E. If you've placed your points where they should
be-and this is a good test of how carefully you're handling the compass-the arcs from C and E should meet at a new point, D, which is
exactly opposite your original point A. (If they don't meet, try to figure out where the mistake is, and either correct the drawing you have
or give it another try.)
Finally, using the straightedge, draw lines connecting points A and
C, C and E, E and A, B and D, D and R and F and B, to create your
hexagram.
in front of you.
9: The Hexogrom
54
Diogrom E-9
57
llttt ttol crttircly so ltirs corttc to syrrrllolizc c()nllict, sr-rlli'ring, ancl clcath. At thc san)c Iinrc, irs tlrc cxclcisc lor this
card will demonstrate, the cross develops fiom arrd clcpcncls on the
vesica, suggesting the unity of birth and death, joy and suffering, love
lcsrts ol'Nitzitrctlr,
and struggle.
tern. To take crossed lines and bring them into parallel takes a
good deal of care and patience; rushed or fumbled, the attempt
simply moves the point of crossing from one place to another
without resolving the underlying situation.
as
the point
of
rr
WnnN
58
I0
The exercise for this card is based on the vesica piscis, but it moves in
new directions, and introduces a method we'll be using in many of the
exercises to come. You may wish to pay careful attention to the
follow-
ing steps, and practice the method several times to make sure you've
worked out any difficult parts.
Start by drawing a line, and marking points A and B on it. Now
make a vesica with line AB as the minor axis: that is, set the compass
points to the distance between A and B; with A as the center point,
it
crosses
l0:
The Cross
irrstrtrclions, li will llc cxitctly lrrrllwrry llclwcctt A irnd l], rtttd itlso cxirctly lrallway bctwccn (l arrcl l). AIry tirttc yott ttcctl lo divitlc ir lirtc
scgnrent in half geotnctrically, this is one way to clo it.
another line crossing your first line at right angles, in the same way
that line CD crossed line AB in the exercise from Card7.
The cross you ve formed consists of two lines, but it also emphasizes one particular point-the point of intersection between the two
lines. As the commentary above suggested, this has the same symbolic
meanings as any point, and this brings up an interesting idea. Two
points,
point.
as we've seen,
This idea is the topic for your meditation. After you ve built up the
imagery in your mind's eye, recall what you know about points and
lines, along with anything useful from the discussion above, and try to
grasp what the idea just mentioned implies in the universe, your life,
and yourself. Think about it generally for a time, then follow one par-
60
as far as
Diogrom E-10
amount of confusion has come about as a result. On the one hand, it stands for the relatively simple process of dividing a circle into four quarters, produca certain
ing the symbolic pattern that is the subject of this card. On the other,
of Card32.
63
lior our l)ufposcs, "t;trirdrirtrrlc ol'lhc circlc" will hccp llrc llrst ol'
tlresc nrearriugs, [rut thcre's a poirrl to tlrc conncction. Sinrplc as it is to
construct, the circle divided into fbur equal parts is a syr-nbol of profound importance in many of the world's spiritual and esoteric tradi-
The patterns and relationships within the circle need your atten-
ed circle is a symbol of the world itself. Its four quarters echo the four
tion right now; those outside it can wait a little longer. Once the
design within the circle is complete, you'll have a clearer idea of
how to link it up with the wider picture.
as well as in Europeanpagan
traditions and the inner disciplines of Western occultism, the quadrat-
as
well
as
many other fourfold patterns that shape the universe of our experience. The presence of these patterns makes the quadrated circle also a
symbol of wholeness, of integration and completeness.
For each of us, the world is defined and created by the sum total
of
something doesn't mean that it doesn't exist; each human world has its
boundaries, however near or far away they may be, and outside those
boundaries lie other worlds we have never imaeined.
into a unified whole. There are lines that have not yet been drawn,
arcs and circles that have not yet been traced, patterns and shapes
you have not yet linked together into the broader design, and now
is the time to pay attention to these things. Seek completion and
integration; pay attention to the overall shape of what you are
striving to create.
marking point A somewhere near the center of the paper, and drawing a circle around it, using the compass. (The circle should be no
more than half as wide as the sheet of paper, or you ll run off the edge
of the paper later on in this construction.)
Then, with the straightedge, draw a line that goes through point A
at the center of the circle and extends out to the circumference on
both sides. Where the line cuts across the circle's edges, mark points B
and C. Now, using line BC as the starting point, construct a vesica piscis outside the circle: set the compass points to the distance between B
and C, and first with B as center, then as C, swing a pair of arcs up and
down to intersect above and below the circle, forming the vesica.
highlighted now.
64
Mirrl< poirrts
cnds
attcl
You may want to save the paper from this exercise, as you'll need to
66
Diogrom E-l I
12:
Algng with the equilateral triangle, the subject of Card 8, the traditions of sacred geometry give special attention to another, very specific kind of triangle. This is the sort known as the right triangle.Right
triangles can be either isosceles or scalene. \A4rat unites them with one
another, and sets them apart from all other triangles, is that one of
their three angles is a right angle-that is, an angle of ninety degrees,
one-quarter of the full circle.
Right angles have a whole range of special properties, some simple,
others very complex. The important point for our present purposes is
71
tlrrrt tlrc riglrt tlirrrrglc lcprcsclrls tlrc lilst s(t'p towirrtl ir rrt,w lirr'lol irr
tlrc clcsigus ancl diirgrarrrs wc'vc lrccn worl<ing
witlr-a
be
rr
72
as
with options that are more limited than you may like.
Iiv pRacuce L DIvrNATroll, this card reversed means that you can't
change one part of the situation without everything else changing
too. If you are considering a specific change, it may mean that the
other factors in the picture will put that change out of your reach,
or it may mean that the other factors will be affected by the change
in ways you don't expect and may not welcome. In other situations, The Right Tiiangle reversed often means that relationships
between the different factors and forces have settled firmly into
place and will put restrictions on what you can do.
rr
l2
l2:
rr
cr'oss
and picture in your mind's eye a third line connecting these two.
Allow the points to move up and down the lines, one at a time or together, and see the line that connects them forming many different relationships with the two intersecting lines. Each of these relationships
makes a right triangle; every one of these triangles is different from
the others, but every one has an identical right angle as its base and
foundation.
After you've built up this image in your mind's eye and explored it,
turn your attention to the ideas of freedom and limitation. How much
of a right triangle is free to change? How much of it is not? How does
this relate to the universe, your life, and yourself? Use any part of the
previous discussion that you find useful. As before, think about the
topic in a general way for a time, and then follow one particular train
of thought out to its end. Finish the meditation in the usual way.
74
Diogrom E-12
ric shapes we all learn in early childhood. Its role in sacred geometry is
equally basic. As we'll see, the square and the circle between them sum
up the entire path of sacred geometry in one sense, with the triangle
(and, on another and deeper level, the pentagon and pentagram) me-
77
llc corrrplt'lc irr itst'll, irrrtl rrriry nol lt'rrtl lo ulrytlting, lirrtltcr, Vcry
ollctt, il sirnply lcl)r'cscnts thc cntl ol rr ploccss, tlrc wiry thtt (lartl
As witlr sotttc
a square.
Wnp,N
monotonous.
/N pRacrrca L Drv rNATtorv, this card reversed usually means that you
number.
rr
ng :
Monifestotion
and reality. The plans are complete, the details have been worked
out, and the workers and raw materials are ready and waiting. Re-
member that once your designs are "off the drawing board," they
are at least partly in the hands of other people, who may or may
not do exactly what you have in mind.
IN
78
that
straight lines and right angles. Either way, unless you try something different, the pattern you make is likely to turn out pretty
pi, which (like r/e, and several other factors we'll encounter a little
later on) can never be expressed exactly as a fraction or a decimal
Upright Meon
its outside edge-is always exactly four times its width; the circumference of a circle is equal to its diameter times the irrational number fi,
With the square, in other words, we are dealing with the here-andnow realities of the manifested world around us. Relating that world
to the realms of spirit and meaning is one of the central tasks of every
form of inner practice, and it dominates the higher reaches of the art
of sacred geometry.
r'1' AzaEARS
you've ended up doing the same thing over and over again on the
WurN
you're sitting in a parked car. It can also mean simply that the sit-
uation is what it is, and nothing much that you can do is going to
change that fact.
gled cross intersect the circle, but there's another way to unfold a
square from the quadrated circle that's a little more interesting.
First, mark the four points where the cross intersects the circumference of the circle; label them points R G, H, and I. Then, set the com-
points so that they are exactly the same distance apart that they
were when you drew the original circle. (This is critically important.)
Check your measurement by putting the metal point of the compass
pass
3: The Squore
on point A, attcl trrlkirtg sttrc tltttl tlrc llcrrcil ptlittt ctttttcs cxitctly ovcr
the circuur ll'rcucc ol' thc ci rclc.
Once the compasses are set correctly, put the metal ptlint on point
F and swing an arc around through at least half a circle, making a vesica piscis with the original circle and leaving plenty of arc on either
end, as shown. Do the same thing with points G, H, and I as centers'
producing a flowerlike pattern. The ends of each arc should cross two
others; mark points L K, L, and M at the crossings. Then draw in lines
JK, KL, LM, and MJ to create square JKLM, which (again, if you ve followed the instructions exactly) should fit precisely around the original
circle
(see
Diagram E-13).
l3
point and the line to help you make sense of this pattern'
As before, think about the topic generally for a time, and then take
one train of thought and follow it as far as you can. When you're
done, finish in the usual way.
80
Diogrom E-I3
tri-
ditional sacred geometry, and for many of the same reasons, The
hexagram is a major factor in the ad triangulum system of geometry,
one of the two standard approaches to using sacred geometry in prac-
tical design. Similarly, the octagram was much used in the rival approach, the ad quadratim system of geometry.
83
tors will have much to do with whether or not your plan has the
success you seek.
suggests
that the design you have worked out on the tracing board needs
another, perhaps from an outside source, to complete and perfect
it. While it's a sign of skill to recognize what you can do, it's a sign
of wisdom to recognize what you can't or shouldn't attempt by
yourself. Seek the one who can complete what you have begun,
and has begun what only you can complete.
