Rivers meander through the landscape in a seemingly random fashion. However, if you look at a river over a length of thousands of miles, an orderly pattern emerges.
There is a fundamental rule the way fluids (lakes, rivers, and oceans) flow about the surface of the Earth; this same basic rule can be seen on other planets.
On Mars the rivers have long since dried up, but the arid river beds show the same meandering patterns we see on Earth. On Titan (Saturn’s largest moon), the rivers are made of methane, cutting through a bedrock of ice. But even on Titan, the same pattern appears to exist. Every river across our Solar System, this rule holds true.
The universe adheres to patterns, which is a clear indicator that nature must be following a similar cosmological etiquette. Our quest to discover these rules leads to a deeper understanding of the cosmos.
Order is hidden in everything; from rivers, rocks, and landscapes, to all living things. Every leopard has unique spots just as all humans have distinctive fingerprints.
Complex patterns emerge from simple ingredients. When the Leopard was still an embryo, two competing chemicals washing over the skin created the distinguishing spots.
The same principle applies that creates the stripes of the Tiger, the Zebra, and the unique spots on the Sea Snail, to name a few. Complexity mask an underlying ingenuity throughout the universe.
The intricacy we see across the natural world emerges from a few elementary laws. The meander of the rivers and the spots on a Leopard, are just two examples of patterns in nature and there are countless more.
Mathematicians refer to the consistent pattern that appears everywhere in the universe, as the "torus."
The energy in a torus flows in through one end, circulates around its center, and exits out the other side. It's balanced, self-regulating, and always whole.
The universal whirlpool pattern and the flow of energy is the same in an atom, as it is in our solar system.
It's the same pattern of life energy. As this energy is released into the universe, little packets of wholeness emerge.
In geometry, a torus is a surface of revolution generated by revolving a circle in three-dimensional space about an axis coplanar with the circle (a set of points in space is coplanar if all the points lie in the same geometric plane). In layman's terms, you have an entire unit that is self-sufficient within itself.
For example, a tornado and a whirlpool are natural, self-supported, torus mechanisms. Each of the packets of a torus are made out of its surroundings, but is distinct within it (as are the 7 billion people on this particular planet). The packets are always the same pattern, no matter what size. It is the primary pattern that nature uses for life on all levels, which explains the patterns of a spider's web, as well as the patterns of our solar system.
A torus is a self-organizing system at every scale. You can see it in the cross section of an orange, an apple, in the magnetic field around the earth, and around any human being (sometimes referred to as an aura).
By looking carefully at the patterns in nature, you can methodically comprehend their origins.
This is what Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, Marie Curie, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Carl Sagan, Nicholas Copernicus, Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, and many others have discovered.
From atoms to galaxies, there are omnipresent regularities and patterns in nature. These impressions are a reflection of the homogeneity and elegance of the veiled laws of our universe.
Science and mathematics provide a blueprint of nature and the future of humanity is dependent on these two disciplines. Unfortunately, to our collective detriment, hardly anyone knows, or cares to know, about these two fields of study. Humankind is hell-bent on regurgitating, pontificating, and warmongering over literature written by primitive men, 2000 years ago.
It is critical to our existence and the future of unborn generations that we do away with archaic beliefs and the “God of the Gaps” theories that only serve to disconnect and destroy. Consequently, if we do not resuscitate our planet and get off this collision course we’ve placed ourselves on – via greed, manipulation and collective narcissism - the human race will hasten the pace toward its inevitable extinction.
"It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring."
~ Carl Sagan
Reference:
AmazingUniverse.info
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