Re: Derivation of the 7-fold Canon from 1st Principles

From: richard@biblewheel.com
Date: Sun Oct 14 2001 - 10:46:23 EDT

  • Next message: Michael Roberts: "Re: Derivation of the 7-fold Canon from 1st Principles"

    Jack wrote:
        Is this what the[y] mean by 'circular reasoning'?

    As a fellow punster, I think you may appreciate my take on the whole thing. I like to think of it as a discovery of "Biblical Proportions."
      ----- Original Message -----
      From: Jack Haas
      To: richard@biblewheel.com ; asa@calvin.edu
      Sent: Saturday, October 13, 2001 2:28 PM
      Subject: Re: Derivation of the 7-fold Canon from 1st Principles

      Is this what the mean by 'circular reasoning'?
      Jack
        ----- Original Message -----
        From: richard@biblewheel.com
        To: asa@calvin.edu
        Sent: Saturday, October 13, 2001 1:17 PM
        Subject: Derivation of the 7-fold Canon from 1st Principles

        Object to Model: The traditional Protestant Canon of 66 Books (the Proto-canon of the Catholics)

        Model: Construct a Wheel with 22 Spokes and three concentric circles called Cycles. This forms a circular grid of 66 Cells, with three Cells on each Spoke. Place the 66 books sequentially on the Wheel, so that Cycle 1 consists Books 1 - 22, Cycle 2 consists of Books 23 - 44, and Cycle 3 consists of Books 45 - 66.

        To derive the Seven-fold Canonical structure of the Holy Bible, impose two initial conditions and construct the minimal Canon that satisfies maximal symmetry constraints as follows:

        Definition:
        A canonical division is defined as a radial line between Spoke m and m+1 on Cycle c, denoted as CD(m,c).

        Definition:
        The set of books contained between two canonical divisions CD(m,c) and CD(n,c) is defined as Block(m,n,c), where m denotes the starting division and n the ending division. E.g. The Torah is Block(22,5,1).

        Initial Conditions:
        History has given us two incontrovertible constraints on any possible canonical structure:
        1) There must exist a canonical division between the first five books (The Torah) and the rest of Scripture.
        2) There must exist a canonical division between the Old Testament and the New Testament.

        Maximal Symmetry Constraints:

        1) Bilateral symmetry:
        The Wheel must look the same when reflected in mirror. This constraint demands that for each CD(m,c) there must exist a CD(n,c) such that m+n = 22.

        2) Radial Symmetry:
        There must be no conflicting canonical divisions. If two Cycles contain canonical divisions, they must have the same number of divisions and all the divisions must lie on a common set of radii.

        Now construct the minimal Canon that satisfies the above constraints:

        1) The initial conditions demand that there are two canonical divisions: CD(5,1) between the Torah and the rest of Scripture, and CD(17,2) between the OT and NT. There must also be a canonical division at CD(22,1) to mark the beginning of the Torah, to form Block(22,5,1).

        2) Bilateral symmetry demands that there is a CD(17,1) to match CD(5,1) and a CD(5,2) to match CD(17,2).

        3) Radial symmetry demands that there is a CD(22,2) to match CD(22,1).

        The initial conditions and the symmetry constraints are now satisfied. This is the minimal solution. Mapping these divisions on the Wheel results in the traditional Seven-Fold Canonical division of the Christian Canon:

        Cycle 1: 5 Books (The Torah), 12 Books (OT History), 5 Books (Wisdom)
        Cycle 2: 5 Books (Maj Proph), 12 Books (Min Proph), 5 Books (NT History)
        Cycle 3: 22 Books (NT Epistles)

        Note also that Spoke 1 consists of:

        Genesis: First book of the Law
        Isaiah: First book of the Prophets
        Romans: First book of the NT Epistles

        Click here http://www.BibleWheel.com/Wheel/Canonwheel_fullsizeBW.asp for a graphic of the result.

        Recommended exercises:
        1) Read "A Variation on Van Till," posted a few days ago, to see why God has done this.
        2) Meditate on the meaning of the Number Seven in Scripture.

        God Bless!

        Rejoice forevermore!

        Richard Amiel McGough
        http://www.BibleWheel.com



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