Sacred Geometry Collective

If one looks closely enough, you cannot miss the sacred geometry found in nature. Flowers, plants, trees, even our fruit and vegetables have beautiful sacred geometry patterns within them.  Plato is known as the father of sacred geometry.  Plato believed that the universe can be explained by the following five geometric shapes that are associated with five platonic solids: (1) the tetrahedron [4 triangles] which represents fire; (2) the octahedron [8 triangles] which represents air; (3) the icosahedron [20 triangles] which represents water; (4) the cube [6 squares] which represents earth; and (5) the dodecahedron [12 pentagons] which represents the cosmos/heaven.  Plato believed that it is through the understanding of sacred geometry, one can connect to nature, and when we can connect to nature, we can connect to self.