IN pnecrtctL DrvrNATrorv, this card upright means that the situation is not something you should try to handle by yourself.
Whether it's a friend's advice, an outside perspective, or professional help that you need, you're not going to get it without reaching out to another person and asking for help. This can be a difficult task for many people nowadays, but it's necessary now, and
the sooner you accept that fact the less trouble you'll have dealing
with the parts of the situation that you canhandle.
84
take them into account. How well you respond to these other fac-
schools.
z\r,r,rizrr.tS
that you nray not bc ablc to drtrw thc design you had in mind, clr
develop it in exactly the ways you would prefer. Other factors are
present, and whether you like it or not, you are going to have to
it
it
ll
Irv pRacrrca L DrvrNATrov, this card reversed means simply that you
thing you want out of the situation, and if you keep pushing for
the whole pie, you may not even get a slice! This is a good time to
rein in your expectations, review the situation (possibly from a
less self-centered point of view), and look for the best option
that's actually open to you.
Exercise for Cord
l4
For this exercise, besides plain paper and your geometer's tools, you'll
need a pair of colored pencils or pens, of two different colors. Start by
drawing a circle of any convenient size with your ordinary pen (or
pencil). Draw a line across the circle, passing through its center; mark
points A and B where the ends of the line cross the circle's circumference. Next, draw two arcs with A and B as centers and the compass
points set to the distance between A and B; the result will be a vesica
piscis surrounding your original circle. Line up the straightedge on
the two points of the vesica, and draw in a line from one side of the
circle to the other, going through the circle's center; mark points C
and D where this second line intersects the circle's circumference.
Then, put the metal point of the compass on C, set the compass to
the distance between C and A, and draw a circle all the way around.
With the compass setting unchanged, move the metal point to A and
make a pair of small arcs-just long enough to cut across the second
circle in the two places where the compass reaches it, one outside the
l4:
The Octogrom
lirst cirelc, (ltc otltcl irtsitlc.'l'lrt'rr tlo tlrc sirrrte tlring willr tlrt'rtrctirl
poiut o['thc circle tln ll, tlrawirrg lwo nrolc shorl iu'cs lrrtl ctrtting, tlrc
second circle in two placcs.
Now line up the straightedge on the places where the two short arcs
you made with A at the center cross the second circle. (If you've done
this correctly, the center of the first circle will fall exactly on the line.)
Using this, draw a line running from one edge of the first circle to the
other; mark points E and F where the first circle and the line intersect.
Do the same thing with the places that the two short arcs made with B
the second circle-again, the straightedge should just
touch the first circle's 6sn1s1-nnd draw another line across the first
as center cross
circle from edge to edge, marking points G and H where the line
crosses the circumference.
l4
After the usual opening process, imagine a circle divided into eight
even segments, as in the exercise. Picture lines reaching out from
point to point to form first one form of the octagram, and then the
B6
Diogrom E-14
()tllcf
ol
you make in your own life that affect other people, and the choices
made by other people that affect you.
As before, consider the topic in a general way for a time, then take
one train of thought and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation
in the usual way.
B8
ol'(litrrl |4, tlrc tlotletrrglirrl (iul it(tr-rrrlly lrc clrawrr in vari<lus clil'lcrcnt wirys; this is only onc ol'lirrrl possible forms. It can also be made fiom three interlacccl s(lLlarcs, fronl
two interlaced hexagons, or as a unicursal figure-that is, one that can
be drawn without raising the point of the pen from the paper. The
same pattern of points, in other words, can be connected with trian-
nray rlcan
that you've tried to accomplish more than the time and resources
will permit, that there are more angles to the situation than you
had realized, that your plans aren't adequate for the job at handor all of these at once! This may be a good time to look at more
gles, as
has a place.
l5
This exercise uses the basic set of geometer's tools and plain, unlined
paper. Start by using your compass to draw a circle of any convenient
size. Then, with a straightedge, draw a line going through the center of
the circle and extending out to the circumference on both sides. Mark
points A and B at the two places where the line crosses the circumfer-
thing you planned on including and haven't yet put into your design, it's likely to be now or never.
Next, starting at point A, follow the method you used in the exercise for Card 9 to construct a hexagram; your compass should stay set
to the width you used to create the original circle.
Now choose a point where the lines making up the two triangles
cross. (Any of the six points of intersection will do equally well; see
WurN
rr
/N pRecrrc,r L DrvrNATroN, this card upright means that the situation is moving toward its final stages. You may need to pay more
attention to the details and the fine print, even if this means leaving the bigger picture to take care of itself for a while. At the same
time, it's often a sign of approaching success, especially if you have
a
of
hand. Too many lines and forms, too many details and intercon-
nections crowd the tracing board before you. You may have to
make the design simpler; on the other hand, you may simply have
to erase it and start over aqain.
90
lt
ence.
through the point and the circle's center, extending it all the way to
the circle's circumference on both sides. Mark points C and D where
the line crosses the circumference of the circle. Noq just as before,
follow the instructions given in the exercise for Card 9, and construct
a second hexagram. The two hexagrams join together to create a
dodecagram.
5: The Dodecogrom
Diogrom
E- I
l5
ine a third, pointing off at a right angle to the first two, and finally a
fourth, pointing the opposite direction of the third.
Think of the way that the four triangles point in four different directions, and imagine a square that surrounds the four points. (If
you'rre worked at developing your visualizing abilities in these medita-
tions, you may even be able to imagine the three squares that make up
93
five elements of ancient spiritual and magical lore: fire, air, water,
earth, and spirit. According to the lore, these elements are the basic
patterns of the universe of our experience, present everywhere and in
all things.
that the pattern you are drawing has energy as a central feature.
The lines on the tracing board are lines of energy, and if you trace
them with skill they will lead the currents of power in directions
that will take you where you wish to go.
94
rr
The Tetrahedron sugnot solid enough to contain the forces you intend to call into it. The lines on the tracing
board may seem firm enough, but they may turn out to be inadequate when the design is put into the hands of the builders and
the structure has to face the energies of the real world.
AaaEARS REvERsED rN A READINc,
are trying to do. Disruption, confusion, and chaos are the likely outcomes. \Mhen this card appears
reversed, you may find that it's necessary to go back to the beginning and start over, or at best to batten down the hatches and prepare to ride out the storm.
l6
For this exercise, besides the usual tools, you'll need a pair of sharp
scissors or a craft knife, and some clear tape; you can also use a heavier type of paper than usual.
Start as in the exercise for Card 11, by drawing a circle, and then
another circle of the same size. with its center on the first circle's
l6:
The Tetrohedron
circutttlclcrtcc. (lltrlosc ortc ol'tlrc two lloints whe r't'tlte cit'e uttrli'rcnccs o1-thc two circlcs cross, arrcl urirl<c ir thircl cilclc ol'lhc sirnrc
size with its center on that point.
You now have a pattern of three overlapping circles, fbrmir-rg three
overlapping vesicas. In the center of the pattern is a space like a
rounded triangle, where all three circles (and all three vesicas) overlap.
Mark points A, B, and C at the corners of this space. Then mark
points D, E, and F at the outward corners of the three vesicas. The result should look like the diagram.
Using the straightedge, draw in lines AB, BC, and CA to form triangle ABC, and draw in lines DE, ER and FD to form triangle DEF. Triangle ABC is in the center of DER and the parts of DEF that are outside ABC form three more triangles, each of them identical to ABC.
Now with the scissors or knife, cut along lines DE, ER and FD to
separate triangle DEF from the rest of the paper. Carefully fold the
paper along AB, BC, and CA, creasing the paper along these lines, so
that the three points D, E, and F come together, forming a tetrahedron. Use pieces of tape to join the edges and make your tetrahedron
stable.
see
l6
96
Diogrom E-16
17:
The 0ctahedron
ment of air.
In the ancient systems of spiritual philosophy that studied the elements, the element of air was especially related to the ideas of mediation, balance between opposites, and flow Modern scientific ideas bear
out these same connections, for it's Earth's atmosphere that mediates
9B
99
sr.rl)
The action of the element of air is to unite and balance the other
elements. Earth, water, and fire all tend to divide themselves
up; there
are many different lands, many seas and lakes and rivers, and
many
,c,ppEARS
that the pattern you are drawing has mediation as a central fea_
ture' There are a variety of active and passive forms on the tracing
board, and your task is to bring them together into a relationship
that will benefit all concerned.
Iiv pRaclrca L DrvrNATrorv, this card upright means that you
are in
the middle of the situation, with a variety of forces and factors
coming to bear on you. \A/hile this can be difficult, it allows you
to
have a major influence on how things
r00
wtttiN I't' Appr;.Ans nrjvtinstjt) rN A Rrrlr)/N<;, 'l'hc ()ctirhcr.lnln suggests that you are allowir-rg the pattern before you to be pulled
about by too many conflicting forces, or scattered into a tangle of
smaller patterns with no relationship to one another. unless you
draw it together through your attention and understanding of the
whole, the result will be confusion and chaos, not a worthwhile
design.
IN pn,+crtceL DrvrNATrorv, this card reversed means that you are allowing yourself to become too scattered and unfocused. This may
be happening because you are putting too much energy into tak_
ing care of other people's concerns, or because you are trying to
do too much at once, or simply because you don't know what you
want out of the situation and are drifting from one thing to an_
other. until you decide what you want out of it and take specific,
active, and focused steps to get it, you're unlikely to achieve very
much, no matter how busy you are.
This construction starts out like the last one, with a pair of circles
drawn to form a vesica piscis, and a third circle drawn with its center
on one of the two points where the first two circles intersect the lower
of the two points. To this you need to add three more circles, as follows. The fourth has its center where the third circle intersects with
one of the first two; the fifth, where the fourth intersects with the
same one of the first two; and the sixth, where the fourth and the fifth
intersect. (Actually, of course, each circle intersects with its neighboring circle at two different places, but if you do the construction as
given, you'll find that one of these intersections is arways the center of
another circle already.) The result is the zigzagpattern of six circles
shown in Diagram E-I7.
