The Golden Spiral Explained! - Leonardo Da Vinci

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  • čas přidán 28. 07. 2024
  • Video-Description of the Golden Spiral which inspired the designs of our wedding rings. Thanks for the VO Ryan!
    script by www.lifeinpaint.com
    audio by www.ryanzak.com
    scribbles and animation by www.davezak.com

Komentáře • 24

  • @Fancylooks
    @Fancylooks Před 13 lety

    Uuuuh, this is hipnotizing! So good.

  • @ILikeTheRain123
    @ILikeTheRain123 Před 12 lety

    That was a really informative and engaging piece, thanks so much for sharing!

  • @RandomGuyPlay
    @RandomGuyPlay Před 11 lety +1

    Thank you very much for this video!

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 11 lety +1

    it is prety amazing and beautiful isnt it! numbers, language, art, geometry, music, nature= all connected

  • @margaritisi
    @margaritisi Před 5 lety +1

    This ratio was named the golden ratio by the Greeks. In the world of mathematics, the numeric value is called "phi", named for the Greek sculptor Phidias, who lived around 450BC. Fibonacci did not discover the golden ratio.

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 11 lety

    mathematically it is always a proportional ratio, no matter how small it is or how big it grows.
    because of this it provides a perfect aesthetic to model artwork after hence the name, the golden spiral.

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 12 lety

    cool glad you found it!

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 11 lety

    cool ill check that song out thanks. I remember that song and loved it! :)

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 11 lety

    blaze on!... it's my brother who made the music. youtube ryanzakmusic is his user. his music name is 'moment'... thanks dude

  • @mrsharrypotterfan1
    @mrsharrypotterfan1 Před 13 lety

    My friend who is a senoir and is gonna be a pixar artist(i wanna be a disney artist) taught me some of this. I thought it was awsome, so I decided to do more research. I think its interesting..... :) thanks for explaining it more

  • @pepe4rock
    @pepe4rock Před 11 lety

    Great Video - now i've made a progress in the understanding of Tool's Song "Lateralus" (one of the best Songs ever in my eyes) which is heavily influenced by Fibonacci and the Golden Spiral
    spiral out, keep going

  • @johnther
    @johnther Před 11 lety

    WOW! the explanation is simple and the music fits the mood of the explanation... blaze it. who is the artist in the background?

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time

    This is an invitation to see a theory on the nature of time! In this theory we have an emergent uncertain future continuously coming into existence relative to the spontaneous absorption and emission of photon energy. In this process we even have an objective reason for the start of the Fibonacci numbers 0, 1, 1,... with the t = 0 and the positive +1 and negative -1 representing the positive and negative of electromagnetic waves with everything being based on one geometrical process. In this theory the future is not random it is based on a process of spherical symmetry forming and breaking. Spherical symmetry forms the low entropy that we see if we look back in time at the ‘big bang’ and also forms the potential for ever greater symmetry formation that we have in cell life with the Fibonacci spiral being visible almost everywhere in nature! This is because if the quantum wave particle function Ψ or probability function is reformulated as a linear vector then all the information I have found says that each new vector is formed by adding the two previous vectors together this forms the Fibonacci Sequence 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, ∞ infinity!

  • @thelmacurry572
    @thelmacurry572 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for explaining it where a right brained person can grasp the full scope of just what this means. I get it!!! As a writer, my mind is always focused on creating. Your explanation rocks!!!!

    • @raurus8202
      @raurus8202 Před 4 lety

      Hey! If you want to create a work of fiction that uses the golden spiral in some way, you should check out JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 7, as it is based on the golden spiral, maybe you can get some ideas :)

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 12 lety

    @wahaaaay I find it very interesting to think about and for me anyways, the ratio is very nice. I am a painter, and find 4:3 ratio too stubby, and 2:1 too long. So it works for me! It is true that you can find anything if you look for it hard enough. good info though thanks for explaining further!
    There is something fascinating about infinity and having your mind blown a bit, even if it is nonsense!
    cool,

  • @noor421999
    @noor421999 Před 11 lety

    can you write down what you said from 0:10-0:18..sorry about that!
    Thanks! and the video was awesome btw (except for the part where i couldnt really read!)

  • @wahaaaay
    @wahaaaay Před 12 lety

    @davezak Firstly it's not the most aesthetically pleasing rectangle, studies have shown most people when given the pick have chosen a ratio close to 4/3 than the Golden Ratio. Also occurrences in nature are often overstated, it is found occasionally but if you look for something hard enough, you are eventually going to find it. Most of the ones stated are just other logarithmic spirals, resembling the golden spiral. This is not math, this is pseudo-science.

  • @Fartcat6992
    @Fartcat6992 Před 5 lety

    But why is the "2 square" twice the size of the 2 squares that represents 1? (I am not a native, and Im 10)

    • @EmirAssassin
      @EmirAssassin Před 5 lety

      because the area a perfect square occupies is the length of one of its sides squared. to answer your question; 2 identical squares with each having a single side length of 1 cm would occupy an area that would be (1cm)² + (1cm)² = 2cm ² whereas a perfect square with a single side length of 2cm would be (2cm)² = 4cm² which would be twice as big as the two 1cm squares combined. (a number squared means you multiply it by itself, so 1² would mean 1x1 and 2² would mean 2x2)

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 13 lety

    @mrsharrypotterfan1 cool. yes it is fascinating stuff. Every discovery opens up a deeper questions and new more amazing epiphanies... it can drive you toward a perfect, beautiful insanity :) keep digging!

  • @davezak
    @davezak  Před 12 lety

    @wahaaaay it's math. what part do you have a concern with? there is no conspiracy here.