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The basic units of matter described by Besant & Leadbeater with microscopic vision, a siddhi of yoga called "anima," consist of ten non-touching helices, or "whorls," each with 1680 circular turns. Each helix makes five revolutions around the axis of spin of the particle, winding 336 times. These turns are symbolised in the 3-dimensional Sri Yantra by the 336 yods spread along the sides of the 42 triangles that surround its central triangle when they are tetractyses. Each whorl makes five half-revolutions in its outer spiralling around the spin-axis and five half-revolutions in its central core. The 168 turns in an outer half-revolution correspond to the 168 yods on the edges of the 21 triangles in one half of the Sri Yantra. The 168 turns in an inner half-revolution correspond to the 168 yods lining the sides of the 21 triangles in the other half, as the next page will portray. Alternatively, the 168 turns in one half-revolution of the helical whorl are symbolized by the 168 blue hexagonal yods on the 84 sides of the 28 tetractyses in the first three layers and the 168 turns in the other half-revolution are denoted by the 84 red hexagonal yods on the 42 sides of the 14 tetractyses in the fourth layer and by the 84 black corners of the 42 tetractyses. In this way, the Sri Yantra expresses the superstring structural parameters 336, 168 & 84.
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