Deep
Secrets
Diagram 16 may look familiar. It is the same construction as Diagram 11 in the Pentagon Section, and shows the manner in which the length of a side of an equal-sided inscribed pentagon may be produced via the finding of the golden ratio division along a circle's radius.
As can be seen above, the right triangle COB has
side OC equal to 1 (it is a radius), and the side OB equal to
.618034. With the aid of a trigonometric table it can be learned that
angle OCB equals 3143',
and angle OBC is therefore 58
17'.
Although the above diagram is of prime significance, it leads to
another construction which may have been recognized by the Egyptian
priests as being even more remarkable.
In Diagram 17, one of the right triangle's sides
is still equal to .618034 of the radius, but in this instance it is
the hypotenuse (and not the adjacent side) that is equal to 1, the
circle's radius. With a trigonometric table it can then be learned
that the angle opposite the .618034 side equals 3810',
and so the remaining angle must be 90
minus this, or 51
50'.
Using the Pythagorean Theorem, the length of side OD can be found,
and it equals .78615 of the radius.
There are two aspects of this construction that
make it of particular interest. The first is that the length of side
ED (.618034) divided by that of side OD (.78615) will, oddly enough,
equal the length of this same side OD (.78615). In terms of
trigonometric relationships, this means that the tangent
(opposite÷adjacent) of 3810'
is the same as the cosine (adjacent÷hypotenuse) of 38
10'
(and, conversely, that the cotangent of 51
50'
equals the sine of 51
50').
The second, and perhaps more important factor, is
that the length of side OD (.78615), when multiplied by 4 yields an
amount (3.1446) that is almost exactly equal to Pi (3.1416). This
finding means that the 3810'
right triangle offers a unique and most interesting point of
intersection between the Pi ratio and the golden ratio
phenomenon.
Were the Egyptian priests of the Old Kingdom
period aware of the properties of this triangle? Diagram 18 is a
sketch outline of the Great Pyramid. This structure, intentionally or
not, was built incorporating the 3810'
right triangle in such a way that the sides slope upward at the
precise angle of 51
50'.
If we compare the pyramid cross-section in Diagram 18 to the
construction in Diagram 17, we can see that side BC corresponds to
.618034 of the radius, side AB corresponds to .78615, and side AC
corresponds to 1. (As nearly as can now be determined, in actual
Great Pyramid lengths, AB was equal to 481 feet, BC to 377.9
feet, and AC to 611.5 feet).
From here things begin to get really interesting (and hopefully not confusing).
As can be seen, BC above is equal to one half the length of the pyramid's side. Therefore, the perimeter of the base equals BC x 8, and in relative terms this equals .618034 x 8 = 4.9443. The relative height of the pyramid is .78615, and, if one uses this length as the radius of a circle, then the circumference (perimeter) of that circle will also be 4.9443.
How this unexpected agreement comes to be is that
: 1) As described a few paragraphs earlier in regard to the
3810'
right triangle, .618034 ÷ .78615 = .78615. This then means, that
.618034 = .78615 x .78615. Therefore, the pyramid's perimeter stated
as 8 x .618034 will also equal 8 x .78615
x .78615; and 2) Since, as mentioned above, 4 x .78615
is a very close approximation for Pi, 2Pi can then be said to
be very nearly equal to 8 x .78615. The circumference of a
circle that has .78615 as its radius (= R) can therefore be computed
as C=2PiR = (8 x .78615) x .78615. As a result, the
Great Pyramid turns out to have the same perimeter length when
measured in a horizontal plane, as a square, as it does when measured
in a vertical plane, as a circle. (See "The
Architect's Plan" section for a discussion
of how this pyramid achieves a concurrent "squaring" of the circle in
terms of the circle's area).
To this we now add the finding that the actual
length of a side of the Great Pyramid, as measured at its base, is
755.73 feet.38
As noted earlier, 8 times this length (i.e. twice the perimeter) is
exactly the length of one minute of latitude as measured at the
equator, (or only about 12 feet less than the average length of a
minute of latitude as measured between 24
and 30
north. See Measuring the Earth discussion). There is then a curious
repetition in having the pyramid's side being equal to 1/8th of a
minute of latitude while the pyramid's height can be seen - in the
context being presented here - as correlating to being 1/8th of 2Pi.
On a monumental scale, perhaps, a connection was being made between
the planet and the universal constants of Pi and the golden ratio.
The choice of 755.73 feet for the length of the pyramid's side could
still be - it must be admitted - pure coincidence, but it is
interesting to see the possibility of there having been a more
intentional provenance.
Why 360 Degrees? Why Base 60?
Throughout these sections we have talked about angles both in terms of degrees and as 1/5th or 1/20th, etc., of a full rotation. We know that the Egyptians had a concept for slope which they called "seked" (equivalent to our cotangent), but beyond this there are no surviving documents explaining how (or even whether) they measured angular separations. Thus far, I have tried to make clear only that the capability existed to make such determinations, regardless of the exact manner in which they may have been done.
However, if the length of a side of the Great
Pyramid was intentionally designed to equal 1/8th of a minute of
latitude, then the supposition must be that the Egyptian architect
was employing a circular measurement system of 360
with further subdivisions of 60 minutes per degree. Is it conceivable
that such a system was in use over 2,000 years prior to its recorded
emergence?
