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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.III November,
1925 No.11
MATHEMATICS
by: Unknown
Freemasonry uses mathematical symbols as well as natural ones. The
mathematics of Freemasonry would require a book for their adequate presentation, but two
of her greatest mathematical symbols belong so aptly together, though separated widely in
her ritual that they will be considered side by side by the interested student.
These are the number "Three," and the Forty-Seventh
Problem of Euclid.
Both of these demonstrate Deity with mathematics, a feat which no
mathematician would dare, but which any well-informed Freemason finds sufficiently easy!
The emphasis placed upon the number "Three" in Freemasonry
is so great that, apparently, the founders and developers of our modern ritual did not
find it necessary to offer any monitorial explanation of it as a symbol. Yet it is a great
and important symbol; generations of philosophers have striven for an adequate compilation
of all of its ramifications. It is not on record that any authority has yet said
"This is the end of the symbolism."
It is neither necessary nor desirable to compile the ancient
references to trinity; from the oldest known and recorded (that of the Brahmins), to the
modern Christian Trinitarian doctrine, the religions of the world of all peoples and all
lands have stressed the tri-part nature of God.
There is "Three" throughout nature. Earth, water, air;
father, mother, child; sunrise, noon, sunset; seed, flower fruit; sowing, growing,
reaping; Man must early have learned of three, and nature's insistence upon three.
And there is three throughout Freemasonry; three degrees, three
principal officers; three original Grand Masters; three lesser lights; three great lights;
three movable jewels' three immovable jewels, three of fifteen who traveled in a westerly
direction; three raps; three gates; three circuits in circumambulation; three steps on the
Master's Carpets; three steps in Masonry, three pillars supporting; three, three, three!
We are taught of Wisdom, Strength and Beauty; and some have been
confused by the inclusion of a word meaning pulchritude; and some initiates think it
refers to form and face, and is there effeminate. But sex does not here enter the
symbolism; in wisdom, strength and beauty the philosopher finds reference to mind, body
and spirit; which support our institution. But there is much more to this symbolism than
support; it is at once a plea, a command, an exhortation and a prayer; that our
institution be supported by the best of wisdom, the greatest of strength and the most
blinding of beauty.
See how this blends with the "Doctrine of the perfect
youth" over which Masonic jurists quarrel in the most friendly fashion to this day
(nor have all Grand Lodges settled the matter, even for themselves). Unquestionably a
maimed man may have a fine brain; one thinks at once of Steinmetz, one of the greatest
scientists this world has ever known, whose achievements will be ranked among the very
highest, as history assigns him his true place. Steinmetz had an ugly, misshapen body; he
was frail and humpbacked, but his mind was wonderful. Yet how much more wonderful might
have been his achievements had his maimed and twisted body been straight and tall, the
enormous power of mind backed up by a health which would have carried him to four score
and ten!
We do not admit to our Fraternity the maimed, the halt, the blind,
the imperfect; the literalist insists because of the impossibility of those so afflicted
conforming to the outward requirements. But the esoteric philosopher finds in the ancient
doctrine of a perfect youth a support, a foundation, perhaps a buttress of the pillar
strength, and passes on his wisdom to practical application; that A Freemason, other
things being equal, is the best whose health and strength fit him for great tasks, greatly
done.
There is need of wisdom in any world; especially is there need of
wisdom in one torn by dissension, riven by differences, swept by passion and dismembered
by prejudice. It is one of the hopes of that same distempered world that Freemasonry, by
her teaching of that especial wisdom which deals with human relations may pour the oil of
brotherhood upon the tempestuous seas of discord and misunderstanding. The pillar of
wisdom is a vital support of Freemasonry, as of civilization.
The pillar of beauty is a symbol of spirituality. It is beauty of
the soul, not of body. It is loveliness of thought, not of limb. It is the blinding
magnificence of our inner conception of the inconceivable . . . The Grand Lodge Above . .
. not a beauty of the earth, earthy. Strength without wisdom is brutality. Wisdom without
soul is fact without mercy, justice, charity or love. Wisdom and strength are vitally
important supports, but the lodge would fall and the Fraternity be no more, if the third
support were taken away. Wisdom, Strength and Beauty; the three Lesser Lights, the
stations of the three principal officers, all form triangles. The Lodge, an "oblong
square" represents the world, perhaps the universe. But the triangle represents God.
It does represent Him because some man once said, "Here is a
curious three sided figure, lets say it looks like God!" Symbols do not thus spring
into being. The triangle always has been a representation of God; from the dawn of history
the three-sided figure has been representation of man's conception of The Most High.
It is not difficult to imagine why. To all mankind deity has been
visualized as perfect. He is also conceived of as First; before all else. The first words
in the Old Testament are, "In the Beginning, God . . ."
A point is nothing but an idea. That which connects two points is a
line. But a line has a beginning and an ending. Man's idea of God is of One without a
beginning or ending. Two lines cannot make a figure without a beginning or an ending. They
form a cross or an angle, but always there is the sense of imperfection, of something
wanting. But when three lines from a triangle, it is without either a beginning or ending.
And it is the first possible complete figure which can be constructed of straight lines.
It is not both logical and beautiful that the First Perfection which Geometry can show
should have stood, and still stands, as a symbol of Him from Whom Geometry (Freemasonry
came?
