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Lexarithmic Ratios

Ratio of Lexarithms · Eleftherios Argyropoulos

Ratios of lexarithms to mathematical constants (π, φ, e, √2)

WHAT IT IS

You divide the lexarithmos of one phrase by that of another. The resulting quotient is compared with known mathematical constants (π, φ, e, √2, √3). If the quotient matches — even approximately — a constant, then the two phrases "encode" geometry within language.

HISTORY & SOURCES

Eleftherios Argyropoulos is a mathematician from Kalamata who has been researching lexarithmic theory since 1998. His fundamental discovery, on May 5, 1998, was that the quotient of specific Greek phrases equals the number π.

The most important relation:
(length + of circumference + of circle) ÷ diameter = (338 + 1016 + 940) ÷ 730 = 2294 ÷ 730 = 3.1424... ≈ π

Observation: Archimedes used the approximation 22/7 ≈ π. 2294 contains "22" and 730 contains "7."

Argyropoulos argues that the Greek language functions as a "spiritual supercomputer" — concepts were not coined randomly but follow the laws of geometry and physics. His central work is titled "The Lexarithmic Intelligence of the Greek Language."

Note: The method is considered arithmosophy by the academic community — the calculations are mathematically accurate, but the interpretation of "encoding" is debated.

CENTRAL RELATIONS OF ARGYROPOULOS

π ≈ 3.1416(length + of circumference + of circle) ÷ diameter = 2294 ÷ 730 = 3.1424…
φ ≈ 1.6180nature = mean and extreme ratio = man = 1310 · Parthenon: width ÷ height = 1.618
equidistant= of circumference = 1016 — "every point is equidistant from the center"

HOW IT WORKS

  1. Numerator: length (338) + of circumference (1016) + of circle (940) = 2294
  2. Denominator: diameter = 730
  3. Quotient: 2294 ÷ 730 = 3.142457...
  4. Comparison: π = 3.141592... → deviation < 0.03%
  5. The first 3 decimal digits (3.14) agree 100% with π
  6. Archimedes observation: 22/7 ≈ π — 2294 contains "22", 730 contains "7"

CONCLUSION

The ratio of lexarithms reveals proportions between concepts that reflect mathematical constants. Language not only describes the world — according to Argyropoulos, it encodes it numerically.

SOURCES

Eleftherios Argyropoulos, mathematician — Discovery 5/5/1998 · 1st publication Oct. 2000 · "The Lexarithmic Intelligence of the Greek Language" · 6 books (ed. Georgiadis)

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