17:The Octohedron
Now drrrw in tlrc pirttcrn ol cight triirrrglcs slrown irr tlrc cliagrarrr,
r-rsiug thc straighlcclgc. (.l.rt thc rcsr.rltirtg slrapc out, cuttirrg only irloug
the outside lines-don't cut between any of the triangles you've
drawn! Fold the resulting shape along the lines so that the two lines
marked AB are joined together, and fold down the remaining triangles. Use tape to fasten the seams, and you have your octahedron.
As before, take the time to get to know the octahedron,looking at
it
from different angles and seeking an intuitive sense of the way it fits
If you like, mark a point in the center of each of its eight
sides, and try to see how these become the corners of a small cube in
the center ofthe octahedron.
together.
an
equilateral triangle, as in the meditation for Card 8. Add more triangles, one at a time, until you have formed the same shape you drew
triangles and join edges together to make an octahedron. (If you find it
hard to imagine this, make another paper pattern following the instructions in the exercise, and fold it but leave it untaped; then fold it
and cut out in the exercise. Then, in your mind's eye, fold up the
together and let it unfold, concentrating on the process, until you have
a clear sense
mind's eye, turn to the topic of the meditation, which is the element
of air. Think about air, about everything connected with air, and
everlthing "airy|'drawing on the discussion above and on any knowledge of the traditional lore of the elements you happen to have.
As before, consider the topic in a general way for a time, then take
one train of thought and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation
in the usual way.
102
Diogrom E-l Z
Of the five traditional elements, the icosahedron relates most closely to the receptive and fluid element of water. In the ancient spiritual
philosophies, just as fire is seen as the archetype of all active things,
105
ing this traditional teaching, have shown that the differences between
male and female actually involve only about 3 percent of our total
DNA.
Like the other Platonic solids, the icosahedron gives rise to another
solid if points are marked in the centers of its sides, and these points
are connected with straight lines going through the midst of the solid.
In this case, the Platonic solid that's created is the dodecahedron, the
subject of Card 29.The dodecahedron is associated with the element
of spirit, the element that unites and transcends the other four. In earlier times, this subtle link between water and spirit was connected to
the opening lines of the Book of Genesis, in which the Spirit of God
moved over the face of the waters of creation.
tor. The lines and forms on the tracing board before you have
drawn energies in from outside sources, and those energies-not
the ones you can bring into the design-are best suited to carry
your plan to a successful conclusion.
IN
pn,q,crrc,+L DtvtNArroru,
r06
l8
Like the last two constructions, this one requires tape and scissors or
knife, along with your geometer's tools, and may benefit from heavy
paper as well. This exercise is one of the trickier constructions in this
'18:
The lcosohedron
()n F,()inF,. Vlrr ttccd rro lcss tlrarr twclvc circlcs, irlrirrrgctl irs irr l)iirglirnr
li-ltl, ttl construct an icosalrcclron. Wlrcrr yoLr'vc drawrr tlrcnt all trut,
of intersection to lay out thc pattcrn shown in thc
mess! Fold the resulting shape so that all the points marked A come
together, and all the points marked B are joined. Fasten the edges with
tape, and you have your icosahedron. Take the time to explore it, and
if you like, mark a point in the center of each of the twenty sides, and
try your hand at imagining how these points become the corners of a
small dodecahedron in the middle of the icosahedron.
r0B
Diogrom E-18
dron is, for example, but cubes are another matter. From the blocks
we play with as children to the office buildings in which many of us
work, the cube surrounds us everyrwhere.
Stable and solid, the cube is a traditional emblem of the element of
earth, one of the five elements of ancient spiritual and magical lore.
Of these elements, earth is the densest and most unyielding; it corresponds to what modern scientists call the solid state of matter, just as
ll1
wirlcl colr('sl)()n(ls to litltritls, lil t() guscs, utrtl litt'lo t'ttt't14y.'l'ltc itttcicut tcachings also suggcst thrt tl-rc clctrtcnts lirrur:t slx'(lfunt, with
earth at one end, spirit at the other, and the other elemcnts lirllilrg irrto
places in between. In this pattern the cube plays the role of a solid
base, from which the other elements rise up and on which they can
build.
For all its apparent solidity, though, the cube contains a hidden factor of flexibility. As mentioned earlier on, if you mark a point in the
exact center of each side of any Platonic solid, and connect the points
together with straight lines inside the solid, another Platonic solid
takes shape. In the case of the cube, the result is an octahedron, which
symbolizes the mediating and subtle element of air.
The cube also has another remarkable feature. Its faces, of course,
are squares, and so ifthe sides are equal to one, a diagonal line running from corner to corner along one face has a length of r/2. On the
other hand, if you draw a diagonal line between opposite corners of
the cube-going not along one face, but through the middle of the
cube-the length of that line is equal to r/:. ftr the cube, in other
words, the two great opposing factors of sacred geometry reveal a
hidden unity. This unity will be developed further in some of the
cards to come.
rr
suggests that
that
the pattern you are drawing has become so solidly established that
it no longer allows for change and growth. Perhaps you have been
drawing the same square over and over; perhaps you have been
relying too much on straight lines and right angles, and have forgotten about curves and complex shapes. Rigid as it is, the design
112
I9
with the exercises for Cards 16,17, and 18, this one works a little
better with stiff paper, and a sharp craft knife or a pair of scissors is
also needed, along with your geometer's tools. Start by drawing a
square of any convenient size, keeping in mind that five more squares
of the same size will need to fit on the paper, using the construction
from the exercise for Card 13 on pages 79-8I.
Next, line up your straightedge with each of the four sides of the
square, one at a time, and extend the lines out in both directions (see
As
Diagram E-19). Then set the compass points to the length of one side
of the square, and with the metal point set at each of the four corners
in turn. draw short arcs to mark off the same distance out from each
"If
9: The Cube
c()nrcr alottg tltc lirtt's yotr'vc tlritwrt. ()onrtccl llrc nrirr'l<s logcthc:t, irs
slrowrr, to ural<e lilur nrorc scluirrcs arorrrrd thc l'irst.
This gives you five of the sides of your cube.'lb makc thc sixth, you
simply need to repeat the same process one more time, putting the
metal point of the compass on the two outer corners of one of the
four new squares and making tlvo new marks farther out along two of
the lines extending from the original square. Connect these marks to
each other to form the sixth square.
Then cut around the outside edge of the pattern-again, don't cut
between the squares. Fold and tape the resulting pattern to create your
cube. Turn it around and about,looking at it from different sides and
seeing the different patterns created by its sides and edges; ifyou like,
mark points in the center of its sides, and try to imagine the octagram
formed by linking these points inside the cube.
l9
After the usual opening process, imagine a square. When this is solidly built up, add another to one side of it. Continue until you have the
same pattern you made in the exercise, and then imagine it folding up
to create a cube.
Then turn to the topic of the meditation, which is the element of
earth. Start with the basic, sensory experience of earth-of soil, sand,
gravel, rock-and go on from there to think of all things "earthy," ex-
ploring how they relate to you and your life. Make use of any of the
material discussed above, and if you've been exposed to the traditional teachings about the five elements, use this as well.
As before, consider the topic in a general way for a time, then take
one train of thought and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation
in the usual way.
114
Diogrom E-19
it as a scene
in his dialogue Meno. There, Plato's teacher Socrates is trying to prove
that our minds are not simply blank slates; instead, he suggests that
every human being comes into life carrying echoes of spiritual wiscomes to us from the Greek philosopher Plato, who uses
|7
twicc thc arca ol'atrolhcr s(lLrarc. All Socratcs docs is rrsl< rlucstiorrs; by
the end of the scene, the servant boy has not only solved the problem,
using the construction we're about to study but understood it as well.
The relation between the square and its diagonal is a central factor
in traditional sacred geometry, and some teachers (modern as well as
ancient) put it at the very beginning of instruction. The card shows a
smaller square, made of two right triangles, and a larger one, turned at
an angle to the first, made up of four of the same triangles. It's clear at
l)iagonal sug-
im-
Like the r/3 relationship, which was introduced along with the vesica piscis in Card 7, the tl2-the square root of )-.gurl1be expressed
tween the length of the sides of the first square and the length of
those of the second-or, in other words, the length of the side and
that of the diagonal line dividing the smaller square. These are con-
{2 relationship.
gests that in the design you've drawn on the tracing board are
cess.
l8
a glance
that the larger one covers twice the area of the smaller-four
triangles rather than two.
What's less apparent at first glance is the special relationship be-
rr
can do in the future. Before you extend the design any further,
you may want to take a hard look at the patterns that have already
been set down, and make sure that you are comfortable with the
way things will unfold if you go further down the path you've already started.
Irv pRacrlce L DtvrNATrorv, this card reversed means that the things
you've done and the positions you've taken will have consequences that can't be avoided or ignored. It serves as a reminder
that events unfold from what we actually do and say, not from our
intentions or our motives. It often means that a course of action
you are considering will lead to results that you may not like; in
some cases, it can mean that a chain of events has already been set
in motion, and the consequences are already coming toward you.
['ry constructing
square, as follows. Draw a line of any convenient length, and mark the
two ends of the line as points A and B. Then, somewhere off the line
(but not too far away!) and closer to B than A, mark point C. With the
metal point of your compass on C and the width set to the distance
between C and B, draw a circle; its circumference should cross line AB
somewhere along its length. Mark point D where the line and the circle cross (see Diagram E-20).
With the straightedge, draw a new line from D through C, and extend it further until it crosses the circle again above B. Mark point E
where the new line intersects the circle. Using the straightedge again,
draw a line from B through E. If you've followed the instructions, the
angle at B is a right angle.
From this point, making the square is simple. Put the metal point
of the compass on point B, set the width to the distance between A
and B, and swing an arc up one-quarter of a circle until it crosses line
BE. Mark point F at the intersection. Leaving the compass at the same
setting, put the metal point on F and draw an arc up from B at least a
quarter circle, then move the metal point to A and do the same thing,
so that the two arcs cross to form the fourth corner of the square.
Mark this as point G. Draw in lines FG and AG to complete the square
ABFG.
Draw in line AR the diagonal of the square. Then put the center
point of the compass on G, and with the compass still set to the distance from
through A and F.) Using the straightedge, extend line AG to the far
edge of the new circle; where the line meets the circumference, mark
point H. Then do the same thing with line FG; where the extended
line meets the circumference of the new circle, mark point I. Draw in
lines AI, IH, and HF to create square AIHF.
