AbracaAdabrá.Ediciones

יום ראשון, 11 בינואר 2009

אגב עיון ב-"נפש החיים": 137

אגב עיון ב-"נפש החיים": 137
פורסם על ידי EduPlanet Rectorate (daniEl I. Ginerman) בתאריך Wednesday, 23 May 2007, 10:02 PM
 

בס"ד

אגב עיון ב-"נפש החיים"

שער א פרק ב

שם א-לקים משמעותו "בעל הכחות כולם" (טור אורח חיים סימן ה')
בעל הכחות = 541 = ישראל

ענין
התמזגות ד' יסודות הם ד' אותיות שם הוי"ה, הוא תתר"ף צרופי הוי"ה לפי
השתנות נקודותיהם בתתר"ף רגעי השעה (רמב"ם הלכ' קידוש החודש פ"ו ה"ב":
השעה מחולקת ל-1080 חלקים).
תתר"ף + 1 = תפארת = כהניך ילבשו צדק וחסידיך ירננו = וארשתיך לי באמונה

אמן = 91 = הוי"ה אדנ"י = הא-להים (זה סוד "ה' הוא הא-להים").
א-להי הא-להים = 137 = קבלה


137
= קלז = נסך-בה = קבלה = נואף = נזף = צליבה = יום ולילה = {מספר ראשוני, מספר
טהור – היחס בין שתי תופעות בטבע ללא ממדים. 137 הוא הקבוע של המבנה הדק והוא
המייצב את הבריאה. הוא גם היחס בין המהירות הגבוהה ביותר במרחב של האור, לבין
המהירות הגבוהה ביותר של החומר, של אלקטרון המימן. מהירות האור גדולה מזו של
אלקטרון המימן פי 137} = מלאו ימי = אומץ = יופיא"ל = אלהי אמן = ויפג לבו = מין
יחידה = {אברהם בן 100 ויצחק בן 37 בזמן עקידה}= {יחידה מדיום (חלקיקי אנרגיה
שלמים על השלכותיהם אל החומר)}



מתוך http://www.ima-adama.co.il/religions/kabbala/kabbala_aharon_lev_hari4_alfon1.htm


פ' חיי שרה - בראשית כה,יז
ואלה שני חיי ישמעאל, מאת שנה ושלשים שנה ושבע שנים...
הוי אומר: ישמעאל נפטר בגיל 137



137 is the smallest prime with 3 distinct digits that remains prime if one of its digits is removed.

http://www.stetson.edu/~efriedma/numbers.html


"וה' א-להים אמת" (ירמיה י,י) = 559 = ישראל חי = מחני נא מספרך


137= קבלה = חכמה + נבואה = חכמה + דין

(נבואה = דין - ונבואה היא בחי' בינה -- ח"ן הוא הזיווג בין אבא-חכמה לאמא-נבואה)


The
Uncertainty Principle

http://www.inner.org/kisses/kiss3.htm

Next
to the underlying unity of nature, the most "enlightened"
focus of modern scientific inquiry can be thought of as the intimate
relationship between consciousness and the laws of physical reality.
The uncertainty principle of quantum physics, which in essence
establishes the impossibility of simultaneously determining certain
pairs of subatomic phenomena (such as position and momentum), implies
that the very act of human observation--or
"consciousness"--irrevocably affects one of the properties
which one is observing. Physicists disagree as to what degree of
consciousness is necessary to the measurement of physical reality.
Nevertheless, the implication remains--as supported by the
corresponding meta-physics of Kabbalah--that consciousness can
determine of its own the nature of the world we seek to know.

The
uncertainty principle is a good example of how the fundamentals of
modern physics can contradict the axioms of common sense. Ultimately,
the intellectual courage to challenge the consensus of reason derives
from the suprarational force of faith inherent within the Divine soul.
Before the advent of quantum physics, science believed that
determinism ruled the universe. Now, with the principle of
uncertainty, it has become clear that nature cannot be explained in
purely causal mechanistic terms. The most we could talk about is
"probability", thus leaving room to re-accommodate such
"unscientific" phenomena as free-will and moral
responsibility which had been entirely dismissed by earlier scientific
thinkers.

