10 January 2026

St. Nicanor (76 AD); St. John Camillus Bonus (660 AD); St. William of Bourges (1209 AD)

 

Universal Transcendental Function and Universal Transcendental Constants derived from "π" and "e" (‘Universe's Numbers’ or ‘God's Numbers’).

 

Abstract.

This paper introduces Universal Transcendental Function and Constants similar to ‘π’ and ‘e’ and derived from them.

The following article addresses the properties of the Transcendental Function, such as index and subscript mathematics.

 The applications of this can be applied in Mathematics, Quantum Mechanics, Cosmology, and in Theology or Philosophy.

These numbers complete the number system, i.e., in addition to the numbers invented by humans, we also have the Transcendental Numbers, not invented but ‘created’. With these numbers, the Universe ‘talks to us.’ I also like the term ‘God’s Numbers’ which are part of Creation.

 

Introduction.

Derivation of Universal Transcendental Function.

How to derive the equation of the Universal Transcendental Function?

The first thing to note is that ‘π’ is at position "8" on the x-axis and ‘e’ is at position "7" on the x-axis. Only then can the formula be derived for the whole family of Transcendental Constants. (There may exist other placements of the constants ‘π’ and ‘e’, but I believe I chose the most precise, simple and elegant option).

Write comment (0 Comments)

1 August 2022 AD

St. Alphonsus Liguori (1787 AD); 7 Holy Maccabees (150 BC); St. in Chains (6th Century); Sts. Faith, Hope, and Charity (2nd Century AD)

 

New Explanation:

 

The Graphs in this article are primarily to show the reader:

 

  1.  the shape of the Real Part of the Equation, i.e., when the Main Equation is scanned with a complex number (C(π/e) , 0i) and Imaginary Part is scanned with (0, i*(C(π/e)).

 

  1. The shape of the Imaginary part

  1. The graph of the sum of the Real and Imaginary parts

 

I will come back to this critical topic in subsequent articles.

Write comment (0 Comments)

19-20 May 2025 AD Monday-Tuesday

St. Pudentiana (160 AD); St. Peter Celestine (1296 AD); St. Ivo (1303 AD);

St. Bernardine of Siena (1444 AD)

Having writings of the three distinguished authors will allow one to obtain a precise picture of Sub Terra (Under the Earth) part of the triple universe, since their views are complementary. St. Frances of Rome records her visits very much more clearly, while St. Hildegard of Bingen writes about the connection between Terra (Earth) and Sub Terra (Under the Earth). Again, Enoch (Henoch) gives crucial details about the connection between Caelo (Heaven) and Sub Terra (Under the Earth). St. Francesca describes Sub Terra (Under the Earth) as a vast space, St. Hildegard clearly says that Sub Terra (Under the Earth) is located inside Terra (Earth), Enoch in important statement says that Sub Terra (Under the Earth) is surrounded by a wall/fence, if you will, similar to wall/fence surrounding a prison.

Write comment (0 Comments)

24 May 2025 AD Saturday

Our Lady, Help of Christians; Sts. Donatian and Rogatian (287 AD); St. Joanna (1st Century AD)

 

I will present at least two different methods of ‘proving’ the construction of the Earth, Hell, and Heaven. In this article I will use the same properties of quantum physics as in the article before, the charge-parity-time violating phase property (CPT) and transcendental mathematics, which make all these calculations possible in the first place. The build of our universe (Terra) is straightforward: there are just quark and neutrino sequences, six groups of the triple elements, 18 altogether, and no extraordinary parts. In the case of Sub Terra (‘Under the Earth’ – Limbo, Purgatory, and Hell), the situation is different and more complicated. There are of course the three groups of the triple elements, membrane/shell, and wall surrounding the underworld as if were a prison separated from the other parts.

Write comment (0 Comments)

17 May 2025 AD Saturday

St. Paschal Baylon (1592 AD)

I am getting ready for the next interesting article on part of the universe called ‘Under the Earth'. Later this week the mathematical part will come as well. As to the shape of the universes, it may be a flower (four-petal jasmine for example, as on the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe) or a 4-dimensional hypercube (tesseract) with eight 3-dimensional cells, which is immortalized in Salvador Dali painting from the year 1954 Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus).

Write comment (0 Comments)