BY
MICHAEL HAYES
Ever
since my formative years, when I first began to think
in concepts, I have always been confounded by the
mystery of human existence. By and large we all tend
to take this consciousness of ours for granted, but
for me it has always been a source of wonder. Equally
perplexing is that ultimate question in life: death
that future happening looming over the horizon of
all of our lives like some conceptual black hole.
What, one wonders, is the purpose in the unending
cycle of the genesis and inevitable destruction of
all of us? Why are millions of sentient beings all
over our planet created, only to starve or be slaughtered
wholesale, many without ever having been given the
opportunity to fulfil themselves?
On the wider scale of evolution, we see evidence in
palaeontological and fossil records, of the emergence
and subsequent violent extinction of whole races of
people and species of animal. These entities come
and go with alarming regularity. But to what avail?
In the greater universe also, existence is no less
capricious, with the continuous formation and devastating
destruction of planets, stars even entire galaxies.
And who knows what countless other life-forms out
there are being indiscriminately annihilated in this
way? Just normal, everyday occurrences but these
inviolable and often disturbingly violent events have
persistently gnawed at my reason. Why, I ask myself,
would the theologians all-wise and all-knowing Benefactor
if he exists create such a myriad of wonderful
forms and then turn round and simply destroy them?
These endless cycles of life and death, creation and
destruction what kind of devilment is this?
The ongoing debate over the possible existence and
modus operendi of a conscious, all-knowing
creator proceeds unabated, with contributors from
all disciplines lining up to have their say. However,
owing to a specific sequence of events which led me
on a solitary quest which was to last nearly fifteen
years, I believe I have found a way of understanding
what might really be going on in and around us. And
ultimately, if I am right, the future looks not all
bad. What is more, in this particular scheme of things,
God is tangible, very much alive, and undeniably omnipresent.
Strange as this may seem, this whole scenario can
all be explained with numbers.
Introducing
the Hermetic Code
The theory in question centres on a familiar
numerical symbol: 22/7. This is pi of course,
a unique mathematical convention whose discovery is
generally attributed to the Greeks, but which in fact
expresses a symmetry that was recognised as far back
as the time of the Egyptians of the Old Kingdom.
It is now generally accepted by all but the most
hardened sceptic that the classical pi ratio 22/7,
or 3.142857 etc. is incorporated in the dimensions
and proportions of the Great Pyramid. That the Egyptians
knew of this value is further substantiated by a key
piece of non-pyramidal evidence. This appears in the
form of a royal decree, one of the most important
administrative documents of the Old Kingdom, which
appoints the high priest and Grand Vizier Shemaj Director
of Upper Egypt. This document
officially places all twenty-two nomes (districts)
under his authority, enumerating them from first to
last. Some time later the pharaoh appoints to the
post of deputy the overseer vizier j, who seems to
be the son of the same Shemaj. But then comes the
most interesting part of this ancient decree, which
states that the son's jurisdiction, as deputy, extends
to only seven nomes. The symbolism is obvious:
father over son, twenty-two over seven: pi.
Most people are aware that pi is the ratio of the
circumference of a circle to its diameter. However
this ratio exists separate from circles as well. It
resonates in and around us and is the answer to innumerable
maths puzzles. It is intrinsic to the solutions of
probability and statistical questions; and it is part
of how we interpret phenomena as varied as the structure
of atoms to the motion of stars. Is it not remarkable,
therefore, given its uniqueness and sophistication,
that the ancient Egyptians incorporated this symmetry,
not only in the proportions and dimensions of what
is undoubtedly one of the most impressive pieces of
architecture of the ancient world, but also as a basic
model for the conduct and interactions of their high
priests?
Now, apart from geometry and the solving of probability
and statistical questions, there is another, much
more important aspect of the pi convention. This is
its musical conformity. 22/7 is in fact an
expression of three consecutive octaves of resonance.
An octave, as everyone knows, comprises seven fundamental
notes: Do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-ti. The eighth note,
Do, a repeat of the first but with double the pitch
frequency, is the first note of the second octave.
Accordingly the eighth note of the second octave
again, Do is the first note of the third. Taken
together these three octaves contain twenty-two notes.
What we have here, in fact, is a symbolic embodiment
of the two most fundamental laws of nature, namely,
the ubiquitous law of three forces (active-passive-neutral),
and the lesser-known but equally all-embracing law
of octaves. The law of three forces, as we shall see,
is the absolute mainstay of all creative processes,
whose influence manifests practically everywhere.