The
litany of modern physics is replete with assaults upon common sense:
the speed of light remains constant regardless of the circumstances
surrounding its measurement; energy-changes in the universe occur at
fixed "quantum" intervals (Planck's constant) rather than in
contiguous increments. These two "constants" in
nature--"c" (the speed of light) and "h" (the
quantum-energy unit)--change forever the way we conceive classical
concepts such as "infinity" and "zero". A third
"constant" in nature, derived from these first two and
positioned--as it were--between them , is the "inverse of
fine-structure constant" equal to the "pure" (i.e.
dimension-less) number of 137. (The number 137 is also the numerical
equivalent of the word Kabbalah in Hebrew.) Together, these
three constants comprise a set that corresponds to the sequence of
stages in one's service of God explained elsewhere in Chassidic
tradition.


http://www.137.com/137/








One of the great physicists of this century
is a man named Richard Feynman, who teaches at CalTech and knows as
much about the way the Cosmos works as any man alive. Feynman has
participated in half a dozen extraordinary theoretical developments and
won a fistful of prizes, including the one you get from Sweden. Even
so, he likes to tell people that physics has not accomplished as much
as some physicists like to brag, and that we are not as close to a
great universal theory of matter and energy as some theorists like to
think. Indeed, Feynman has said, physicists ought to put a special sign
in their offices to remind themselves of how much they don't know. The
message on the sign would be very simple. It would consist entirely of
one word, or, rather, number: 137.

One hundred thirty-seven is the value of a number called the
fine-structure constant. This constant, 137, is the way physicists
describe the probability that an electron will emit or absorb a photon.
Because this is the basic physical mechanism of electricity and
magnetism, the fine-structure constant has its own symbol, the Greek
letter a, “alpha.”

Now, alpha is nothing more, nothing less than the square of the
charge of the electron divided by the speed of light times Planck’s
constant. Thus this one little number contains in itself the guts of
electromagnetism (the electron charge), relativity (the speed of
light), and quantum mechanics (Planck’s constant). All in one
number! Not only that, this number isn’t like the gravitational
constant or the universal gas constant, full of meters and kilograms
and degrees Celsius. Alpha is a pure, dimensionless number — little
wonder that people have been fascinated.

Physicists would like to believe that these phenomena fit
together tidily in accordance with one big plan. They would like the
ratio of electromagnetism, relativity, and quantum mechanics to be a
number like one, or maybe two times pi. They do not like its being 137
— a prime number, for heaven“s sake!

The significance of alpha was first spelled out in 1915 by a
physicist named Arnold Sommerfeld — at the time, measurement errors
made the value closer to 136 — and physics ever since has been littered
with efforts to explain it. the most famous attempt was that of Sir
Arthur Eddington, a prominent astronomer who believed that such
constants could be used to produce a theory of the universe. He built a
huge 16-dimensional equation full of these constants and claimed that
alpha could be calculated from the number of terms: (162 - 16) / 2 + 16 = 136.

Unfortunately, experiments quickly showed that alpha was really
closer to 137. Plucky Arthur Eddington was not dismayed. He said he had
forgotten to add one more factor — alpha itself — and made the value
137. For thus, Punch magazine dubbed him Sir Arthur Adding-One.
But Eddington was not deterred. Proudly he proclaimed that the
firmament contains exactly (137 - 1) x 2256 protons. Of course, the old man may have been right; nobody has yet been able to count them all.

Throughout the Thirties and Forties, the greatest scientists of
the day tried and failed to figure out the magic number 137. The great
Werner Heisenberg told his friends that the problems of quantum theory
would disappear only when 137 was explained, and spent years trying to
explain it; fortunately, the problems did go away despite his failure.
One of Heisenberg’s friends, theorist wolfgang Pauli, wasted endless
research time trying to multiply pi by other numbers to get 137; Edward
Teller, now a prominent advocate of star wars, derived alpha from
gravitation; and a dotty Japanese showed that the difference in the
masses of the proton and delta particle is equal to alpha. All this
shows is that there are many ways you can multiply and add a bunch of
numbers to get 137. The closest any of these people got to the answer,
perhaps, was when Pauli died — in hospital room 137.

The best explanation of the mystery ever given to Victor
Weisskopf, another leading theorist from that time, was provided by
Gershom Scholem, one of the most eminent scholars of Jewish mysticism.
When Scholem met Weisskopf, he asked about the prominent unsolved
problems in physics. Weisskopf said, “Well, there's this number,
137....” And Scholem's eyes lit up! He said, “Did you know that one
hundred thirty-seven is the number associated with the Cabala?”

