He points to a project applying sacred geometry principles to strengthen bee colonies against environmental stressors. Rather than political advocacy or land management alone, the focus is direct intervention: using geometries found in nature to help bees build resilience. The idea resonates beyond apiculture. If these patterns can buffer one living system against disruption, what does that suggest about their potential application to human communities? The principles are ancient, but the challenge is contemporary. It's one thing to study a problem or debate policy. It's another to test a solution in the field and measure the outcome. That's the approach here: implement, observe, refine. The broader implication is harder to quantify but worth considering. Could the same geometric relationships that organize healthy hives also inform how we structure our own social and physical environments?
Sacred geometry. Ancient catastrophism. A living university built around the work that changes everything. Kosmogonia is here: https://kosmogoniauniversity.com/