If you like, you can then go on to use line IF-the diagonal of the
second, larger square-as the side of a new square, which will be four
120
titucs litrg,cr thitrt tltc lrrst ortc.'l'his pr<lccss cirn bc continr,rcd inclclinitcly . . . or until you run out of papcr to drirw srprarcs on.
a square;
same process as in the meditation for Card 13, extending a point into
line and the line into a square. Once the square is built up solidly in
your mind's eye, imagine the diagonal being drawn in. From this, una
122
125
of
the pattern itself at all. A minute square and a massiye one are both
squares, in the same way that an atom and a solar system echo the
same structure and follow the same pattern of physical laws.
rr
suggests that the design you have traced can be seen as a model
for bigger things. What you have drawn on one part of your tracing board may be applicable to a much larger area, if you make
sure to do the same thing on the large scale as you did on a smaller one.
126
to spill over the edge of the tracing board! It's a reminder that bigger is not always better, and that a pattern that works well on a
small scale can turn into an unwieldy dinosaur when it's expanded beyond its
limits.
2l
For this exercise, you may find graph paper helpful; the ordinary
geometer's tools will also be needed.
There are many different ways to create a gnomon for any given
shape, and each shape has its own rules. In this exercise, we'll concentrate on one way for creating gnomons for squares, partly because the
method is a classic one, partly because you can check your work easily with graph paper.
Start by drawing a square of any convenient size; for the sake of the
exercise, it's best if this first square has a whole number of graphpaper squares inside it. Then, with the straightedge, draw three additional lines. All three of these start at the same corner of the squarethe lower left corner, let's say (see Diagram E-21). The first goes from
there through the upper left corner and on as far as the paper allows,
extending one side of the square; the second goes from the lower left
128
Diogrom E-21
conlcr through tlrc krwcr rig,lrt onc antl on lo llrr.t.rrtl ol'thc pagc, cxtcndiug another siclc o{'thc square; the tlrircl gocs f'r.<lnr tlrc klwcr lefi
corner through the upper right, forrning the diagonal ol'thc square,
and going on to the edge of the paper as before.
Now take the compass, put the metal point on the lower left cornet
and set the width to the distance to the upper right corner, along the
diagonal. Swing an arc to either side of the diagonal until it touches
the other two lines. Mark points A and B where the arc and the lines
intersect. Then, from A and B, draw lines over and up to the diagonal
line. These new lines should be parallel to the sides of the original
square. (This can be done by geometrical constructions, but for the
time being it's simpler to follow the lines of the graph paper.) The two
lines should intersect with the diagonal at the same point; mark this as
point C. Points A, C, B, and the lower left corner of the original square
form a new square larger than the original. (Ifyouve been paying attention, you've probably noticed that the second square uses a version
of the square-and-diagonal construction of Card 20, and so has twice
the area of the first square.)
Do this same construction again, taking the square you just drew in
place of the original square. Repeat several times, until you've constructed a series of squares, each one larger than the one before it. The
L-shaped areas that expand each square to the next are the gnomons
constructed by this method.
Again, there are other ways of making gnomons for squares, some
of them of very different shapes. You may find it interesting to try to
figure out some of the others, and to work out geometrical ways to
into
built up solidly in
turn your attention to the topic of the meditation,
create them.
r30
2l:
Gnomonic Exponsion
zz: Alternation
Another tool much used by the ancient sacred geometers, and well
worth exploring by modern students of the art, is a method called alternation. Alternation is a way of using ordinary numbers to deal with
the "irrational," numerically inexpressible factors that dominate sacred geometry-relationships such as 12, \i3, and others we'll explore
a little further on. In practical design work, it's important to be able to
approximate these factors in whole numbers, and this sort of approximation also forms a bridge between sacred geometry and the science
of numbers, another branch of the ancient quadrivium.
r33
Yott cittt sccitllct'ttaliolt ul worl< itt rrn inlirlnrirl wiry ()n iuly rrrotlclrr
suggests
that
the patterns on your tracing board are moving toward their final
form, but have not yet achieved it. Lines will need to be moved,
tr
not
going to achieve everything you want in the situation, no matter
how hard you try. One way or another, there will be imperfections
in the end result. It's important to remember that life is always a
succession of ups and downs, joys and sorrows, achievements and
failures; if you can approach the current situation with this in
mind, you may be able to make the best of the situation and enjoy
it despite its imperfections.
ancient example. Theon of Smyrna was a philosopher, mathematician, and sacred geometer who lived in the second century of the
common era; in his book Mathematics Useful for Understanding Plato,
he included an example of alternation using the r/Z ratio, which we'll
follow here. Several pieces of graph paper will be useful.
The goal of this exercise is to create a set of ratios between whole
numbers, which will come as close as possible to the r/2 relationship.
Start by drawing a square on the graph paper with sides equal to one
of the paper's squares. Draw in the diagonal. The side equals l, and
the diagonal falls between I and 2; you can check this with another
piece of the same graph paper. Since we need whole numbers, we set
the diagonal number at l, a little less than the actual length of the diagonal.
tion you wish. Perhaps you made mistakes in the early phases of
the drawing, and it's proceeded too far for them to be corrected
now; perhaps your tools, or the materials available to you, simply
Now Theon's method takes over. Add the side to the diagonal, to
get the side of a new square; 1 + I = 2, so the second square has sides
equal to 2. Now double the side of the original square and add this to
the diagonal, to get the diagonal number of the new square; (2 x 1) +
I = 3, so the new square has a diagonal number of 3. If you draw the
aren't up to what you had in mind; perhaps you are simply striv-
second square and measure its diagonal, the actual length is between 2
WnpN
the patterns on your tracing board will never achieve the perfec-
134
ing lirr ir lcvcl ol pcr'li'cliorr tlrrrt citrt't Irc lcirlizt'tl in tltc worltl ol
orrr cxpclicncc. liot wlrirtcvcr rcils()tl, tlttlug,lt, ytlur dcsig,rt is
22: Alternotion
itttd -i, so ltgititt our'lig,ttrc is lcss tltun orrc rrrril irwlry li'onr llrc trctrrirl
nrcirsLrrclrcnt-but this tiurc, it's rt littlc ntor-c.
Repeat the same process again. Add the sidc arrcl thc diirgonal ol'tlrc
of
r36
22: Alternotion
r/: relationship,
of Card 20 provides the standard geometrical form of the ^/2, th. double square with its diagonal gives us the last of the three fundamental
root relationships oI sacred geometry-the square root of S, or r/S.
In certain ways, the double square echoes both of the other two figures just mentioned. From one point of view, it's simply a development
141
But the double square is not just another version of the relationships we've aheady explored. If the side of each square is equal to l,
the diagonal of the double square is equal to r/5-again, a ratio that
can't be expressed by any fraction or decimal figure. Where the r/Z
stands for generation, and the r/3 for relation, the ri5 represents regeneration, the transforming process by which a pattern transcends the
limits of its own nature and opens up new potentials. In turn, it's the
thut opens the way to the proportion known as the precious jewel
^/S
of sacred geometry-the Golden Proportion, or Golden Section.
Square sug-
gests that the design you have made can be the basis
for unimagined transformations. From its vantage, you may be able to reach
new possibilities that were previously closed to you, or understand the patterns before you in unexpected ways. So that these
new potentials do not slip away, attention to what is happening is
called for.
clude dangers you haven't yet noticed. The lines and patterr-rs before you combine in subtle ways, and some of these open up
not, you are in danger of losing things you value, and the more
carelessly you face the situation the less likely you are to come out
the other side in one piece. It's especially important not to fall into
the habit of thinking that any change must be for the better. However bad the situation may seem, it could get worse, and you may
wish to consider carefully before making changes you can't undo'
itselfis constructed.
The goal of this exercise is to construct a second square next to the
first, and of exactly the same size. Start by putting the metal point of
the compass on one of the lower corners of the square, and setting the
compass width to the length of the diagonal-that is, to the distance
from that corner to the opposite one. Draw an arc up from the opposite corner until it's well past the midpoint of the square's upper side.
Then move the metal point of the compass to the other lower corner
of the square, and with the compass at the same setting, draw another
arc up from the other upper corner, crossing the first arc above the
middle of the upper side (see Diagram E-23).
142
Line up the straightedge on the point where the two arcs cross and
the point where the square's two diagonals cross, and draw a line connecting these. Where this line crosses the upper side of the square,
mark point A.
Next, leaving the compass at the same setting, put the metal point
on each of the square's upper corners in turn and draw two arcs, of a
quarter circle each, in the space above the original square, (It's not
necessary for these arcs to cross each other.) Then line up the straightedge on point
turn, drawing two lines, which cross at point A and go out to intersect
the two arcs you've just drawn. Where the lines cross the arcs, mark
points B and C. Connect points B and C with each other, and with the
upper corners of the square below, to form a new square exactly the
size of the original one.
time, and then turn to the topic of this meditation, which is the
concept of regeneration-the possibility of stepping outside existing
for
limits by coming to
see
As before, consider the topic in a general way for a time, then take
one train of thought and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation
t44
Diogrom E-23
e4: Progression
of
Roots
At this point in our progress through the cards, the diverse patterns
of
147
As we saw
and so on.
It's worth taking a few moments to think about what this implies.
Starting with the simple square and diagonal, it's possible to produce
all three of the prime ratios in traditional sacred geometry, one after
another, by repeating the same process over and over again. The riZ
and./: relationships, in other words, aren't necessarily opposites; they
can also be stages in a common process. Nor does the r/5 relationship
come from out of the blue to transform the opposition into a more
balanced interaction; it's another stage in the same process, carried on
rr
of
Roots
suggests that the design you're drawing has its own, inner pat-
terns to unfold, whether or not these were what you had in mind.
From the lines and shapes you've drawn on the tracing board,
new ones will unfold, and if you let them go along with their own
innate wisdom you are likely to be astonished and delighted by
the results.
