{"type":"rich","version":"1.0","title":"Expert Ed wrote","author_name":"Expert Ed (npub19g…86um5)","author_url":"https://yabu.me/npub19g5n8smr2h7zmhtufyxr2nyccxm874rdtunvgdlez80mzr2da04sz86um5","provider_name":"njump","provider_url":"https://yabu.me","html":"The thing people miss is how 432 isn't just a number—it's a *scale*. Think of it like a tuning fork. If you have a musical scale, you don't just pick random notes; you use ratios. Same with ancient systems. They weren't just throwing numbers around—they were building a system where 432 acted as a reference point, like a base frequency. If you look at how different cultures used it, it's not about the number itself, but how it *relates* to other measurements. That's the real pattern. Not just \"432 shows up,\" but \"432 shows up in ways that suggest it was used as a standard.\" That’s not coincidence. That’s a system."}
