Over the past five years, I have found myself increasingly drawn to the study of sacred geometry. Like many of the subjects I have explored for my latest writing project Beyond Spacetime, this was not something I intentionally set out to investigate. Rather, it was another thread that kept appearing no matter which direction I looked. Whether I was studying consciousness research, theoretical physics, quantum mechanics, ancient civilizations, comparative religion, architecture, biology, or mathematics, geometric patterns seemed to emerge with surprising consistency. At first I dismissed the idea as little more than artistic symbolism or mystical speculation. Today I see it differently.
I do not approach sacred geometry as someone trying to prove
a religious doctrine or convince others that every geometric pattern possesses
mystical power. Instead, I approach it with curiosity. While
individual pieces of evidence rarely prove anything by themselves, sometimes
enough independent observations begin pointing in the same direction. Sacred
geometry has become one of those observations.
If consciousness truly is fundamental, as Donald Hoffman,
Bernardo Kastrup, Federico Faggin, and others suggest, and if information lies
beneath physical reality as Max Tegmark, John Wheeler, and numerous physicists
have proposed, then geometry may be the language through which that information
becomes form. This is, admittedly, philosophical speculation. Yet it is
speculation rooted in remarkable mathematical consistency.
The history of sacred geometry stretches back thousands of
years. Ancient Egyptians incorporated precise geometric proportions into the
Great Pyramid. Greek philosophers, particularly Pythagoras and Plato, believed
mathematics revealed the underlying order of the universe. Hindu temples,
Buddhist mandalas, Islamic mosaics, Gothic cathedrals, and Jewish mystical
traditions all incorporated geometric designs that were intended to express
something deeper than simple decoration. Civilizations separated by continents
and centuries arrived at many of the same geometric forms. That alone makes me
pause.
Pythagoras believed that "all is number." Modern
science might rephrase his insight by saying that mathematics describes reality
with astonishing precision. Einstein's field equations describe gravity through
geometry. Quantum field theories rely on elegant mathematical symmetries. Nima
Arkani-Hamed's work on the amplituhedron suggests that spacetime itself may
emerge from a deeper geometric reality. If some of our greatest scientific
minds are discovering geometry beneath spacetime itself, perhaps the ancients
were pointing toward something profound, even if they lacked the mathematics to
explain it.
One of the most recognizable symbols in sacred geometry is
the Flower of Life. Constructed from evenly spaced overlapping circles, it
appears in ancient Egyptian temples, medieval churches, and numerous cultures
around the world. Many modern writers claim that every geometric relationship
in the universe can somehow be derived from this pattern. I remain cautious
about such sweeping claims. Yet I cannot deny its extraordinary symmetry or the
fact that it has captivated human imagination for millennia.
Closely related are the Seed of Life, the Vesica Piscis,
Metatron's Cube, and the Platonic Solids. These shapes are often interpreted as
symbolic representations of creation, balance, harmony, and the organization of
reality. Whether these interpretations are literally true is impossible to
establish scientifically. What can be established is that these geometric
relationships exhibit remarkable mathematical properties and have inspired
generations of thinkers, artists, architects, and philosophers.
Another recurring feature of sacred geometry is the Golden
Ratio, represented by the Greek letter phi (φ), approximately equal to 1.618.
This ratio emerges naturally from the Fibonacci sequence, where each number is
the sum of the two preceding numbers. As the sequence progresses, the ratio
between successive numbers approaches phi with increasing accuracy.
For years I had heard claims that the Golden Ratio appears
everywhere. Some of those claims are exaggerated. Not every beautiful face,
building, or work of art conforms to phi. Nevertheless, it is undeniably
present throughout nature. Spiral galaxies, hurricanes, pinecones, sunflower
seed heads, certain shells, and numerous plant growth patterns exhibit
approximations of this mathematical relationship. Nature repeatedly discovers
efficient geometric solutions to complex problems.
The nautilus shell is perhaps the most famous example,
although even here popular illustrations often oversimplify reality. The shell
is not a perfect Golden Spiral, but its logarithmic growth closely resembles
one. What fascinates me is not whether it is mathematically exact, but why
biological growth so often follows predictable geometric principles.
Hexagons provide another remarkable example. Honeybees
construct hexagonal honeycombs because the hexagon encloses the greatest area
while using the least amount of material. Snowflakes form six-sided symmetry
because of the molecular structure of water. Basalt columns at Ireland's
Giant's Causeway naturally form hexagonal patterns as lava cools and contracts.
Even graphene, one of the strongest materials known, consists of hexagonal
carbon lattices. Nature appears to prefer efficiency, and efficiency frequently
expresses itself geometrically.
This observation leads me to one of the central questions in
my own thinking. How does abstract mathematics become physical matter?
Numbers themselves have no mass. Equations cannot be
weighed. Geometry exists in the realm of relationships rather than substance.
Yet somehow these abstract mathematical relationships become crystals,
galaxies, DNA molecules, flowers, shells, and perhaps even spacetime itself.
This is where my own spirituality begins to enter the
conversation.
The Kybalion has long resonated with me because of its
statement, "As above, so below; as below, so above." I do not treat
that phrase as scientific proof. Rather, I see it as an invitation to look for
recurring patterns across different levels of reality. If consciousness gives
rise to information, and information gives rise to geometry, and geometry gives
rise to physical structure, then perhaps sacred geometry represents the bridge
between what I have called Beyond Spacetime and the world we experience every
day.
This idea also aligns remarkably well with Donald Hoffman's
proposal that spacetime is not fundamental but instead resembles a user
interface generated by consciousness. If the physical world is an interface
rather than ultimate reality, geometry may represent part of the programming
language behind that interface.
Similarly, Federico Faggin argues that consciousness
precedes matter. Max Tegmark explores the possibility that reality itself is
fundamentally mathematical. Nima Arkani-Hamed searches for geometry beneath
spacetime. Bernardo Kastrup proposes that mind is primary. Although these
thinkers approach reality from different directions, they all seem to be
converging upon a picture in which mathematics, information, consciousness, and
geometry occupy a far more fundamental place than traditional materialism has assumed.
I also find myself wondering whether sacred geometry helps
explain why beauty moves us so deeply. Across cultures, humans consistently
recognize symmetry, proportion, balance, and harmonious relationships as
beautiful. Is that merely evolutionary psychology? Perhaps. But perhaps beauty
itself reflects something deeper about the structure of reality. Maybe we
respond emotionally to geometric order because our own consciousness emerges
from that same order.
None of this proves the existence of God, the soul,
reincarnation, or higher dimensions. I would never claim that it does. However,
it does suggest that mathematics is far more than a useful human invention.
Increasingly, mathematics appears to be woven into the very fabric of
existence.
As I have explored consciousness research over these past
several years, sacred geometry has become less of an isolated subject and more
of a connecting thread. It links ancient wisdom with modern physics. It
connects biology with cosmology. It unites architecture with mathematics. It
offers common ground between spirituality and science without requiring either
to surrender its integrity.
For me, sacred geometry is not an object of worship. It is a
lens through which I view reality. It reminds me that beneath the apparent
chaos of everyday life lies extraordinary order. Whether that order ultimately
originates from God, universal consciousness, or some deeper informational
substrate that science has yet to fully understand remains an open question.
But I find it increasingly difficult to believe that geometry is merely a
convenient human invention.
Instead, I have come to suspect that geometry is one of the
universe's native languages. If consciousness is the author, information is the
message, and spacetime is the stage, then sacred geometry may well be the
grammar through which creation itself is written.