The second law, the law of octaves, tells us that
all phenomena generated by these three primordial
forces are essentially musically structured.
To sensibly visualise this concept, we need to look
at the formula pi when expressed musically, like so:
Do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-ti-Do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-ti-Do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-ti-Do.
This configuration expresses in exact scientific terms
everything you need to know to understand the General
Theory of just about Everything. All one need do to
appreciate this is to remember the key musical numbers
incorporated within it. These are: 3, 4, 7, 8, 22,
and 64. Three, the number of the Trinity, is
the number of octaves encoded in pi. Four is
the number of base-notes (Dos) in three consecutive
octaves. Seven is the number of intervals between
the notes of the major scale. Eight is the
number of individual notes in the major scale. Twenty-two
is the number of notes in three consecutive scales
or octaves. And, according to the law of three forces,
the three octaves incorporated in pi are each sub-divisible
into three octaves apiece, giving an inner formula
of nine octaves, or sixty-four notes. So eight
is the constant, and sixty-four, is
the square of it.
So much for the maths. You don't need to be an Einstein
to venture further, although it is worth noting the
most famous scientific equation of all time e=mc2
was formulated to verify this great scientist's
Special Theory of Relativity, which states that e,
the latent nuclear energy contained in any given element,
is equal to m, the mass of the thing, multiplied
by c2, the square of the
constant speed of light. As we shall see, the
square of the constant occurs time and again throughout
the whole of nature.
I have called this musical pattern of symmetry the
Hermetic Code, after the Greek god of wisdom
and patron of alchemy Hermes Trismegistus, known as
the god Thoth, in Old Kingdom Egypt.
As noted previously, it was in ancient Egypt
where the pi symmetry first came to light, both in
its most famous piece of architecture the Great Pyramid
and also in extant administrative documents of the
Old Kingdom.
The law of three expressed in the Hermetic Code can
be recognised by anyone. Nothing in this universe
can be created without the combined action of the
three forces described by it: active, passive and
neutral. The three main constituents of atoms protons,
electrons and neutrons the triplet-codon
templates of the genetic code, the three pin plug,
two opposing teams and a neutral referee, the three
primary colours of the spectrum of light, the tripart
social and political arenas, two chemical compounds
and an intermediary catalyst all of these trinities
exist and interact as a direct result of the three
fundamental forces described by the first law of nature.
Whenever and wherever something is created,
these three forces will inevitably be there.
The second law the law of octaves also operates
throughout the entire universe. For example, the atomic
scale of matter described by the periodic table of
elements in chemistry conforms to this law precisely.
Based on the atomic weight of a given substance, the
table begins at its apex with hydrogen, the lightest
of all elements, which has just one electron tracing
a specific orbit, or period, around the nucleus. The
heavier the element, the more electrons it hosts,
and the more periods are needed to accommodate them.
The table culminates with substances like curium,
one of the densest of radioactive elements. The curium
atom consists of ninety-six electrons, which between
them trace a total of seven periods around the nucleus
precisely the number of periods, or intervals,
between the fundamental notes of the major musical
scale. The eighth, transcendental note of this
atomic scale is the whole phenomenon, all atoms combined.
There is also a current method of classification in
nuclear physics called the theory of quantum chromodynamics,
which indicates that, beneath the atomic scale, in
the world of subatomic quanta, there are also distinct
musical symmetries. The American physicist Murray
Gell-Man noted that the categories of particle-molecules
known as baryons, mesons and pions always combine
together in families of eight, which he called octets
hence his name for the system: the eightfold way.
Further, each of the eight particles in an octet is
a triplet made up of three smaller particles, which
Gell-Man called quarks. Three quarks to each particle,
eight particles to each octet an altogether familiar
pattern. And then we have the hermetic structure of
light, with its three primary colours, the seven fundamental
colours of the spectrum and the final eighth note,
the product of all seven colours when spun together
the white ray.
