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Index Entry
" We may say ‘triangling’ instead of ‘squaring.’ When we say ‘triangling’ we are referring to stable structures. When we say ‘squaring’ we are referring to unstable shapes. Because squares are utterly unstable they may not be called structures. Squares, when partially stabilized, always consist of two triangles which can move in respect to one another as the two halves of a hinge. When we deal with triangling we are being more economical with space than when we employ squares with edges equal to the triangles’. Nature always insists on being most economical. Nature ‘triangles.’ Nature accounts all of her structuring entirely rationally when measuring with triangles. . . . Ergo: triangular observation of physical phenomena from any angle always produces reliable and rational accounting not available in quadrangular accounting."
