Dear Friends & Patriots,
I like to invite You for a new Challenge by the Discovery "Growth Principles
of Nature" of our good Friend Hans Döring - Frankfurt/Main, who passed by in 2006.
He was Engineer and CEO of several Companies in Germany and Austria.
Here is a short Introduction for You:
More than 45 years ago Michael Ende chose "Momo", a self-fulfilling Persian Prophecy, as his Fairy Tale (for Adults):
"Momo" 1986) - english audio
Now we are all at exactly at this Point and on the Threshold of a Golden Age.
This Film Fairy Tale has indeed led us to the Discovery.
This Discovery is an Orientation Compass.
It is the Key for a new Natural Organisation and an Ideal Constellation of a New Society.
Matching it:
Nature by Numbers.
Now the Golden Age of Knowledge and Awareness about the deep Connections with the whole Cosmos and the Earth begins.
With warm and encouraging Greetings,
Gerhard
https://www.shambhala.com/the-power-of-limits-1203.html
"One of the delights of life is the discovery and rediscovery of patterns of order and beauty in nature—designs revealed by slicing through a head of cabbage or an orange, the forms of shells and butterfly wings. These images are awesome not just for their beauty alone, but because they suggest an order underlying their growth, a harmony existing in nature. What does it mean that such an order exists; how far does it extend?
The Power of Limits was inspired by those simple discoveries of harmony. The author went on to investigate and measure hundreds of patterns—ancient and modern, minute and vast. His discovery, vividly illustrated here, is that certain proportions occur over and over again in all these forms. Patterns are also repeated in how things grow and are made—by the dynamic union of opposites—as demonstrated by the spirals that move in opposite directions in the growth of a plant.
The joining of unity and diversity in the discipline of proportional limitations creates forms that are beautiful to us because they embody the principles of the cosmic order of which we are a part; conversely, the limitlessness of that order is revealed by the strictness of its forms. The author shows how we, as humans, are included in the universal harmony of form, and suggests that the union of complementary opposites may be a way to extend that harmony to the psychological and social realms as well.
One of the delights of life is the discovery and rediscovery of patterns of order and beauty in nature—designs revealed by slicing through a head of cabbage or an orange, the forms of shells and butterfly wings. These images are awesome not just for their beauty alone, but because they suggest an order underlying their growth, a harmony existing in nature. What does it mean that such an order exists; how far does it extend?
The Power of Limits was inspired by those simple discoveries of harmony. The author went on to investigate and measure hundreds of patterns—ancient and modern, minute and vast. His discovery, vividly illustrated here, is that certain proportions occur over and over again in all these forms. Patterns are also repeated in how things grow and are made—by the dynamic union of opposites—as demonstrated by the spirals that move in opposite directions in the growth of a plant.
The joining of unity and diversity in the discipline of proportional limitations creates forms that are beautiful to us because they embody the principles of the cosmic order of which we are a part; conversely, the limitlessness of that order is revealed by the strictness of its forms. The author shows how we, as humans, are included in the universal harmony of form, and suggests that the union of complementary opposites may be a way to extend that harmony to the psychological and social realms as well."