Irv pnecrrca
tion has
48
L DrvrNATIoN, this card upright means that the situaa momentum and a direction of its own, and will develop
that you
factors
This is often a very good sign in divination, since it tends to mean that the situation will take care of itself if you simplylet it alone.
see as opposites.
rr
of Roots
suggests that the designs on the tracing board have gone beyond
in Diagram E24; make sure you extend the lines at least far enough to allow you to
draw in another square. For the sake of clariry we'll label the corners of
the square on the side where the lines don't extend as points A and B,
and the corners where the lines start their extension as points C and D.
sides of the square out in the same direction, as shown
24: Progression of
Roots
Now put the metal point of the compass on point A, and set the
compass width so that the pencil point reaches to point C at the opposite corner of the square, across the diagonal. Draw an arc down
from C until it crosses the extended line; mark point E here. Then
move the metal point to B, set the pencil point at D, and draw an arc
up from D to the extended line. Mark point F where arc and line
cross. Draw a line from E to F to complete rectangle ABFE, which is a
tl2 rectangle-that is, a rectangle where the length relates to the width
(or vice versa) in the ratio 1:r/2.
Now put the metal point of the compass back on A, set the width to
the distance from A to R and swing an arc down from F to the extended line, marking point G where arc meets line. Move the metal point
to B and repeat the process, swinging an arc from E to the line, marking point H. Draw a line from G to H to complete rectangle ABHG,
which is a r/: rectangle. (If you want to doublecheck this, construct a
vesica piscis with the distance from A to B as the radius of the two circles; the length of the vesica's major axis will be the same as the length
of rectangle ABHG's long side.)
Now repeat the process, setting the compass width to the distance
from A to H and drawing arcs from H and G to the extended lines,
marking points I and J. If you've followed the instructions carefully,
rectangle ABJI will be a double square. Check this by setting the compass width to AB, putting the metal point at D, and drawing a semicircle from A through C to I, showing that lines AB, AD, CD, and DI are
all the same length.
{7, and
^/6,
use in traditional sacred geometry,
a square. Exactly as
150
{3
{2
in the exrectangle,
rectangle, and a double square with its diagonal. Then turn your
Diogrom E-24
attention to the topic of this meditation, which is the way these three
factors proceed from one another. Think about the different meanings
we've discussed for these three root-relationships, and try to see how
generation gives rise to relation, and relation to regeneration. (You
may find it useful to read back over the material for Cards 7,20, and
23beforeyou start.)
As before, consider the topic in a general way for a time, then take
one train of thought and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation
152
153
154
REvERsED rN A READINc, Discontinuous Proportion suggests that you have drawn the design before you in such a
way that someone else is going to have to complete it for you. You
have made your patterns dependent on someone else's contribution, and now you will have to see if that is going to come your
way-or not.
toward situations in which you actually need help. Here and now,
you are waiting for someone else to do your work or carry your
burden for you, and as a result you will have to deal with the very
mixed benefits of dependency.
among the most common and useful tools of the practicing sacred
geometer. It's called "finding the fourth proportional," and not all that
long ago it used to be part of a basic education in math all over the
Western world.
\{hat is a fourth proportional? Imagine for a moment that you
only had three of the numbers in the example we used earlier in this
section. You have I and2, and you know that the first term of the second pair of numbers is 3 . . . but you don't have the last number. That
number is called the fourth proportional.
Working out the fourth proportional in numbers can be done, but
it's not always the best approach. If the measurements that you're
using happen to be in whole numbers, as in the example just given,
you're in luck; you can solve problems like this easily by using simple
algebra. If the measurements work out to complicated fractions or,
worse still, to irrational numbers like r/2, you have a lot more work
ahead of you.
If you
it
past the details of construction into the actual process more quickly,
and it also allows you to check your work by arithmetic if you want to.
(If you've mastered the constructions used in the cards we've covered
up to this point, you can do it on unlined paper; give it a shot if you're
feeling confident.) Your geometer's tools are the only other things
you ll need.
Start by drawing three lines, all of different lengths, over by one
side of the paper. These are your three measurements. Mark them
with the letters W, X, and Y. The fourth proportional, the measurement you are trying to find, will be Z.
Now draw another line, at least as long as lines W and Y put together, along the middle of the paper. Use your straightedge, and line it up
with one of the lines of the graph paper for convenience. Then mark
three points, A, B, and C, on the line. A can go anpvhere convenient,
but should be close to one end of the line. The other two points are
placed by measuring: the distance between A and B is the same as the
length of line W and the distance between B and C is the same as the
Iength of line Y. (You can do this by setting the width of the compass
points equal to the length of the line, putting the metal point on a
point you've already established, and drawing a small arc across the
line to show where the other point belongs.)
Then draw a second line, at right angles to the first one, up from
point A. (You can construct a right angle geometrically if you wish, or
you can simply follow the graph lines.) On this second line, mark
point D, so that the distance from A to D is equal to the length of line
X. You now have all three of your measurements mapped onto the
construction (see Diagram E-25).
At this point, all you have to do is draw another line at right angles
to the first line, starting at point C and going the other direction.
Then line up the straightedge on points D and B, and draw a line
from D through B to intersect the third line. Mark point E where
56
Diogrom E-25
of the
these two lines intersect. The distance from C to E is the length
as
ratio
fourth proportional,Iine Z,which is related to Y in the same
XistoW.
Meditotion for Cord 25
figure
After the usual opening process' imagine any simple geometric
beyou wish. Build it up solidly in your mind's eye' Then imagine it
the
coming first larger, then smaller, in such a way that it keeps exactly
same shape, and every part stays
every
other part.
the mediOnce you have imagined this clearly, turn to the topic of
the
tation, which is the relation between change and stability. see what
that
image has to say to the experiences you ve had in life of things
consider
change, and of things that don't seem to change' As before'
the topic in a general way for a time, then take one train of thought
way'
and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation in the usual
ent
as
158
first ratio
first measurement
159
to the second in the same way that the second relates to the third. For
example, the numbers 1, 2, and 4 form a continuous proportion' Two
is the double of one, and four is the double of two; in shorthand,
l:2::2:4,"one is to two as two is to four."
Continuous proportions are among the most useful of all the tools
in the sacred geometer's kit. The relation that binds together 1,2, and
IN pntcrtc.e,L DrvrNATrov, this card reversed means that the situation is what it is, and for the time being, at least, you will have to
live with it. Not everything in life is open to negotiation or
change! In many cases, this card is a warning that you dort't have
as much influence as you think, or that you're expecting the world
to conform to your ideas, rather than developing your ideas on
the basis of your experience of the world. This can be a recipe for
else, that
make, will affect everything else. The patterns you set in motion
aren't random or capricious; they will be precise reflections of what
you do, howyou do it, and what your motives are. This has obvious
links to the concept of karma-the idea that what you get out of
life depends on what you give-and issues of karma may be more
than usually important in your life at this time.
160
suggests that the lines and forms on the tracing board are linked
disaster; you can convince yourself that cars don't exist, and learn
not to notice them when they drive by but if you go for a walk
across the freeway you can still be run over by what you don't see.
Exercise {ror Cord 26
The method of finding the fourth proportional, which was taught in
the exercise for Card 25, is one of several useful geometric skills that
used to be common knowledge among most people with a basic education. The subject of this exercise is another. It's a method of finding
the geometrical mean, and it once saw constant use by artists, architects, designers, and other practitioners of sacred geometry.
What is a geometrical mean? The word mean means "middle," and
middle number that relates
the two together in some meaningful way. There are various kinds of
means. The geometrical mean is another way of talking about the
middle term in a continuous proportion where the ratio between the
a mean between
first two terms is the same as that between the last two. In our example above, l:2::2:4,2 is the middle term of the proportion, and it can
also be described as the seometrical mean between I and 4.
This is an easy example, since it involves nothing but whole numbers and a simple proportion. Things can get much more complex
when you're working with relationships like
{3
or the Golden Proportion. Trying to deal with these by way of numbers is difficult at best.
Again, though, geometry offers an easier way.
For this exercise, graph paper is recommended; the exercise can be
done on unlined paper, but graph paper
will make it
check your work. Start by drawing, along one side, two lines of any
length you like; for the sake ofconvenience, one should be a good deal
larger than the other, and each one should be an exact number of
graph-paper squares in length. (It can be any number of squares you
like-l4, 9,33, or whatever-but it shouldn't be 15 and part of a sixteenth, for instance.) Mark the lines as line I and line 2.
Now draw a line across the middle of the paper, lining up your
straightedge on the grid lines of the graph paper. Mark three points
on this line-A, B, and C. The distance from point A to point B
should be equal to the length of line 1, and the distance from B to C
should be the length of line 2. (Use your compass to measure the distance exactly.) Now from point B, draw another line at right angles to
the original line, and extend it until it's as long as the longer of your
two lines.
The next step is to find the center of the whole distance from A to
C. You can do this with the construction from the exercise for Card
10, or simply "cheat" by counting graph-paper squares. Once you've
found and marked the center, put the metal point of the compass
there, set the compass width so that the pencil point comes to A, and
draw a semicircle around to C, cutting through the other line (the one
at right angles to AC) in the process.
Where the semicircle cuts the other line, mark point D (see Diagram E-26). Line BD will be the geometrical mean between line AB
and line BC, so that AB, BD, and BC form a continuous proportion.
162
Diogrom E-26
mind's eye. Then imagine yourself moving closer to it, and discovering that it is made up of smaller versions of the same shape, clustering
together. You come closer and closer, and the smaller shapes prove to
be made of even smaller ones, themselves made of still smaller ones'
your imagination will reach.
Turn to the topic of the meditation, which is the concept of interrelation. A common theme of spiritual teachings from around the world
is that all things are interconnected. Think about this, and in particuand so on, as far
as
64
165
As you've already learned, a discontinuous proportion is a relation between four different measures' which we can label a, b, c, and
d, such that a:b::c:d. A continuous proPortion relates three measures, a, b, and c, such that a:b::b:c. How can this be taken any further? Simply by making c equal to the sum of a plus b. Then we have
a:b::b:(a+b).
