Gold Pattern


November 2011 Writing 

     Cold facts are easy to find. Thousands throng to the Grey Cup Parade. Millions seek Tahrir Square. Seven billion and counting.
     There are numbers everywhere in our environment. Scores are regular mantras, especially now that number 87 has glided onto the ice.  And then there’s the ½ price realm. Or we count how many days till the big one.
     But where does all this numeralia come from? Since we could scratch on cave walls we’ve been keeping track of things and events. But there’s a great leap from a line in the sand to the mathematical equation. I began my search and after a little visit to Google the Great, I found a math man of the millennium.
     For almost 800 years folks have called Fibonacci the "greatest European mathematician of the middle ages." Fibonacci’s full Italian name was Leonardo Pisano, indicating that he was born in Pisa. He called himself Fibonacci which was short for Filius Bonacci, "son of Bonacci", which was his father's name.
     Fibonacci grew up in the North African town of Bugia and travelled around the Mediterranean where he learned the Hindu-Arabic system of arithmetic. He was one of the first to introduce this numbering system into Europe.  Using the base of ten digits, a decimal point and a symbol for zero, it is the same system we use today. His 1202 book on the decimal system, Liber abbaci, details all those rules for adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing.
     Fibonacci was born in 1175 and lived until the 1240's. Today one can see a statue of him at the Leaning Tower end of the cemetery next to the Cathedral in Pisa.  Fibonacci discovered a unique phenomenon. He was trying to solve a theoretical problem about the growth of a rabbit population. He arranged a sequence wherein each number (rabbit) was the sum (offspring) of the previous two. This pattern became the Fibonacci series: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, 987, 1597, 2584, 4181 and so on. Then he calculated the ratio between the numbers. Since this turned out to be the same answer each time, mathematicians called it the golden ratio. It exists everywhere. For every ¼ turn, a natural spiral widens by a factor of this golden ratio. We can see it in sunflowers, a single cell, a beehive, a grain of wheat or the scales on a pineapple. How about a galaxy? Artists, musicians and philosophers also adhere to the mathematical axiom. Some even claim parallels to the stock market!
     Looking for Fibonacci sequences in nature can refresh a late fall hike. Those brown crinkly ferns waiting for the weight of the snow, the swirls in the sand after storm wave patterns leave their mark or the twists in old cedars as they reach for the light could all fall under the influence of Fibonacci’s find.
     One element that I do know will adhere to the golden ratio is the cone of the spruce, balsam and pine trees. And this year there are THOUSANDS of them. Too many to resist, we’ve been adding them to our basket of seasonal greenery. When they fall from the tree, the cones are sticky and tight. But after a few days they widen into their fragile, spiralled selves. We like to admire their possibilities. Fibonacci’s golden ratio exists in their curly shape but the real glow is in their holiday shine.

   As we move towards this month of lights within the darkness, the alchemy of numbers is tempting. Adding, subtracting, multiplying then dividing is a logical diversion considering how math seems to rule the world. But we’ve got to be careful. There could be traps. Unless you’re listening to “Comfortably Numb”, you don’t want to get caught up by the Numb Brrs.