After physicists slam into a problem for a few decades, they
tend to go into greener pastures. Alpha calculating has been out of
fashion for a while. Physics is making progress without it. But it is
comforting to know that if you're at a party, and some know-it-all is
talking about how great the progress of science is, you can always say,
“That’s true, my man. But why is alpha equal to one hundred
thirty-seven?”

— Charles C. Mann


copyright
© 2001 by Charles C. Mann



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_hundred_thirty-seven

In mathematics


One hundred [and] thirty-seven is the 33rd prime number; the next is 139, with which it comprises a twin prime, and thus 137 is a Chen prime. 137 is an Eisenstein prime with no imaginary part and a real part of the form 3n − 1. It is also the fourth Stern prime. 137 is a strong prime in the sense that it is more than the arithmetic mean of its two neighboring primes.


In Waring's problem, "all sufficiently large numbers are the sum of at most 137 seventh powers."[1]


Using two radii to divide a circle according to the golden ratio yields sectors of approximately 137° (the golden angle) and 222°.


137 is a strictly non-palindromic number and a primeval number.



[edit] In physics


The numerical value of the fine structure constant is almost precisely 1/137. This quantity is given by combining several fundamental constants of nature:


\alpha = \frac{e^2}{\hbar c \ 4 \pi \epsilon_0} = \frac{1}{137.035 999 11(46)},

where e is the elementary charge, c is the speed of light, \hbar is the reduced Planck's constant and ε0 represents the vacuum permittivity. The fine structure constant is a dimensionless quantity, i.e. its value is the same regardless of what system of measurement we use.


The importance of the constant is that it measures the strength of the electromagnetic interaction. It is precisely because the constant is so small (i.e. 1/137 as opposed to 1/3 or 5 or 100...) that quantum electrodynamics
(QED) works so amazingly well as a quantum theory of electromagnetism.
It means that when we go to calculate simple processes, such as two
electrons scattering off one another through the exchange of photons,
we only need to consider the simple case of one photon exchange --
every additional photon you consider is less important by a factor of
1/137. This is why theorists have been so successful at making
incredibly accurate predictions using QED. By contrast, the equivalent
'fine-structure' constant for the theory of strong interactions
(quantum chromodynamics or QCD) is just about 1 at laboratory energy
scales. This makes calculating things in QCD much, much more involved.



[edit] In other fields


137 is also:



















Search Results / חפש תוצאות




















































































































































IDWORDBOOKCHAPTERVERSE
1מצאובראשיתדטו
2נלבנהבראשיתיאג
3ואקלבראשיתטזה
4בקלהבראשיתכאיב
5מצבהבראשיתכחיח
6מצבהבראשיתכחכב
7מצבהבראשיתלאיג
8מצבהבראשיתלאמה
9ויחבקהובראשיתלגד
10מצבהבראשיתלהיד
11מצבהבראשיתלהכ
12לאונןבראשיתלחח
13ומלכיאלבראשיתמויז
14הלבניםשמותהז
15הלבניםשמותהח
16ונעבדהשמותידיב
17נזליםשמותטוח
18מצאושמותטוכב
19מצאושמותטזכז
20מצבהשמותכדד
21ומצאויקראכהכו
22עזכםויקראכויט
23גדעניבמדבראיא
24גדעניבמדברבכב
25גדעניבמדברזס
26גדעניבמדברזסה
27ומצאבמדבריאכב
28ומצאבמדבריאכב
29ויאצלבמדבריאכה
30במסלהבמדברכיט
31לגלעדבמדברכוכט
32מוצאבמדברליג
33ומצאבמדברלהכז
34והעויםדבריםבכג
35ואמץדבריםבל
36מוצאדבריםחג
37ואפןדבריםטטו
38ואפןדבריםיה
39ונעבדהדבריםיגז
40ונעבדהדבריםיגיד
41והאלמנהדבריםידכט
42והאלמנהדבריםטזיא
43והאלמנהדבריםטזיד
44מצבהדבריםטזכב
45ומצאדבריםיטה
46בקהלדבריםכגב
47בקהלדבריםכגג
48בקהלדבריםכגג
49בקהלדבריםכגד
50בקהלדבריםכגד
51בקהלדבריםכגט
52מוצאדבריםכגכד
53והפילודבריםכהב
54ואמץדבריםלאז
55בפיהםדבריםלאיט
56ואמץדבריםלאכג
57אפאיהםדבריםלבכו


http://www.n-soft.org/GematriaFinder.aspx











Development by EduPlanet.Network



Who links here?




Jewish Banners

אין תגובות: