The Da Vinci Code



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Dan Brown - The Da Vinci Code

Architectura.
"Nobody understood better than Da Vinci the divine structure of the human body. Da Vinci 
actually exhumed corpses to measure the exact proportions of human bone structure. He was the 
first to show that the human body is literally made of building blocks whose proportional ratios 
always equal PHI."
Everyone in class gave him a dubious look.
"Don't believe me?" Langdon challenged. "Next time you're in the shower, take a tape measure."
A couple of football players snickered.
"Not just you insecure jocks," Langdon prompted. "All of you. Guys and girls. Try it. Measure the 
distance from the tip of your head to the floor. Then divide that by the distance from your belly 
button to the floor. Guess what number you get."
"Not PHI!" one of the jocks blurted out in disbelief.
"Yes, PHI," Langdon replied. "One-point-six-one-eight. Want another example? Measure the 
distance from your shoulder to your fingertips, and then divide it by the distance from your elbow 
to your fingertips. PHI again. Another? Hip to floor divided by knee to floor. PHI again. Finger 
joints. Toes. Spinal divisions. PHI. PHI. PHI. My friends, each of you is a walking tribute to the 
Divine Proportion."
Even in the darkness, Langdon could see they were all astounded. He felt a familiar warmth inside. 
This is why he taught. "My friends, as you can see, the chaos of the world has an underlying order. 
When the ancients discovered PHI, they were certain they had stumbled across God's building 


block for the world, and they worshipped Nature because of that. And one can understand why. 
God's hand is evident in Nature, and even to this day there exist pagan, Mother Earth-revering 
religions. Many of us celebrate nature the way the pagans did, and don't even know it. May Day is 
a perfect example, the celebration of spring... the earth coming back to life to produce her bounty. 
The mysterious magic inherent in the Divine Proportion was written at the beginning of time. Man 
is simply playing by Nature's rules, and because art is man's attempt to imitate the beauty of the 
Creator's hand, you can imagine we might be seeing a lot of instances of the Divine Proportion in 
art this semester."
Over the next half hour, Langdon showed them slides of artwork by Michelangelo, Albrecht Dürer, 
Da Vinci, and many others, demonstrating each artist's intentional and rigorous adherence to the 
Divine Proportion in the layout of his compositions. Langdon unveiled PHI in the architectural 
dimensions of the Greek Parthenon, the pyramids of Egypt, and even the United Nations Building 
in New York. PHI appeared in the organizational structures of Mozart's sonatas, Beethoven's Fifth 
Symphony, as well as the works of Bartók, Debussy, and Schubert. The number PHI, Langdon told 
them, was even used by Stradivarius to calculate the exact placement of the f-holes in the 
construction of his famous violins.
"In closing," Langdon said, walking to the chalkboard, "we return to symbols" He drew five 
intersecting lines that formed a five-pointed star. "This symbol is one of the most powerful images 
you will see this term. Formally known as a pentagram—or pentacle, as the ancients called it—this 
symbol is considered both divine and magical by many cultures. Can anyone tell me why that 
might be?"
Stettner, the math major, raised his hand. "Because if you draw a pentagram, the lines 
automatically divide themselves into segments according to the Divine Proportion."
Langdon gave the kid a proud nod. "Nice job. Yes, the ratios of line segments in a pentacle all 
equal PHI, making this symbol the ultimate expression of the Divine Proportion. For this reason, 
the five-pointed star has always been the symbol for beauty and perfection associated with the 
goddess and the sacred feminine."
The girls in class beamed.
"One note, folks. We've only touched on Da Vinci today, but we'll be seeing a lot more of him this 
semester. Leonardo was a well-documented devotee of the ancient ways of the goddess. 
Tomorrow, I'll show you his fresco The Last Supper, which is one of the most astonishing tributes 
to the sacred feminine you will ever see."
"You're kidding, right?" somebody said. "I thought The Last Supper was about Jesus!"
Langdon winked. "There are symbols hidden in places you would never imagine."


"Come on," Sophie whispered. "What's wrong? We're almost there. Hurry!"
Langdon glanced up, feeling himself return from faraway thoughts. He realized he was standing at 
a dead stop on the stairs, paralyzed by sudden revelation.
O, Draconian devil! Oh, lame saint!
Sophie was looking back at him.
It can't be that simple, Langdon thought.
But he knew of course that it was.
There in the bowels of the Louvre... with images of PHI and Da Vinci swirling through his mind
Robert Langdon suddenly and unexpectedly deciphered Saunière's code.
"O, Draconian devil!" he said. "Oh, lame saint! It's the simplest kind of code!"
Sophie was stopped on the stairs below him, staring up in confusion. A code? She had been 
pondering the words all night and had not seen a code. Especially a simple one.
"You said it yourself." Langdon's voice reverberated with excitement. "Fibonacci numbers only 
have meaning in their proper order. Otherwise they're mathematical gibberish."
Sophie had no idea what he was talking about. The Fibonacci numbers? She was certain they had 
been intended as nothing more than a means to get the Cryptography Department involved tonight. 
They have another purpose? She plunged her hand into her pocket and pulled out the printout, 
studying her grandfather's message again.
13-3-2-21-1-1-8-5
O, Draconian devil!
Oh, lame saint!
What about the numbers?
"The scrambled Fibonacci sequence is a clue," Langdon said, taking the printout. "The numbers are 
a hint as to how to decipher the rest of the message. He wrote the sequence out of order to tell us to 
apply the same concept to the text. O, Draconian devil? Oh, lame saint? Those lines mean nothing. 


They are simply letters written out of order."
Sophie needed only an instant to process Langdon's implication, and it seemed laughably simple. 
"You think this message is... une anagramme?" She stared at him. "Like a word jumble from a 
newspaper?"
Langdon could see the skepticism on Sophie's face and certainly understood. Few people realized 
that anagrams, despite being a trite modern amusement, had a rich history of sacred symbolism.
The mystical teachings of the Kabbala drew heavily on anagrams—rearranging the letters of 
Hebrew words to derive new meanings. French kings throughout the Renaissance were so 
convinced that anagrams held magic power that they appointed royal anagrammatists to help them 
make better decisions by analyzing words in important documents. The Romans actually referred 
to the study of anagrams as ars magna—"the great art."
Langdon looked up at Sophie, locking eyes with her now. "Your grandfather's meaning was right 
in front of us all along, and he left us more than enough clues to see it."
Without another word, Langdon pulled a pen from his jacket pocket and rearranged the letters in 
each line.
O, Draconian devil! Oh, lame saint!
was a perfect anagram of...
Leonardo da Vinci! The Mona Lisa!

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