
Kepler's Cosmic Geometry

Kepler's Cosmic Geometry XI

Kepler's Cosmic Geometry XII
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Keplers Cosmic Geometric
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In an effort to determine the distances between planets in our solar
system the great German Astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) determined
that the planetary intervals are defined by the relationship between
the five regular geometric solids.
In ancient geometry the regular solids held a special, almost sacred
significance. Of particular interest to Kepler was their association
with the four elements: the cube with Earth, Tetrahedron with Fire,
Octahedron with Air, Icosahedron with Water as well as the dodecahedrons
association with the heavens. The Intention was to demonstrate that
these geometrical forms were building blocks in creation.
Kepler built on the ideas of Copernicus, creating the fabric of
a new system that paved the way for Newtonian theory. Retaining
the sun as the focal point of our system, he described the planetary
orbits, no longer in terms of circles, but ellipses.
It is said that Kepler was seeking to discover the divinely instituted
harmony that pervades the universe and binds its diverse parts into
a concordant whole. |