Sacred Geometry and Metaphysical Entities: Golden Ratio and Divine Proportion

This scholarly text explores the profound connections between sacred geometry, metaphysical philosophy, and spiritual practices. It delves into the doctrine of entities as developed by Vladimir Solov'ev and Tommaso Palamidessi, examining how every entity must be simultaneously an atom (indivisible unit), an idea (qualitative content), and a monad (active force). The work investigates how the concepts of Good, True, and Beautiful represent three aspects through which entities experience their essence - as desired good, intellected truth, and beloved beauty. The text extensively discusses the Golden Ratio (φ = 1.618...), known since ancient Egypt, as a divine proportion that appears throughout nature in growth patterns of flowers, leaves, shells, and organic forms. This ratio represents perfect hierarchical structuring of unity, where the middle term mediates between the whole and the smallest part, creating what the author terms "solidary hierarchy" - a model of perfect transmission and communion typical of ideal creation. The Golden Ratio embodies the very mechanism through which divine beauty diffuses throughout creation, representing the complete materialization of divinity and the perfect incarnation of God's Idea in creation, symbolizing supreme beauty itself.