The idea of a circle being divided into 360 parts (degrees) first appears in the currently known written historical record as an innovation of the Babylonian culture a few hundred years prior to the birth of Christ.39 The division of each degree into 60 'minutes', and each minute into 60 'seconds', etc., is of Babylonian (via Sumerian) provenance as well.
Although there is no currently known surviving written evidence that the ancient Egyptians had previously developed these methods, it is not beyond the realm of possibility that they had. The association of the number 360 during the Old Kingdom with a complete cycle, or circular context, could have come about in a variety of different ways.
As previously mentioned, the Egyptians introduced a 365 day calendar shortly after the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt in about 3,000 B.C.40 With this change, the year was divided into three seasons, each containing four '30 day' months. Each of these months was next further divided into three ten day weeks. As a result, a year contained 36 ten day weeks for a total of 360 days, with the calendar year's five remaining days being added somewhat ceremoniously to the end of this 360 day period. It is interesting to note that these five added days were not always considered (perhaps for religious reasons) to be a legitimate part of the more preferable 360 day per year cycle.41
In addition to this correlation, the number 360 has a direct connection with the sun itself. The sun has an apparent diameter of just over 1/2 of a degree, or about 1/720th of a full circular rotation of the sky. River fog conditions will often allow the sun's disk to be clearly viewed for brief periods with the naked eye, thus making the task of measuring of the sun's relative apparent diameter a fairly simple undertaking along a river such as the Nile. (The apparent diameter of the full moon, though somewhat variable, is also almost exactly 1/2 of a degree.) On a daily basis, due to the Earth's progress in its orbit, the sun appears to move the equivalence of two of its own diameters (i.e., about 1/360th of a full rotation) eastward through the heavens relative to the fixed stars. The Egyptians were very concerned with recording the first visibility immediately before sunrise of various stars, and so would certainly have been well aware of the sun's daily eastward displacement relative to these stars.
None of the above observations are difficult to
make, and each would have again brought up numbers related both to
circular contexts and to the number 360. It may have been understood,
however, that numbers as measured in the exterior world should not be
expected to be exactly the same as a particular "ideal" number, but
only to represent, or point the way to, this ideal. It is perhaps
this approach that Plato had in mind when he has Socrates say:
These sparks that paint the sky.....we must recognize that they fall far short of the truth, the movements namely, of real speed and real slowness in true number and in all true figures both in relation to one another and as vehicles of the things they carry and contain. These can be apprehended only by reason and thought, but not by sight.42
Corroboration for the choice of 360
could have been taken from the fact that it is wholly divisible by
all of the first 12 numbers except for 7 and 11, an attribute that
greatly facilitates the further partitioning of the circle into whole
number sections. It is also the smallest number that is divisible by
10, 20, 30, 40, 90 and 60.
The concept of dividing a whole unit into 60 parts, and then dividing each of these parts into 60ths, and so on, originated in the Mesopotamian region. There is evidence (drawn from clay tablets excavated at a site known as Jemdet Nasr, located in present day Iraq) that the workings of a "base sixty" system was already in use by about 3,000 B.C.43 There is also evidence of substantial Mesopotamian influence taking place in Egypt at precisely this same point in time.44 In fact, some of the evidence of such contact is based on findings unearthed at this same Jemdet Nasr site. With the Mesopotamian impact of this period having affected Egyptian architectural and artistic designs choices, it would seem reasonable to suppose that there was coincident Egyptian exposure to base sixty counting methods as well.
If, as can be construed by the length of the perimeter of the Great Pyramid, Egyptian architects were aware of a base sixty system, and chose to divide a circle into 360 degrees, then why is there no demonstration of either usage in the surviving written historical record of ancient Egypt? The answer may be due to a combination of factors. It may have been thought that since the use of this knowledge allowed access to such intrinsically powerful results (i.e., trigonometry), then perhaps this knowledge should be closely held by only a select few.
It may also have been found that the use of a base
sixty, and a 360
system, ran counter to methods that were already well entrenched and
in daily use. Cultural inertia, then, may have prevented their
widespread adoption. (This would be similar to the present day
resistance in the United States to the adoption of the metric
system). And lastly, it may be due to the very limited amount of
material that has endured through the ages until the present time. It
has been wisely noted in regard to ancient Egyptian capabilities,
that "it would be rash to assume that no advance was made beyond what
can be found in the scanty and mostly fragmentary surviving
texts".45
In addition to the length of each side of the Great Pyramid, there is one other Old Kingdom design choice that may possibly offer confirmation not only of the issues discussed in the preceding paragraphs, but also of the initial assumptions stated at the beginning of this essay. I refer to the Old Kingdom choice for the length of the ancient Egyptian standard unit of measure, the Royal Cubit.
38. W.M. Flinders Petrie, op. cit., p.13.
39. O. Neugebauer, The Exact Sciences in Antiquity, p.
25.
40. R.A. Parker, op. cit., pp. 707 - 708.
41. Anthony Spalinger, "Some Remarks On The Epagomenal Days in
Ancient Egypt", JNES v.54, p.34.
42. Plato, Republic, VII 529 d.
43. Joran Friberg, "Numbers and Measures in the Earliest Written
Records", Sci. Am., Feb. 1984, p. 114
44. Henri Frankfort, "The Origin of Monumental Architecture in
Egypt", AJSL v.58, no. 4, pp.329-358. Also see the newly published
(Nov. 2005) work by Joran Friberg, Unexpected Links Between
Egyptian and Babylonian Mathematics.
45. Gay Robins, Civilizations of the Ancient Near East, Vol.
3, p.1800.