Now it so happens that there's only one ratio in all the universe that
will make this equation work, and it involves yet another irrational
number. This number is signified by the Greek letter phi, O. In approximate numbers' it works out to around 1.61803398875 ' . ' (and
so on for an infinite number of digits) but-like n or the square roots
of 2,3,and 5-it can't be expressed exactly by any fraction or decimal
number. On the other hand, like these others, it canbe expressed exactly by geometry.
O is a number with astonishing properties' Not only does it make
the special "hypercontinuous" proportion' or Golden Proportion1:O::@:(1+O) works out exactly-but adding I to <D gives you O', and
subtracting 1 from it gives you the fraction /o! Entire books have been
written about the ways that O dances around itself in mathematical
terms. and books have also been written about the ways that O and
the Golden Proportion appear over and over again in the natural
world. The spiral of seeds in the head of a sunflower is based on the
Golden Proportion; so are the curves of a nautilus shell, the lengths of
the bones in your fingers, and many other relationships.
Researchers have found that of all shapes, those based on the Gold-
as
are doing' or are planning to do the right thing at the right time
in
the right situation, and the results will unfold from that in perfect
harmony.
Reversed Meoning: Justice
wnnN rrAp,,EARs
RE'ERSED
rNA
READTNc, The
Golden proportion
suggests that the designs you have drawn on your tracing board
It
relates
This exercise will teach another basic construction that was once common knowledge among educated people. The basic Golden Rectangle,
166
success, pure
well.
27 : The
Golden Proportion
Start by drawing a square, using either of the two constructions rntroduced so far (in the exercises for Cards 13 and 20). The next step is
You now have a square divided into two long rectangles' and if
you're paying attention, you've noticed that each of these rectangles is
a double square. (Their long sides, after all, are twice the length of
their short ones.) Next, put the metal point of the compass on point A
and adjust the width until the pencil point is on the opposite corner
of one of the rectangles; swing an arc upwards through a quartercircle or so. Move the metal point to B, and swing a second arc up in
the same way.
Line the straightedge up on the sides of the original square, and extend the sides up until they intersect the arcs. Where the arcs and lines
cross, mark points C and D. Draw in line CD to complete a new rec-
168
Diogrom E-27
Once you have the basic ratio in place, it's possible to keep on turning
out an endless sequence of Golden Rectangles, all of them in perfect
Meditotion
Qor
Cord 27
After the usual opening process, imagine the Golden Rectangle shown
on the card; leave out the lines and arc inside the rectangle, and just try
to pay attention to the overall shape. Consider it, turning it over in
your mind and trying to feel how the sides relate to one another. When
this is clearly built up in your imagination, turn to the topic of the
meditation, which is the idea of beauty. What is beauty? What do we
mean when we say that something is beautiful? Is beauty just a matter
of perception by the senses, or is there something else involved?
As before, consider the topic in a general way for a time, then take
one train of thought and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation
170
t7\
rr
that the drawing you have made on the tracing board is, in some
sense, a magical talisman. It has the capacity to summon power of
one kind or another. If you take the time to learn how to make
it
it
IN pnecrtctL
172
Diogrom A-28
This is very often a positive sign, for it means that you have the
power you need to achieve what you want. It also implies, howev-
if the situation needs fixing, you're the one who is in a position to fix it; this is not a good time to wait for someone else's
er, that
help!
REvERSED rN A READTNG,
that you need to remember that no one else's hand is holding the
pen upon your tracing board, nor will anyone else be responsible
for the patterns you draw there. Those patterns may not be as abstract or as playful as you assume; you may end up having to live
with the results of your designs, and so may other people.
IN pnecrrctL DrvrNATroN, this card reversed means that you need to
keep in mind that power brings responsibility with it, and your
actions may have consequences and implications for which you
will be held responsible, one way or another, further on down the
road. At its harshest, The Pentagram reversed can have some of
the same quality of implacable justice as The Golden Proportion
reversed, but more often it simply reminds you that what you do
is important, and not just in the present moment.
\
A
F-r/
horizontal line, and the upper end of the vertical one. For our present purposes, we'll call the first two points A and B, and the last point C.
Now set the compass to the same setting it was at when you drew
the original circle; put the metal point on B, and draw an arc through
the center of the circle, swinging it out until it crosses the circumference on both ends and forms a vesica piscis (see Diagram E-28). At
cross intersects the circle's circumference-the two ends of the
174
Diogrom E-28
the ends of the vesica's major axis, where the arc and the circle inter-
pentagram.
it
to the four material elements-fire, air, water, and earth, respectively-but the dodecahedron corresponds to the fifth element, the element of spirit.
176
177
days-not
from a root that also shows up in words like "respiration." From the
idea of breath, it came to be used for the subtle life-energies that are
related to breath, and then for a whole range of realities that go beyond the purely physical. Since most people in the Western world
know very little about the nonphysical levels of being, it's no wonder
that it's come to be used rather loosely.
For our present purposes, the complex geography of the realms of
spirit isn't crucial. The one point that needs to be kept in mind, and
gets forgotten far too often, is that spirit isn't simply a vague, formless
"something" onto which we can project our own desires and fantasies.
According to the seers and mystics of all times and cultures, it's the
world of matter that's comparatively formless and vague, and the
world of spirit that's intricate, powerful, and structured. To borrow a
metaphor from C. S. Lewis, we tend to think of the spiritual side of reality as some vague mist steaming upward, when a better image might
be strong, skilled hands reaching down from above to shape and
transform.
rr
rNA READTNc, The Dodecahedron suggests that the design on your tracing board has become a framework for energies descending from the spiritual levels of being. In
AppEARs upRrGHT
IN pnAcrtc,c,L DrvrNATrorv, this card upright means that the situation is being shaped by spiritual influences. Where Card 28 upright is like a magical talisman, The Dodecahedron suggests a
temple or a shrine, one in which the divinity is very much present
and active! Whether you understand what is happening or not,
t7B
this is a good time to try to move along with it, rather than trying
to pursue your own idea of what should happen.
Reversed Meon ing : Tro nsmutotion
wnpN
e'ppEARs REVERSED
rNA
R.EADTNG,
gests that the design you have drawn is an image of yourself, and
as that design changes, you must change along with it. It may be
that spiritual powers are guiding your pen, or that you yourself
are beginning to recognize the ways in which you need to bring
greater balance, harmonS and creativity to bear in the lines and
forms of your own self.
Ilv pnecrrca L DrvrNArrorv, this card reversed means that what the
situation is demanding of you is inner change. This is perhaps
the most frightening part of any spiritual journey, and it,s an im_
portant reason why so many people either ignore the spiritual altogether or put up some comfortable imitation in its place. The
tangle of compromises, evasions, and half-truths that makes up
the ordinary human personality has to give way to something
stronger, clearer, and more honest before it can open itself to the
spiritual realm-or, really, to any aspect of life. This is the work
ahead of you at this time.
Exercise for Cord 29
This exercise, like those for the other platonic solids, will require a
craft knife or a good pair of scissors as well as the usual geometer's
tools, and it's useful to do it on heavier paper than usual; you'll need
two sheets this time, as well. This is the most difficult construction
you'll be given in this book, but if you follow it step by step you
shouldn't have any trouble.
The first step in this construction is to draw a regular pentagon,
which you can do by following the instructions for the exercise for
card28, except for the last step of drawing in the pentagram itself. As
you start, make sure that the original circle is small enough that you
can
the edge of the paper. Instead of the final step, draw in lines CH, Hf,
JK, KI, and IC to form the pentagon (see Diagram E-29). You may
find it useful to make these lines darker than usual, so that they stand
Next, set the compass to the distance between points C and Hthat is, to the length of the side of your original pentagon. Put the
metal point of the compass on each of the corners of the pentagon,
and draw short arcs to mark in the corners of the new pentagons. (I
won't give letters to each of these new points, since we'd quickly run
out of alphabet! Simply mark these in the same way you did in the exercise for Card 28.) Draw in lines to create the five pentagons around
the original one.
\Arhen you've done all that, you're halfiuay there. What you have to
do next is to repeat the same process exactly, with the same measurements, on another piece of paper. Once you have two clusters of six
pentagons each, cut the clusters out-cut along four sides of each of
the outside pentagons, but don't cut them apart from the central one,
or you'll have wasted all that effort-bend the outside pentagons up
until their edges meet, and tape them together. Finally, join the two
halves of the dodecahedron together-the points on each half go into
the spaces between the points on the other-and tape. Take the time
to studyyour dodecahedron from various angles, and see the patterns
it forms.
180
tagons folding back, away from you, to meet and form a half-dodecahedron. All at once. become aware that there is another half behind it.
unseen, completing the dodecahedron.
topic in a general way for a time, then take one train of thought and
follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation in the usual way.
182
underlies all the patterns of sacred geometry, new relationships become apparent. In examining Card 24, Progression of Roots, we discovered one of the ways in which the three central root relationships
r85
attract, and you may have seen this (or experienced it yourself) in
human relationships, or in other aspects of life. The truth underlying
the clichd is that every pair of opposites is part of a greater unity. Hot
and cold are simply different kinds of temperature, male and female
different expressions of a common humanity life and death different
stages in a single process.
This recognition of the underlying unity in all oppositions can
bridge the gap that seems to open up so often in ordinary life, where
opposites sometimes seem to hedge us around on all sides. At the
same time, it's a door into paradox, into realms that we may not be
able to understand within the limits of our ordinary habits of thinking and experiencing.
IJaRTGHT
tion among the patterns on your tracing board, you will be able to
draw the different lines and forms back together again into unity.
Subtle connections link together even those things that seem most
at odds with one another, and if you can find these or sense them,
you can use them to reconcile the different factors of your design.
In pntcrtceL DrvrNArrorv, this card upright means that conflict, division, or disagreement in the situation can be resolved in a constructive way. It often means that different factions or individuals,
who seem to be moving in opposite directions, are actually carrying out different parts ofa larger pattern, and can be brought together in a constructive way if this is done gently and perceptively.
It can also mean that no conflict will arise in the first place.
186
suggests that the design on your tracing board has taken shape ac-
cording to principles that may not make sense to you. Lines and
forms are combining and interacting in ways you hadn't expected
and can't predict, and the overall design seems to be turning into
something other than what you had in mind.
