Tuesday, May 08, 2018

Consciousness and Mathematics

What differentiates us from other species (birds, animals, insects, fish, etc.)?

Is it the look and feel, the intelligence, or the ability to adapt the environment to suit our needs rather than adapting to the environment?

The answer lies in one single word. The most dreaded subject we learned in our school.

"Mathematics"
Mathematics is the language of science. Should we say the language of a highly developed consciousness? It is the only Universal language; you can even talk to an Alien civilization using mathematics.

"An equation means nothing to me unless it expresses a thought of God."
- Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887 – 1920)

"Equations are more important to me because politics is for the present, but an equation is something for eternity."
- Albert Einstein (1879 – 1955)

So, our ability to understand simple counting to complex equations makes us different from other species.
As Ramanujan expressed – "God must be a mathematician then." Math is ingrained in our everyday life even though we are unaware of it.

0101101000100000010010010101011001010111001000000100111101001100
0101010001001100001000000100011101010010010011010010000001010110
0101101001011000010100110010000001001001010101100100100001000110
01001111010001110010000001000111010001100100110101010110

The above zeros and ones look like a lovely pattern. However, it could be your email getting transmitted across the globe. The above data is represented using the binary number system (Computers use binary number system). There is a hidden message in the above zeros, so see if you can decode the message. 

Clues to decode the message
- I used a cipher, which was used in the biblical.l times.
- The total number of words in the message equals a Fibonacci number


The following table shows two interesting number sequences in mathematics. These Sequences have a lot of impact on our daily life and our surroundings.

Two interesting number sequences

Fibonacci Numbers: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, 987, 1597.......
Prime Numbers: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61…........


Now, let us look at some of the wonders/puzzles of mathematics. It includes the Fibonacci Number and golden Ratio, the Number ZeroPi, the Imaginary number, and the Infinite number (read more about these 5 Numbers by Simon Singh). Among these, the Fibonacci number is considered part of nature.

Fibonacci Series

Leonardo da Pisa (aka Leonardo Fibonacci), an Italian mathematician (1175-1250), introduced the Hindu-Arabic number system to Europe, the method we use today with a ten-digit decimal system with the symbol for zero. He discovered a number series where you add the previous two values to get the new value, later known as the Fibonacci series. He wrote a famous book 'Liber Abaci' on how to do arithmetic using the decimal system in 1202.

Here are some interesting facts about the Fibonacci number related to nature. Let us look closely at flowers; the interesting point is that the number of petals on a flower is often one of the Fibonacci numbers.

1 petal white calla lily flower, 2 petals euphorbia flower are rare, 3 petals trillium flowers are common, Hundred of species of 5 petals columbine flower in wild and cultivated, 8 petals bloodroot flowers are not common but there quite several species, 13 petals black-eyed Susan. The outer ring of ray florets in the daisy family also illustrates the Fibonacci sequence. Daisies with 13, 21, 34, 55, or 89 petals are expected. 21 petals Shasta daisy flower. Ordinary field daisies have 34 petals. (
Read more).

Golden Ratio (Phi = 1.618033988749894….)

If you divide any Fibonacci number by the previous number, you will get a ratio of around 1.618… It occurs in nature at a golden angle of 137.5 degrees (360-360/phi). Take any leaves on a plant; the growth of the leaves on a stem follows a spiral path to the top at an angle of 137.5 degrees. This angle helps the leaves maximize their exposure to sunlight and minimize the shadow it casts on other leaves. Euclid defined the Golden ratio around 300 BC. Luca Pacioli, the 15th-century Italian mathematician, equated the Golden Ratio with the incomprehensibility of God. The most surprising case for the Golden Ratio is its association with Black Holes, a discovery made by Paul Davies of the University of Adelaide in 1989 (read the article '
The Golden Rule').
The golden ratio governs the nautilus shell's (cross-section is shown on the left side) growth pattern of its chambers. The Greeks incorporated the Golden Ratio into their Art and Architecture – many of their building, including the Parthenon, are considered antiquity's most perfect structure.
Prime Number

Every positive number is either a prime number or a by-product of Primes. However, it's been ages since we hunted for the formula to predict the prime numbers, and the complete procedure to predict the prime numbers still eludes us. Following are the effects of finding the formula to predict prime numbers.
- The collapse of current cryptography (Public / Private Key Infrastructure) standards (used in SSL / TLS).

- The collapse of Internet Secure Communications (Banking and Credit Card transactions)

Nature & Mathematics

After looking at the above 3 Numbers (Fibonacci, Golden Ratio, Prime), it is interesting to know that Nature still hides a lot of information from us or rather gives subtle clues for us to discover the ultimate truth, and mathematics is one of the critical science which helps us to understand the mysteries of the nature.

So, as a species, our ability to understand nature is far superior to other species.

What is the next level of our consciousness? Is it nirvana? Or perfection from the scientific point of view? Are there any species that have achieved the next level of consciousness?

Imagine an entire society in a state of nirvana!

A state where science is frozen while the self blends with the Oneness.

"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable."
- George Bernard Shaw (1856 - 1950)


Glossary
Prime NumberA Prime Number is a positive integer not divisible without a remainder by any positive integer other than itself and one. Examples. 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, and 13 are Primes.
Mersenne PrimeNamed after the French Monk and mathematician Marin Mersenne, born in 1588. He investigated a particular type of Prime Number 2P-1, where P is an ordinary prime number.
Fibonacci NumberThe Fibonacci number is a series generated by adding the two preceding numbers. Example. 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, etc. Dividing a Fibonacci number by a previous one. For Example., 21/13 or 8/5 results in an answer close to 1.61803, known as a Golden Ratio. 
Golden Ratio1.618033988749894848204586834365638117720……. This unique number represents the Golden ratio, denoted by the Greek letter Phi. The digits of the Golden ratio go on forever without repeating.
PiPi represents the number 3.14159265… which is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. An irrational number that cannot be expressed as the ratio of two whole numbers and has a random decimal string of infinite length.



Further Reading
Internet
1. Plus Magazine –
The Life and Numbers of Fibonacci
2. Guardian UK – The Golden Rule
3. Wolfram Research – Fibonacci Number
4. Math Forum – Fibonacci Number and the Golden Ratio
5. American Scientist – Did Mozart use the Golden Section?
6. Web – The Mathematical Magic of the Fibonacci Numbers
7. Web – Fibonacci Number & Golden Ratio in Art, Architecture & Music
8. Web – The Golden Mean in Art (Leonardo Da Vinci)
9. Answers.Com – Fibonacci Numbers
10. Answers.com – Golden Ratio
11. Web – The Golden Ratio
12. BBC – 5 Numbers by Simon Singh
13. Wolfram Research – Prime Number
14. Answers.Com –
Prime Numbers
15. University of Tennessee – The Largest Known Prime
16. Wikipedia – GIMPS – Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search
17. Clay Mathematics Institute – Riemann Hypothesis
18. Answers.com – Pi

Software Products
1. Wolfram Research –
Mathematica 5.2
2. Mersenne.org – Free GIMPS software to search for primes

Books1. Mario Livio – 
The Golden Ratio
2. Marcus du Sautoy – The Music of the Primes: Searching to solve the greatest mystery in mathematics
3. Simon Singh –
The Code Book
4. David Wells –
Prime Numbers: The most mysterious figures in Math
5. David Darling –
Equations of Eternity