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Q: What is the science behind the number 108?
This Q and other Qs related to it have been answered by Dr. Raziman TV, Postdoc in Applied Maths & Theoretical Physics at Imperial College, London.
Answer by Dr. Raziman TV:
108=112233, making it a hyperfactorial,[1] which is pretty interesting.
Christopher Giannaras' answer[2] lists a few more such mathematical curiosities about 108.
But 108 is also the subject of a lot of pseudoscientific woo, as evidenced by some other answers on this page which have their content from viral forwards that can be found all around the internet. The idea is to justify the presence of 108 in ancient scripture and religious rituals by assigning some cosmic significance to it. Of course all this is wishful thinking. Let's look at a few claims.
One common claim is of 108 being the ratio of some astronomical distances.
- The distance between the Earth and the Sun is 108 times the diameter of the Sun.
- The distance between the Earth and Moon is 108 times the diameter of the Moon.
- The diameter of the Sun is 108 times the diameter of the Earth.
The fact is that the orbits of the earth and the moon are slightly elliptical, so that the ratios do not remain constant.
In short the numbers have a big range, and their average values can be closer to 107, 109 or 111 than to 108 — this allows us to rule out any astronomical significance of 108.
Now, ancient people did know the approximate angular diameters of the sun and the moon, and the inverse being approximately around 108 which is a highly divisible number might have caught the eye of the ancients and caused its incorporation to rituals. But they definitely did not know the real diameter of the sun.
The claim then continues
These distances might be a predicting factor for other star/planet systems in the galaxy.
There is absolutely no reason for that to be the case. Even in the solar system, the other planets obviously have different distance ratios. And even the exoplanets we have observed come in all sorts of varieties.[7]
Another claim
Sanskrit alphabets are numbered: 54. These sound differently when articulated by the two genders (counted at that point of time). Multiply 54 x 2 = 108. These sound-vibrations consciously pronounced using life-energy include all vibrations in the Universe. This is being understood by scientific studies.
There are different ways to count the number of letters in Sanskrit,[8] but I'm yet to see one that results in 54. Even if that were the case, multiplying that by two genders is arbitrary. Life-energy is a meaningless word scientifically,[9] and relevant vibrations in the universe far exceed the sounds made by humans.
So I would really like to know that “scientific studies” are understanding these.
The next set of claims is dependent on units, like
Stonehenge, a prehistoric monument in England is 108 feet in diameter.
Yeah, and that would be 33 m. What cosmic significance does the combination of a random unit of length measurement and a random site have?
Well that got nothing on this one
The circumference of the Earth at the Equator is 21,600 [=108x200] nautical miles. On average, we take about this many breaths a day. This connects our human body with the planet.
That number is 21,600 because the nautical mile was historically defined so![10] The number of breaths is of course an approximation.
There are many more claims involving things without evidence such as Ayurvedic pressure points and chakras, and a lot of numerology with 1,0 and 8 that can be dismissed outright. What remains are mentions of the number in rituals and astrology of eastern religions. That could have had origins in the fact that 108 is a highly divisible number or even in the approximate astronomical ratios, or could well have been a coincidence. All that is only of historical and religious interest, and there is no cosmic significance of 108. All these atrocious “scientific" claims are made later by religious followers who want to give a totally unnecessary scientific justification for their customs.
Footnotes
If the same thing can be found everywhere (i.e. a lot places in an inexact form, scientific theories’ predictions are also similar), does it not make it significant?
There’s the golden ratio, golden angle, etc as well which is observed in various places in nature. Are they also not significant? Science due to the scientific method can never know anything with full certainty. That’s the unattainable goal science strives for.
Raziman TV:
How do you define significance? Isn’t everything a coincidence?
No. The moon, for example, is continuously moving away from the earth. The lunar distance to diameter ratio is thus going to increase with time. If there is universality of some sort, we can call it astronomically significant. Otherwise if you look at a million ratios, some hundred of them are going to be same - that is just a coinciidence.
Why is inertia found everywhere? Isn’t that a huge coincidence?
Everywhere is the key thing here. Universality is what makes it significant. If every satellite in the solar system had a ratio of orbital radius to diameter of 108, I would have considered it significant.
There’s the golden ratio, golden angle, etc as well which is observed in various places in nature. Are they also not significant?
This is mostly hype. There are situations in nature where the number arises, but we can explain them scientifically.
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