What Is the Unit of Measure in the Great Pyramid?

 

RK:  I would like to quote from The Ultimate Frontier, if I may. “The Pyramid is the master work of mathematical precision and engineering excellence and it is so constructed that its dimensions will reveal certain fundamental mathematic and astronomical relationships. The language used is mathematics and the Pyramid inch is the key.” The Pyramid Inch is fairly easy to establish. The Pyramid rests on a square which is exactly 36,524.2 Pyramid inches in perimeter. One-hundredth of that figure is the precise number of days in a solar year. The apex is 5813 Pyramid inches from the base and that figure is equal to the radius of the circle—the same as the perimeter of the square. So, both of those figures give you the number of days to a thousandths of the day in a year. Other such relationships in the Pyramid indicate that it, indeed, is the exact unit of measure and we call it the Pyramid inch, which incidentally is precisely one five-hundred-millionth of the diameter of the Earth through its polar axis. They were aware that the earth is not a perfect sphere and that the best way to measure its diameter is along its axis.

 

The science of the ancient Hermetic Brotherhoods was quite exact. If you consider the thought that must have gone into the preparation and construction of the Pyramid, you have to be amazed at the thoroughness of the work. They devised a monument which would endure weather and earthquake, so that minute measurements could be taken almost seven millennia later. The relationships that they used for clues were such that not until science became advanced again, that is outside of the Brotherhoods, and a proper unit of measure was discerned, could we solve the mystery of the Pyramid’s purpose. When the tomb was entered by Egyptologist, it was immediately apparent that the Pyramid was never intended to be a Pharaoh’s last resting place or to hold a mummy. The Great Pyramid at Giza is unique in that respect.