- Apr 5, 2009
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Eternity in the Heart, Equations in the Cosmos
“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men, yet they cannot fathom the work that God has done from beginning to end.” — Ecclesiastes 3:11
Genesis 1 reads like a divine algorithm—six days of creation, each with its own function, rhythm, and recursion. Light, firmament, land, luminaries, life, and man—each step building on the last, culminating in rest. It’s not chaos—it’s code.
But then came the Fall. And with it, the veil.
Prelapsarian (adj.): belonging to the state of innocence before the Fall of Man.
In other words, Edenic. Unspoiled. Harmonious.
The mathematical order of Genesis 1 stands as a monument to prelapsarian harmony. Ecclesiastes 3:11 reminds us that eternity is etched into our hearts, yet the full pattern remains elusive. Has the Fall obscured our ability to perceive the divine logic embedded in creation?
In the last few days I've been working on a mathematical challenge to find palindromes in the sequence of numbers that are multiples of 9.
Example #1
While doing this I have reflected on the following:
Hullo @XtraPercept etc
“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men, yet they cannot fathom the work that God has done from beginning to end.” — Ecclesiastes 3:11
Genesis 1 reads like a divine algorithm—six days of creation, each with its own function, rhythm, and recursion. Light, firmament, land, luminaries, life, and man—each step building on the last, culminating in rest. It’s not chaos—it’s code.
But then came the Fall. And with it, the veil.
Prelapsarian (adj.): belonging to the state of innocence before the Fall of Man.
In other words, Edenic. Unspoiled. Harmonious.
The mathematical order of Genesis 1 stands as a monument to prelapsarian harmony. Ecclesiastes 3:11 reminds us that eternity is etched into our hearts, yet the full pattern remains elusive. Has the Fall obscured our ability to perceive the divine logic embedded in creation?
In the last few days I've been working on a mathematical challenge to find palindromes in the sequence of numbers that are multiples of 9.
Example #1
While doing this I have reflected on the following:
- The numerical symmetry of the Creation account
- The symbolic structure of “evening and morning” cycles
- The implications of “eternity in the heart” for mathematical intuition
- Whether post-Fall mathematics is a dim echo of Edenic clarity
Hullo @XtraPercept etc