1N
situation is taking shape in ways that seem paradoxical or confusing. Things you thought were going one way turn out to be headed
in a completely different direction, and your actions produce results you didn't anticipate. This can be a difficult experience, especially for those who like their lives predictable, but it's important to
remember that finite minds facing an infinite universe are going to
of unlined paper.
start-with
with two circles forming a vesica piscis, or with a double square. We'll take these one at a
time.
To start from a square, begin by constructing a slluare, using either
of the constructions we've studied so far (the exercises for Cards 13
and 20 give these). Draw in the diagonal of the square. Choose one
side of the square, and label the two corners on that side points A and
B; the two on the opposite side are points C and D.
There are three ways to
a square,
IBB
inyour
teract. When you ve established this pattern of imagery firmly in
imagination, turn your attention to the topic of the meditation, which
is the links among the three root relationships-{2, {3, and lS-and
the three corresponding principles of generation, relation, and regeneration.
As before, consider the topic in a general way for a time, then take
one train of thought and follow it out to its end. Finish the meditation
in the usual way.
possible, and see how the square, the vesica, and the double square
r90
r93
come into common use in the ancient world until Roman times.) Still,
even
studied by wise people, for it was clear even then that the sphere was
the dominant shape in the universe surrounding the Earth.
There's a common modern notion that claims no one knew that
the Earth was round until the mariners of the Age of Exploration
sailed around it, but this just shows how little people actually know
about the life of the mind in ancient times. The correct shape of the
Earth was certainly known to the ancient Greeks by the fourth century B.c.E., and there's good reason to think it may have been figured
out much earlier. The philosopher Eratosthenes of Cyrene even calculated the Earth's size in the third century B.c.E., and came within a few
percent of the modern figure. As for the contemporaries of Columbus, the textbook of astronomy used in university courses all over Europe in 1492-lohn of Sacrobosco's On The Sphere-starts out with a
set of good logical proofs that the Earth is round. (The debates between Columbus and his critics had to do with the size of the Earth,
not its shape. His opponents argued that the distance from Spain to
the Indies was farther than any fifteenth-century ship could traveland they were right! It's just that no one imagined there might be two
unknown continents in the way.)
With the sphere, then, we are dealing with the symbolic image of
the cosmos itself. The sun, the moon, the planets, and the Earth itself
are spheres, and this led philosophers of an earlier age to suggest that
the universe itself might be shaped the same way. This ancient idea
has received startling modern support from Einstein's theory of relativity, which holds that space itself is curved and that the entire uni-
ities before you are greater than you have any way of imagining.
the design on your tracing board has passed beyond your understanding. The lines and forms you have traced interact with others you can't see at all, producing patterns and relationships you
can't predict and may not even see, and the final shape of the design you're drawing is completely hidden from you.
1iv
or more of the major factors at work in the situation are completely outside your picture of the matter. In some ways, this card
is a more intense form of Card 30 reversed, but what you re up
against here is not simply a matter of paradox-it's a complete
failure to grasp what's going On. It may be that you don't have the
knowledge or the experience to figure out what is happening, it
may be that your basic assumptions are so far off the mark that
you don't have a clue about the actual factors at work, or it may
simply be that the situation is so complex and delicate that its
verse is spherical.
IT
that
the design you have drawn on your tracing board leads out end-
194
3l:
The Sphere
3l
The Sphere is the one card in the Sacred Geometry Oracle for which
theret no practical geometrical exercise. The reason for this is simple:
there is no way to construct a sphere, or even a really close approximation to one, using the tools of the sacred geometer and a sheet of
paper. A sphere can have no angles and no flat surfaces; only a pattern
with an infinite number of infinitely small sides would do the joband this is a little hard to carry out in practice!
To explore the sphere, it's necessary to stray out of the boundaries
of sacred geometry itself just a little, and venture into another branch
of the ancient quadrivium-the fourth branch, astronomy. One good
way to do this is to go outside on a clear evening just after sunset,
when the moon is in its first quarter and one or more planets will be
visible. (You can look this up in any good almanac.) Find a grassy
slope with a good view of the western sky, and lie down on your back,
looking out into infinite space. Though the sun is below the horizon,
you can see its rays streaming upwards from the west, and the crescent
of the moon shows that those same rays are illuminating one face of
our sister world. If Venus or Mercury are visible, be aware of the sun's
rays lighting them also.
As you gaze into the sky, then, try to become aware-not just as an
intellectual idea, but as an actual experience-that you are on a sphere
yourself, spinning through the same heavens as the sun and its other
planets. Tiy to realize, with your whole being, that you are looking out
rather than up-that the Earth is not a flat surface beneath you but a
sphere among spheres, sweeping through space as it turns on its
axis-that the sun and moon are not setting, but rather that the part
of the Earth you're on is turningaway from them.
It's a dizzyine experience, and you may not want to try to drive im-
After the usual opening process, imagine a sphere taking shape around
you, extending perhaps ayard or so out from you. Tiy to build up the
image of the sphere surrounding you as solidly as possible in your
mind's
eye.
bigger, expanding to surround the room, your home, your neighborhood, your state or province, your country your continent, your planet.
mediately afterwards.
196
3l
3l:
The Sphere
that is, producing a square and a circle that had either exactly the
same area, or exactly the same distance around the outer edge. This
Inay seem trivial at first glance, but it actually deals with issues that go
.straight to the core of traditional sacred geometry.
The square is a very easy figure to calculate with. If you want to
l<now thc clistancc rrround its outer perimeter, all you have to do is
t99
can never be expressed precisely by numbers, you can know exactly ei-
ther the diameter or the circumference of a circle. but never bothand this raises a barrier to squaring the circle that no amount of ingenuity can breach.
In fact, mathematicians proved long ago that there is no way to
square the circle exactly by geometrical methods. It simply can't be
done. This doesn't mean, however, that the attempt is not worth making. Many of the classic methods for carrying out an approximate
squaring of the circle are accurate to within a tiny fraction of the total
measurements involved, and they also have lessons of their own to
teach.
Upright Meoni
WnnN
gests
ng : Attoi nmenl
r00
simply can't be done, and that is that. Despite all your efforts and
skill, you are not going to achieve what you want to achieve. Like
among the simpler, and it also has the useful feature of starting on
ground we've already covered several times. This particular construc-
tion is an ancient one, and has been explored in detail by the modern
sacred geometer fohn Michell.
Begin by marking a point, point A, and drawing a circle of any
convenient size around it. Choose a second point, point B, on the circumference of the circle, and draw a circle of the same size around it,
creating
Then draw lines from E and F to H. Where these two lines cross the
D
H
the ones in the card. After a time, imagine the square rising and the
circle lowering, until they overlap exactly.
Then turn your attention to the topic of the meditation, which is
the relation between spirit and matter. fust as many different forms
202
and functions i
squaring the cir
used
in different methods of
onethatseems.",,.'ffi
::il:J:ilri"l'ffi :.lilil::,:H;
205
tlittliliorrrrlly took slrirpt' irr tlrt' lrcirrrlilirl rrrrtl rttovirrg str ttt lttt'cs ol ittt
cicnt irrclritccturc, just irs thc lilclcss gconrctlics ol plrlit itlttl cl'licicrrcy
produce the ugliness of so much in tlre way ol'rtroclcrrt clcsigrr atrcl cottstruction.
But the connection between geometry and the universe of our cxperience goes a good deal deeper. Our own bodies, the instruments
through which we experience the world, are structured by geometricarl
principles. If you fall close to the human ayerage, the distance fror-r-r
your head to your navel relates to the distance from your navel to the
floor in the Golden Proportion, and the distance from your navel to
the floor relates to your total height in the same ratio. Many similar
proportions and ratios structure eyery part of the human body.
Equally, as countless experiments have shown, people find shapes
based on the Golden Proportion more attractive than any other, and
they find shapes based on any meaningful geometrical pattern more
attractive than those simply put together at random. \A/hat this shows
is that geometry is as deeply rooted in our minds as it is in our bodies.
In ancient times, considerations like these led the masters of sacred
geometry to build their art around what is called the human canon.
(The word "canon" is an old term for "standard" or "rule.") This was
simply the principle that the measures, relationships, and patterns
used in sacred geometry were drawn from the human body itself.
From ancient times through the Renaissance, the same proportions
that relate the fingers to the hand and the limbs to the body also related the parts of a building to the whole shape of the structure, and the
structure itself to the surrounding landscape. The result was a built
environment that was not only stunningly beautiful, but that also
made it easier for the people living in and around them to live lives of
the same sort of proportion and balance. All these are things that
would be well worth reviving in the present world.
ur-rity that governs the whole pattern is clne that you yourscll'havc
put there, whether you realize it or not.
over again, you may want to try to figure out how you yourself
might be causing it-and if you don't like it, you may want to
think about ways of changing yourself so that you don't call it into
being again. More broadly, this card upright is a reminder that
you are the most powerful force shaping the universe of your own
experience, and you need to seek in yourself the means of reshap-
Human Canon suggests that the design on your tracing board contains more factors
and patterns than you have imagined, and more potentials for
new creation than anyone can ever grasp. No matter how simple
WnnN
the design is, or how complex it has become, the possibility always
exists that you
drawn before.
lrv pnecrrcaL DrvrNATrorv, this card reversed means that you may
not be paying enough attention to the real diversities that are present in the situation. While it may look just the same as other situations you've seen in the past, it has features of its own that
you re not noticing. This card reversed serves as a reminder that
the universe is more complex and diverse than any of our belief
systems or mental models can really grasp, and that it's always
possible for things to happen that have never happened before.
WrtpN rrAppEARs upRrGHT rNA READTNc, The Human Canon suggests that the design you have sketched out on your tracing board
206
about who lrtcl wltlt y()u arc; try to g,et past sirnplc vcrbirl lirltcls
"l am a woman,""l am a man,""I am thin,""l arn fat,""l arn (fill irr tlrc
blank)"-toward something deeper and less arbitrary, founded not on
words but on experience. Who are you? What are you? Let the questions turn over in your mind, and seek a sense of your own nature. Go
on as long as it seems productive, then finish the meditation in the
usual way.
so on.
