It is considered foundational to building sacred structures such as temples, mosques, monuments and churches; sacred spaces such as altars, village greens, holy wells and the creation of religious art and using 'divine' proportions. Alternatively, sacred geometry based arts may be ephemeral (short-lived) such as visualisation, sand painting and medicine wheels.
Sacred geometry may be understood as a worldview of pattern recognition, a complex system of religious symbols and structures involving space, time and form. According to this view the basic patterns of existence are perceived as sacred. By connecting with these, a believer contemplates the great mysteries, and the great design. By studying the nature of these patterns, forms and relationships and their connections, insight may be gained into the mysteries - the laws of the universe.
Below some photos I took of sacred places whilst I was in Hong Kong early this month.
'what is God? He is length, width, height and depth'
'Geometry' means 'measure of the earth'. The activity of measuring the earth became the basis for a science of natural law as it is embodied in the architectural forms of circle, square and triangle. Geometry is the study of spatial order through the measure and relationships of forms. Geometry deals with pure form, and philosophical.
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