The most important numbers in the universe

Measurement scales are not mathematics.
There is no 'best' measurement scale.

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The US also standardized our railroad track gauge (4 feet 8-1/2 inches) to match the gauge of Roman Chariot wheels.

True story.

Actually, the railroads themselves did that.

There are some railroads with unusual gauges, usually mining equipment or local lines that don't travel from State to State.

Sort of like the way keyboards standardized on the QWERTY layout, designed originally to slow you down so you wouldn't jam the typewriter.
 
Sacred geometry is a fascinating use of numbers but it's Sunday so this is the best I can do.

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Nuthin' particularly sacred about it. It's just playing with numbers while designing buildings. An art form. Especially popular during the Renaissance.
 
Clearly, you were incapable of recognizing the speed of light in a vacuum, which is one of the most fundamental physical constants of observable reality.

The speed of light in a vacuum has never been measured. Indeed, the speed of light has never been measured. The only measurements made so far is how fast light reflects.

Observations are not a proof. They are subject to the problems if phenomenology. A constant isn't 'physical'. It is simply a measurement. There is no perfect vacuum obtainable, even in space.

Reality is not an observation. Buzzword fallacy.
 
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