Whilst still on the subject of theoretical physics,
significantly the number sixty-four, the square of
the musical constant, has surfaced in superstring
theory, which describes all particles in the universe
as infinitesimally small strings made of a kind of
vibrational energy. You really cannot get more conceptually
obscure than superstring theory, with its eleven different
dimensions (three spacial, one temporal, and seven
others of increasingly acute curvature), and a system
of higher mathematics guaranteed to give the layman
a form of intellectual vertigo. But no matter, all
we need to know here is that this incredibly complicated
system holds that there are eight degrees of
manifestation or modes of movement inherent within
the string itself. Moreover, in order to account for
the four-dimensional structure of classical space-time
geometry, the superstring theory is further developed
through calculating the formulation of the string
in four dimensions, the mathematics of which apparently
produces precisely sixty-four specific
degrees of movement associated with it. The detailed
mechanics of this theory involves a language all of
its own, inaccessible to the general reader, myself
included. The point is and any lay observer can
see this even the most complex and advanced mathematical
formulae of present-day scientific thought, taken
as symbols, reflect virtually every aspect, every
nuance, of the original Hermetic Code.
As well as the microcosmic music of the underworld,
there is also a cosmic aspect of the Hermetic Code.
This is dramatically reflected, not only in the musical
symmetry of light itself, but also in the movements
of major planets in relation to the Sun, many of which,
as I explain in my book High Priests, Quantum Genes,
beat out endlessly repeating intervals developing
in time, which exactly conform to the relative values
of the fundamental notes of the major scale. Ergo,
the music of the spheres is not simply legend, but
fact.
Perhaps most crucial of all aspects of the Hermetic
Code is that it actually resonates throughout the
entire organic world. Probably most of you will have
heard of the genetic code, a chemical arrangement
used by the DNA in the cells of your body to manufacture
amino acids, the building blocks of all organic life.
In the genetic code there are four kinds of fundamental
chemical bases: adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine.
In this respect it is significant there are exactly
four base-notes, four Dos, in the triple-octave of
resonance described by pi. It takes three of these
bases to make what is known as a triplet-codon, an
amino acid template, of which there are precisely
sixty-four variations. Each of these codons correspond
to one or another of twenty-two more complex components,
namely, the twenty amino acids and two further coded
instructions for starting and stopping the process
of protein synthesis.
All this, therefore, is crystallised music, composed
by nature from units and sub-units of the constant
number eight and its natural multiple, the square
of the constant, sixty four. This same universal
harmony is also reflected in the ever present number
seven of course, which again, as we see from the periodic
table, is prevalent throughout the whole of nature.
This is simply because it, too, is an expression of
the law of octaves, which describes eight fundamental
notes, but with seven intervals between.
So the General Theory of just about Everything is
described in its entirety by the Hermetic Code, an
exact blueprint, not only of the underlying structure
of the physical universe, but also of the genetic
code, of the DNA molecule, of life itself.
This unique evolutionary concept has been in existence
at least since the time of Old Kingdom Egypt. And,
remarkably, the symmetry it describes is currently
resonating through the entire spectrum of modern scientific
enquiry. How strange is that? Well, not quite so strange,
for the seeds of science were sown long ago, as we
shall see when we go back in time. Consider this:
In the symbolism of every major religion and belief
system in history, the key numbers of the Hermetic
Code are paramount. Without exception, these immensely
powerful religious doctrines are all exact copies
of the original blueprint. To briefly illustrate this,
we need only to focus on the two key numbers of the
octave: eight (the notes) and seven (the intervals
between).
In ancient Egypt,
where the Hermetic Code first came to light, the people
revered a pantheon of eight principal gods. There
were three main theologies in the Old
Kingdom: Hermopolitan, Memphite and Heliopolitan,
and in all of them the octave format formed the basic
blueprint.
In China,
in the third millennium BCE, the legendary sage Fu
Hsi introduced a belief-system which was subsequently
condensed into a book we today know as the I-Ching,
whose chapters were numbered using a combination of
eight three line symbols called trigrams. Confucius,
who later added commentaries to this enigmatic book,
subsequently introduced a system of instruction known
as the Eight Steps of Learning.
The body of writings known as the Vedas of
Indian tradition described the nature of reality as
being supported by a system of proofs, of which there
were considered to be eight fundamental types. Reminiscent
of this also are the systems of the Buddha, with his
Eightfold Path, and the Persian Zoroaster, with his
pantheon of eight Bounteous Immortals. Pythagoras,
as we know, reinvented his own take on this oldest
of sciences by working out the precise mathematics
of the octave. In the Book of Genesis of Mosaic tradition,
we read that God worked for six days, rested on the
seventh, presumably starting over again on the eighth.
