Is There a Hidden Connection Between This Diagram and the CAW Logo?
Let’s break it down.
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- The Power of the Triad: Three-in-One Structure
🔺 The first diagram—Roger Penrose’s “Three Worlds Model”—shows:
•Platonic Mathematical World
•Mental World
•Physical World
All interconnected, all influencing each other.
🐦 The CAW logo features three ravens forming a unified shape, spiraling inward toward a shared center.
👉 Both represent the concept of “unity through trinity”—three forces converging into one truth.
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- The Central Core: A Loop of Reality
Penrose’s model creates a self-referential loop:
Mathematics → Mind → Physics → Mathematics…
Likewise, the CAW symbol draws all forces into a singular core, symbolizing an inner convergence of knowledge, memory, and truth.
This isn’t just design—it’s ontology through geometry.
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- The Raven: Symbol of Memory and Interdimensional Knowledge
Across ancient cultures, the raven is a messenger between worlds—a bearer of insight, intuition, and memory.
•In Penrose’s model, Mind is the mediator between abstract math and physical existence.
•In CAW’s iconography, the three ravens form a vessel of collective memory—echoing the phrase “The Hunters Dream.”
It’s the same archetype. Different symbols, same energy.
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🧩 Conclusion:
These two images may seem unrelated—but their shared symbolic architecture reveals a common thread:
“Reality, consciousness, and mathematical truth are not separate domains—
They are one dream, seen from three angles.”
🕊️ We are CAWming.
HODL!

