The universe might look random at first glance, but ancient traditions saw something very different, a hidden order expressed through number, rhythm, and proportion.
In Vedic cosmology, texts like the Surya Siddhanta describe the cosmos not just as physical space, but as a structured system governed by cycles and relationships. And within that system, certain numbers appear again and again, 108, 216, 432, 864.
These are not just religious symbols. They follow a harmonic pattern, doubling like musical octaves.
108 becomes 216,
216 becomes 432,
432 becomes 864.
Now here’s where it gets fascinating.
The distance between the Earth and the Sun is about 108 times the Sun’s diameter.
The distance between the Earth and the Moon is about 108 times the Moon’s diameter.
This is why the Sun and Moon appear almost the same size in the sky, allowing perfect eclipses to happen.
So was this a coincidence, or were ancient civilizations encoding cosmic relationships into symbolic systems?
In the Vedic view, reality itself is vibration. Everything is frequency, everything is resonance. These numbers may not just describe the universe, they may reflect its underlying structure.
108 as a fundamental resonance,
432 as an expanded harmonic,
a fractal pattern repeating from the smallest scale to the largest.
Maybe the universe is not just matter moving randomly.
Maybe it is something closer to music.
And these numbers are the notes.
🎥 @sadhguru
#astronomy #cosmology #vedic #sacredgeometry