This, then, is the reading of the number "Three"
throughout Freemasonry; it is a symbol that the Great Architect is everywhere; that we can
move not, work not, live not or love not without we do so beneath His All-Seeing Eye, and
as workmen in His Quarry. Everywhere, in every degree, is three, three, and yet more
threes. Everywhere, throughout all life, is God, God and yet more of the omnipresence of
God.
Everywhere, through out the three degrees, threes preach the
inextricable inter-weaving of the philosophy, the meaning and the glory of freemasonry
with her gentle, tender and wholly reverent idea of the Great Architect of the universe.
So much for the number three. As the child begins the study of
arithmetic with simple digits and gradually progresses through mensuration of all sorts to
algebra and finally, in high school, to geometry; so the Freemason meets his first Masonic
mathematics in the number three, and gradually learns more and more of the gracious
mensuration of the Craft until he is invited to study the geometrical Forty-Seventh
Problem of Euclid.
The Forty-Seventh Problem of Euclid is older than Pythagoras. The
Sublime degree of Master Mason as we know it is younger than Pythagoras by many hundreds
of years. Our Rituals are accurate in neither date nor fact; and yet of all the symbols of
Freemasonry the Forty-Seventh Problem is one of the most beautiful and most filled with
meaning.
For the benefit of those who may have forgotten their geometry days,
the Forty-Seventh Problem is here simply stated; in any right triangle, the sum of the
squares of the two sides is equal to the square of the hypotenuse. This is demonstrably
true regardless of the length of either side. But in the Problem as diagrammed in the
lodge, and for simplicity's sake it is usually shown with sides the proportions of which
are as three, and four units when the hypotenuse, or longest side of the triangle will be
as five units. If one draws on paper a line three inches long, and at right angles to it ,
and joined to one end, a line four inches long, then the line connecting the two ends will
be five inches long when the angle is a perfect right angle, or one of ninety degrees. The
square of 3 is 9. The square of 4 is 16. The sum of 9 and 16 is 25. The square root of 25
is 5.
We are taught but little about this Problem in our Rituals, and, as
stated, much of what we are taught is wrong! We are instructed that it was invented by
Pythagoras, that he was a Master Mason, that he was so delighted with his invention that
he exclaimed "Eureka" (I have found it), that he sacrificed a heca-tomb, and the
Problem "Teaches Masons to be general lovers of the arts and sciences." Why so
great and awe-inspiring a symbol should receive such scant attention is not our problem.
Perhaps it is because the fathers of the ritual thought it beyond the grasp of many and so
better left for the individual to follow if he would. Certain it is that he who will think
on this problem will find a rich reward.
How came this wonder to be? What is the magic of 3 and 4 and 5? (or
6 and 8 and 10, or 36 and 64 and 100, or any other set of numbers of the same
relationship)? Why is the sum of the squares of the two lesser always equal to the square
of the greater? What is the mystery which always works out so that, no matter what the
length of any two sides, so be it they are at right angles, the line joining their free
ends will have a square equal to the sum of the other two squares? If one line be 7.6954
inches long, and the other 19 miles, 573,5732 feet long, the sum of the squares of these
numbers will be the square of the length of the line joining their free ends, if, and only
if, the two lines are at right, or ninety degree, angles.
With this certainty, man reaches out into space and measures the
distance of the stars! With this knowledge he surveys his land, marks off his boundaries,
constructs his railroads and builds his cathedrals. When he digs a tunnel through a
mountain, it is the Forty-Seventh Problem of Euclid by which he measures so that the two
parties digging toward each other meet in the center of the mountain, having dug a
straight tunnel. With this knowledge man navigates the ocean, and goes serenely and with
perfect confidence upon a way he cannot see, to a port he does not know; more, with this
problem he locates himself in the middle of the ocean so that he knows just how far he has
come and whither he goes!
If we put down the squares of the first four numbers; thus, 1, 4, 9,
16; we can see that by subtracting each square from the next one we get 3, 5, and 7; which
are the steps in Masonry, the steps in the Winding Stair, the brethren which form Entered
Apprentice, Fellowcraft and Master Mason Lodges, which are, in other words, the sacred
numbers.
These have been the sacred numbers from the dawn of history. Always
they have held meanings for those who attached a significance of spiritual import to
mathematics. Always they have been symbols of the interrelation of science, knowledge,
exploration, building; and God, religion, worship and morality.
Many will find presumption in any attempt to read a symbol which so
great an authority as Albert Pike said had an unknown meaning (page 789, Morals and
Dogma). Yet, if none presumes, from whence can individual progress come? The same
authority declared it the inalienable privilege of any Mason to interpret the symbols of
Masonry for himself. Therefore, a reading is here dared!
So far as we know . . . and while we cannot prove it by mathematics,
the strongest of circumstantial evidence leads us to believe . . . the fundamentals of
mathematics are true, not only in this world, but in all worlds. Our finite minds cannot
think of a world or a universe in which two and two make other than four, or in which the
relation of the circumference of a circle to its diameter is other than 3.1416 plus. It is
axiomatic to us that if the sum of the squares of the two sides of a right angled triangle
are equal to the square of the hypotenuse is a truth here, it is a truth everywhere. This
particular mathematical truth is so perfect, so beautiful, so inevitable and so fitting to
the art an science of Freemasonry, the founders of our beloved Order must have chosen it
from many others as a symbol of the universality of law, and therefore of the Law Maker.
The Forty-Seventh Problem of Euclid not only teaches us to be general lovers of the arts
and sciences, but to bow heads in reverence at the perfection and the beauty, the
universality and the infinite extension of the laws of the Great Law Giver. |