Sacred Geometry Used to Predict Cryptocurrency Trends

Sacred Geometry Used to Predict Cryptocurrency Trends

Investors in cryptocurrency have grown by more than 300 percent in the last year alone. With the world coming out of one of the most tumultuous times in modern history, people are flocking to digital assets, but why? Could investors have found a key to unlocking the secrets of the crypto market by using sacred geometry?

Cryptocurrency, a one-time novelty used by tech-savvy individuals as a digital storehouse of wealth is now being adopted by some of the largest institutions around the world; cryptocurrency has gone mainstream. But with growing demand comes the need to better understand these new markets. Some investors have found the use of sacred geometry as a way to track the trends of digital currency. Known as Fibonacci retracements, this sacred geometric tool has been used to predict potential support and resistance levels for price actions in financial markets.

But what is sacred geometry, and in particular the Fibonacci sequence?

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What are Fractals?

What are Fractals?

If you look around you right now, depending on where you are, you’re likely to see to two distinct types of shapes: 1) blocky, linear and smooth if you’re in a manmade environment; or 2) branching, uneven and irregular shapes if you’re in a natural one. Why is there such a difference between the appearance of manmade and natural spaces? Why does one tend to look smooth, while the other looks rough? It comes down to one word: fractals.

A Brief History of Fractals

At the beginning of the 20th Century, mathematicians Pierre Fatou and Gaston Julia discovered fractal patterns while looking at complex mathematical systems. Back then, these objects defied linear analysis; they were considered aberrations or scary mathematical monsters, with infinite depth and complexity. They weren’t very popular and were forgotten until the late Belgium mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot discovered them again while working at IBM labs in Armonk, New York in 1980.

Fractals Contain Imaginary Numbers

To distinguish fractals from ordinary objects, you should know that fractal sets are created by algorithms that, in addition to ordinary integer numbers, also contain so-called “imaginary numbers”. This allows fractals to behave in much more complex ways, and describe more complex systems than ordinary numbers.

The Behavior of Fractals

Mandelbrot was the person who coined the word fractal. He used it to describe the behavior of financial markets and telephone line noise. The word fractal is derived from the word Greek “fractus,” meaning “fractured.” Mandelbrot noticed that telephone line noise is similar, whether you look at it over the course of an hour, a minute, or a second: you still see the same wave-form shape. In this sense, you can describe telephone line noise with a numerical dimension that applies at any time scale. The dimension defines the visual “roughness” of the signal; in other words, the dimension translates to how choppy it looks.

This is a very different type of geometrical logic than the one we were taught in school, where objects have a definite length and size. This is because, in school, we’re dealing with abstract objects that we imagine are perfectly linear and smooth. Nothing in the real world really looks like that!

If you take a look at almost anything natural under a microscope, you’ll see it’s full of fissures, pits and holes.

That’s because natural things are seldom perfectly flat beyond a certain scale. The closer you look, the more defects you’ll see.

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