The ‘Circular Theory’ Diagram

Ilexa Yardley
The Circular Theory
2 min readAug 8, 2018

Nature is extremely easy to understand.

Nature is extremely easy to understand. It looks like this:

Zero and one. One and two.

What we see in the diagram is the circular relationship between ‘one’ and ‘one.’ Also known as ‘one and two.’ More realistically characterized ‘50–50’ everything (zero and one).

Meaning, zero is superimposed on one, and one is superimposed on two, which means the diagram is superimposed on everything in Nature (everything in Nature is superimposed on the diagram).

Where zero and one is, necessarily, one and two (if zero, then one, and, always, vice versa). Any X and-or Y (if circumference, then diameter).

And that’s all there is to Nature. You can use the diagram above to characterize (understand) any idea (any word or number) (any operation) (any symbol) (symbolization). Why? (And, also, ‘how’?)

Zero and one. Circumference and diameter.

There is a mandatory circle separating, and, also joining, any ‘me’ and-or ‘you.’ Explaining identity. And, complementarity.

Circumference and diameter is zero and one, and, always, vice versa (‘two’ is, technically, the only number in Nature). Yin and yang (ancient) is zero and one (modern).

Conservation of the circle is the core dynamic (only dynamic) in Nature.

https://www.amazon.com/Circularity-Natures-Constant-Yang-Zero/dp/1721120483

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