
A Mathematical Theory of Reality
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In the extraordinary book, 'The Man Who Knew Infinity', written by Robert Kanigel, the author details Ramanujan's attempt to link his spirituality with his love of mathematics. Even thought he was a Hindu by birth, he expressed interest in all the religions and spiritual ideas of the day. He surmised that Oneness or God or Absoluteness could somehow be formulated in a mathematical expression. Even today, some of these theory's are quite controversial and hotly debated among mathematicians and philosophers alike. I'm not very good at math, but one of these formulas Kanigel explained struck me as highly peculiar, yet somehow seemed to have remarkable logical reasoning behind it, especially in the context of Buddhist teachings.
In theoretical mathematics, it is very important to understand that the number zero does not represent nothingness or void-ness, but rather represents potential. It is the only natural number that is neither positive nor negative, and denotes something which has the latent capacity for any numerical eventuality. On the Kelvin scale in quantum physics, absolute zero represents the coldest temperature possible in the universe, where there are no particles nor energy nor light. Anyway, here is Ramanujan's simple 'Theory of Reality' for you all to ponder.
0 = Absolute Reality and (Infinity) ∞ = the "myriad manifestations of that reality" Therefore, he claimed (0) (∞) (zero x infinity) = "All Numbers, or every individual act of creation." This might be a bit co
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