He points to the flower of life pattern and identifies a specific mathematical relationship embedded within it: the square root of three. The ratio appears when you compare the circle enclosing the six-petaled flower to the distance between alternate petal tips. This isn't decorative accident. Sacred architecture, from cathedrals to temples to simple shrines, consistently incorporates these geometric principles. The question becomes whether ancient builders understood these ratios intuitively, through tradition, or through direct mathematical knowledge. Either way, the presence of specific mathematical constants like the square root of three suggests intentional design rather than aesthetic preference alone.