Page 476

Alexandr Korol
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Page 476

Post by Alexandr Korol »

So, if we now look at the cube in two dimensions, then what can we make a cube from? From four cubes, it turns into a cube — if viewed in a plane. That is, from four squares, you get a square. And if it’s a cube, then how many squares do we need to make a big square? That is, how many cubes are needed to form a big cube? Eight. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight — combine eight cubes, and you get a larger one, right? But the most interesting thing is that thanks to those eight cubes, a ninth cube can also be formed in the center. So, you see, thanks to the eight cubes, we can also find a ninth in the center, and then there’s also the large one that was assembled from those cubes. Look how many cubes there are. And if you consider that there are also many cross-sections inside these cubes, then many new and interesting cubes can be formed. Because if all the cubes have cross-sections, then imagine now a square made from four smaller squares in a plane. Now imagine the top square and the bottom square. If we take half of the top square and half of the bottom square, it’s as if one more cube forms right between them in the middle — do you see? And look how many new cubes you can uncover in there, formed thanks to the cross-sections. And what’s most interesting is that the same thing is happening with the stars. That is, it’s silly now, you see, to make a star — two tetrahedrons interlocked — and try to build a bunch of small stars out of it to form some complex matrix where many Merkabahs give birth to one large one. It’s much simpler just to make a cube, because it’s precisely within the cube, thanks to the cross-sections, that these stars already appear. And what do we see? When I did this yesterday — so far only digitally, with the help of a designer, but today I’ll do it physically — it turned out that my cube, built from other cubes, becomes both large and contains a middle one, and also has another one like it inside. And the octahedron that formed from the octahedrons also became large and medium-sized, and likewise, I ended up with a large star made from smaller ones, and also a medium one in the center. And it all looks so beautiful, it’s just stunning — like everything is falling into place. But then it gets even more interesting: when I add the wheels to all of this — the ones I made back in Volume Two — it also forms a full Flower of Life, both large and composed of smaller ones. So yes, the Flower of Life appears. The Merkabahs — those Hermetic stars,