Now do the same thing with your face, using a mirror to guide your
hand, and being especially careful near the eyes. When your eyes are
open to their normal width, how close do they come to perfect vesicas? What are the proportions of your nose, your mouth, your forehead, the line of your jaw? Take these explorations as far as you wish,
208
bet of symbols that can be used for divination, as well as for other
purposes, such as meditation or study. An alphabet, though, is only
the first step of the way we form and communicate meaning. In ordinary language, we put letters of the alphabet together to form words,
sentences, and entire texts. In the subtle language of divination, similarly, we put one or more cards together with a diviner, a querent-the
person for whom the divination is done, who may or may not be the
same person as the diviner-and a question or situation on which the
reading will shed light.
There are many different ways to approach the process of divination. One useful way divides it into three different stages: first, preparation; second, casting the reading; and third, interpretation. We'll
take these one at a time.
into the state of heightened awareness and intuition that makes divination possible. Others find that such things simply get in the way,
and prefer to plunge straight into the divining process. One way or
another, though, it's important to still the ordinary chatter of the
mind, and to focus your awareness on the work you are about to do.
Divination isn't a game, and it should be treated with a certain degree of seriousness. As the word itself suggests, it's a matter of raising
the awareness up above the everyday human level, and coming into
closer contact with the divine consciousness that shapes all things.
211
be clarified in a way that will help the divination make sense. Thc
other is to make sure that the cards themselves are ready to respond to
the questions. Each of these has its own requirements.
P r e p ar in g
In
the Qu e stio n s
many systems of divination, the standard approach is to have the
We'll cover the details of this method a little further on, when we
discuss casting and interpreting the reading. In preparing for this
method, though, it's important to be sure you understand the question or situation that the divination is going to explore. If you're doing
a reading for another person, you'll need to work with the querent to
open up the different issues and factors involved, asking questions ancl
encouraging the querent to talk about his or her concerns, hopes,
fears, and needs in the situation. If you're doing a reading for yoursell,
the same process will need to go on inside your own head.
This part of the divination process has much in common with thc
sort ofwork that counselors and clergy do. Patience, tact, and the abil
ity to listen are of central importance here. Particularly crucial is tlrc
habit of keeping an open mind, and avoiding any judgment in atl
vance of the divination process itself. See what the cards have to say
before you jump to any conclusions about what is going on!
212
third to the third pile, the fourth to the first pile, and
in the deck have been dealt out into the
three piles, put the first pile on top of the second one, then the combined pile on top of the third, forming a single pack to be cut, shuffled, and dealt in the divining process itself.
second pile, the
Preparing Yourself
There is also the matter of readying yourself for the divination, and
entering into a state of consciousness that will foster the divining
process instead of interfering with it. One simple ceremonial method
that helps to do this, and falls somewhere in the middle of the extremes mentioned above, goes as follows.
First, spend a moment or two stilling your mind, and then take
your cards out of the box and hold the deck in your hands, facedown,
so that the diagram on the back is visible.
Second, imagine the diagram expanding out from the back of the
topmost card until you (and the querent, if you're divining for someone else) are sitting in the center, surrounded by a triangle, square,
and circle formed of lines of pure light. Hold this image, allowing it to
build up solidly in your mind's eye.
'lltit'tl,
siry,
worcls:
Let the circle oJ'spirit and the square ol mattcr comc into harmony here and now; let wisdom take shape and knowledge be
shown, and the form of hidden things be revealed.
214
titttt pcoplc, lirrccs, ittttl lrte tors irr thc sittratiort itlxrrrl wlritlr you tt'tli
virring. Stlrt with ir carcl lor thc qucrcr)t lrirnscll'ol hcrscll, irrrrl thcn
deal out the others one at a time, saying aloud what each carcl rcprc-
meanmg to you.
words and commentaries given for each of the cards of the Sacred
Geometry Oracle should be treated as a starting point for your own
intuitive awareness, not as a cage around the card's possibilities of
meaning.
Sample Readings
Two sample readings may help show how this process is carried out.
Somple Reoding I
The querent is an office worker who is dissatisfied with her job. One of
her coworkers has approached her about a business opportunity that,
he claims,
has given her a packet of literature about the program, and invited her
to attend
the opportunity.
references
It
about
1. Herself;
216
217
l. (l.rrtl
l<l cirrlr
ol lhcsc
irs lirllows:
she has stopped moving under her own power, ancl nray bc
2. Card
Cord
The Unmarked Card reversed: Hiddenness. This suggests that the coworker may have information he is not shar1,
Cord
Cord 3
Cord 2
CordT
5. Card
be wasted effort.
Cqrd 5
In the course of discussing the cards, the querent admits that she'd
heard rumors that the coworker who made the offer was involved in
various shady marketing schemes, and had wondered why he didn't
seem to be as rich as the flyers implied he ought to be! She is more interested, though, in following up some of the cards'other suggestions.
Two more factors emerge from the discussion:
218
Somple Reoding I
Cord 6
Cord 9
It. 'l'hc oppoltrrrritics t() l)c lourrtl irr ltcr currcrrt lint'ol
wor'l<;
Cord 2
Cord 3
Cord 4
Somple Reoding 2
Cord 6
The querent is a young man worried about his future. He has applied
to
Cord 5
wants to be told that he'll be accepted, and doesn't want to hear about
any other issues involved.
These are the most important factors
situation:
CordT
2. The university;
3. The university's response to his application.
The cards respond to these as follows:
220
Somple Reoding 2
of
and then, by a series of gentle questions, elicits a long story of
and then suddenly bursting into tears. The diviner gets him a box
tissues
4. Card
7. Card
1,
The querent considers these, and then asks another question: How
can he avoid falling into the same sort of perfectionism that has made
222
llrirt ltt"s lollowt'tl nriuly tinrcs irr llrt'prrsl,;rrrtl llrirl il's rrrrlil<t'ly
Somple Reodings
inner traditions, as mentioned earlier, and the total number of worthwhile books on the subject in English today would fit on a very small
shelf. Fortunately, some of the books on that shelf count as classics by
any definition. Those books I would recommend to the beginning or
225
Sclrwirllcl tlc l,rrhicz, lt. A. '/'/rr' Iigyptittrt Mirutfu (ltocltcslcr, Vt.: lrrrrcr
ltaditions Internar-
tional, 1999).
Glossary
Air: one of the five elements of ancient philosophy, science, and magic,
related to the gaseous state of matter/energy.
Alternation: a traditional process of approximating irrational numbers, which functions by creating ratios that are successively above
and below the irrational number by an ever-diminishing amount.
Arc:
portion of
a circle.
Circle: a set of points, all of which are the same distance from a common point (which is called the center).
Circumference: the outer edge of
a circle.
226
227
r'rrc: ()r'rc ()t lllc lrvc clcn)cnts ()l iu)cicnl philosoplry, scicrrcc, lntl
r.r-tirgic, rclatecl to the radiant state <lf rrrattcr/energy.
llittlirrs: lltc tlislrtrttc lrt'lwt't'tr lltt'tt'ttlt'r ol it t irt lt'irrrtl ils t irt rrnrlr,r
t'rttc; rrlso, rr lirre witlr ir lcrrgtlr ct;rrirl lo llrirt tlislirrrrr,.
Golden Section:
see
Golden Proportion.
Golden Proportion: a continuous proportion in which the first measure is to the second as the second is to the sum of both,
a:b::b:(a+b), which can only be achieved with the irrational number o. The Golden Proportion is also known as the Golden section.
lsosceles Triangle: a triangle with two sides of the same length, and
one side of a different length.
Major Axis: in a vesica piscis, the line connecting the two points
formed by the crossing of the circles making up the vesica.
Minor Axis: in
a shape made
tual insight.
Scalene Triangle: a triangle
as a
up of straight lines.
lengths.
from two circles, each one with its center on the other's circumference.
Platonic solids: the five regular three-dimensional figures-tetrahedron, octahedron, icosahedron, square, and dodecahedron-used
228
Glossory
Index
ad quadratim geometry 83,90,147
ad triangulum geometry, 83, 89-90,
t47
t66,227-228
correspondence, 160
rr2,177, r93,227
ll
l-114,
147, 177,
193
calendrics,5
16, 84
4,
17
r99 --202,
20
+-20 5, 208,
l,
222
Columbus.194
I, 83,
227 --229
17
34,
17
discontinuous proportion,
153-155, L59,166,227
dodecagram, 89-92,
cathedral(s),
feng shui,
r77,193,228
Fourfold Breath, I I
l6l
231
l(X)
l
107,
l4tt-
17
4, 176, 179-180,
I 86-1
196,201,208
geometer's toolkit, 8
l3l,
magic,
228
l,
20,
17
t28, t31,220
Golden Proportion,
meditation, 9-l
II8,
142, 162,
0-17 2, t7 4,
7, 206,
17
208,228
diary,
Golden Section,
7, 227 -229
ll8,
167
ll8,
-168,
17
Western,
196
17
17l
octahedron, 99-102,105,
ll2,
7,
L77,
17
l-17 2,
17
4,
t76-r77,179
48,
53, s8-60,
90-92,94-96,100,102,
185
204,222,229
third dimension,
93
3-9 4, 228
228
45, 47
ll9,
I Ching,6,214
pentagram,
theory of relativity, 1 94
r93,228
icosahedron, 105-108, I77, I93,
tarot, 5-6
229
numerology,5
stone circles, 3, 5
l0
166-167,179,200,214
221)
142,
quadrivium,5, 133,
ll
Newgrange,3l
232
5, 7 2,
sPilit,
40-4r,
posture, 10
Golden Rectangle,
harmonics,
188,228
L7
17
165-1 68,
2,
proportion,
Renaissance,
l, 3-5, 206
228-229
ll7, I35
Scientific Revolution, l, 4
ll2,177, 193,229
Index
'x-ffi]$,ffi[
From the time of Stonehenge and the Pyramicis, through the
mystical teachings of Fythagoras, to the cutting edge of advanced
scierrce-the tradition of sacrecl geometry bridges past and
future. 5s\4,, for the first time, vou can put the insights of sacred
geornetry to r,vork in your own life with the Sacred Geometry
Oracle.
izi.95 -iS
i2i.r:;5 C/!hl
5!
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