
Where tradition meets contemporary manifestation

The phrase “one hundred minus one” is not simply a poetic or rhetorical expression synonymous with “ninety-nine”.
A superficial counting of the inner cubes might lead one to believe that there are one hundred, not ninety-nine cubes, but diagrams in the accompanying book clarify how a comprehensive view of the cube (and the various interrelationships between segments derived from different diagonals) demonstrate that what appears to be the hundredth inner cube of one segment is actually the folding cornerstone of another segment which has been opened in a complementary direction. In other words, the apparent hundredth cube forming the base cube of any opened segment needs to be subtracted from the superficial count of one hundred cubes within that segment once we come to understand the unifying law of the inner property of the cube. Thus, it becomes evident that the phrase “one hundred minus one” is not a rhetorical embellishment but a precise reference to a mathematical reality.