Later still, Jesus Christ acted out possibly the greatest
musical performance of all time through the Passion,
which began on Palm Sunday and ended, seven days later,
on the Sunday of the Resurrection. Finally we have
Mohammad, last of the great revelationists, whose
famous night journey began at the sacred site of the
furthest mosque (The Dome of the Rock
Temple in Jerusalem the first
note), and continued up through the seven heavens.
The number seven, or the septenary principle, is equally
ubiquitous in the annals of human tradition.
It first appears in the customs of the Neanderthal
race as far back as 75,000 BCE. In a cave at Drachenloch
in the Swiss Alps, a known bear-hunter site, there
was discovered an altar in which were enshrined seven
bear skulls, each with their muzzles pointing toward
the entrance.
The Hindus regarded the constellation of the Great
Bear (our Plough), as the heavenly home of the Septarishi,
an embodiment of the seven Rishis (properties)
applicable to the whole of nature. Their land had
seven peninsulas, seven islands, seven rivers, seven
seas and seven mountains.
Another key number of the Hermetic Code, as noted
earlier, is the number sixty-four, the square of the
constant. This, too, is a vital component of many
major religious and esoteric traditions. We have already
noted this number is intrinsic to the pi convention,
whose encoded triple-octave is further subdivisible
into nine inner octaves sixty-four notes. The Greeks
recognised an Egyptian number system known as the
Magic Square of Mercury, defined by the number 2080,
which is the sum of all the numbers from one to sixty-four.
Mercury, of course, is a Romanised version of Hermes/Thoth,
the Egyptian messenger of the gods.
In the time of the Buddha it was customary for the
nobility to consult a council of sixty-four Brahmins
on matters of supreme importance. The ancient game
of chess, whose true origins are the subject of endless
debate and whose strategic possibilities are seemingly
endless, is played on a board comprising sixty-four
squares. The Tarot pack, with its fifty-six minor
arcana cards also includes a major arcana of twenty-two
cards. This major arcana, a triple-octave on one scale,
must also, according to the law of three forces, be
a single octave on another scale. If we add this greater
single octave onto the minor arcana figure, we end
up with a total of sixty-four notes. And again, in
the Koran, there is a crucial chapter on the sacred
light of Allah chapter sixty-four.
So, what does all this mean? It means many things,
whose separate conceptual strands all lead us back
to the same hermetic blueprint. It means that the
Hermetic Code, the design plan for everything existing
particles, cosmic concentrations, living cells
is applicable literally everywhere, not only in the
wider universe, but also, as we see from esoteric
traditions going back over centuries and millennia,
in the ephemeral realms of the collective human psyche.
It tells us that, if everything is music, then
everything is hermetic, genetic, alive.
There is an ancient dictum attributed to the Egyptian
god Thoth which sums up this idea perfectly: As above,
so below. The message is clear: man below and the
universe above, as stated so emphatically in Genesis,
are made in the same image. Everyone, quite literally,
is a miniature universe. And expansion is the natural
course of things.
And so, if hermetic is genetic, this means
the whole universe itself is alive, it is a
living organism of infinite size. So
if you are looking for a god, we have here a candidate
that outshines all of the ill-defined, abstract deities
alluded to by clueless clerics an all-powerful,
omnipresent deity that actually does exist.
If we assume, therefore, that the universe is itself
an organism, a living entity, and that
we are all copies of it, then this would imply that
the more advanced products of an organic brain
ideas, theories, concepts are also in their own
way alive, they are metaphysical genes, as
organic as the brain from which they originate. The
ancients of the remote past, in my view, seem somehow
to have understood this, which is why they devised
a musical mode of existence in the form of
prescribed disciplines and rituals which enabled them
to psychologically conform to the laws and forces
controlling evolution. This is precisely why religion
was first invented to instil into the collective
consciousness of humanity the necessity of harmonising
one's inner faculties according to the principles
of the Hermetic Code.
The aim was quite straightforward, it was an attempt
to complete the natural course of one's evolutionary
and psychological development by living-out a harmonious
existence and ultimately transcending on to
a higher plane, a greater musical scale above. This
greater scale, a wholly scientific concept
describing a higher dimension of existence accessible
to the trained mind, is the heaven expressed in all
religions.