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Scale Invariance and Why the Ancient Mind Mapped the Small Onto the Large

Randall traces the conceptual foundation of the ancient worldview back to something that modern civilisation has largely disconnected from - the direct, lived experience of natural cycles as the organising principle of existence.

The annual cycle governed agriculture, economics, and social organisation for the vast majority of human history. The day-night cycle governed when people slept, worked, and gathered. A century ago, people went to bed when the sun went down because artificial light did not yet separate human activity from the rhythms of the natural world. These were not inconveniences to be overcome. They were the fundamental structure within which human life operated.

What the archaic mind was doing, Randall argues, was something more sophisticated than simply observing these cycles. It was tracking the resonance between cycles operating at different scales - the day mirroring the year, the year mirroring larger astronomical periods, each smaller rhythm reflecting the structure of a larger one. This is what Randall calls scale invariance - the principle that the same patterns and relationships repeat across different magnitudes of time and space. For the ancient world, recognising that resonance between the small and the large was not a poetic intuition. It was a precise and functional understanding of how reality is organised - one that informed their architecture, their calendars, their mythology, and their mathematics simultaneously.

Видео Scale Invariance and Why the Ancient Mind Mapped the Small Onto the Large канала The Randall Carlson
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