Ardha-bindu, Bindu, Valaya, and Pradakshina
http://sahajayogaencyclopedia.org/index.php?title=Chakras_above_Sahastrara
Final names four levels of a 14 density hierarchy after Hamsa chakra.
4th level of navaratna corresponds to anahata as it is represented by the planet venus and jewel diamond. 4 chakra. adamant. anahata. diamante. diamond.
Ra tells people to purify their forms with rubies and diamonds.
I think assuming everyone around the world will call it the same thing is fanciful, but I think it's definitely intriguing that 10th density
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamsa
Has the same symbol from North Africa through the Mideast all the way to India.
The hamsa (Arabic: خمسة khamsah; Hebrew: חַמְסָה, also romanized khamsa; Berber languages: ⵜⴰⴼⵓⵙⵜ tafust) is a palm-shaped amulet popular throughout the Middle East and North Africa and commonly used in jewelry and wall hangings.[1][2] Depicting the open right hand, an image recognized and used as a sign of protection in many times throughout history, the hamsa is believed by some, predominantly Muslims and Jews, to provide defense against the evil eye. It has been theorized that its origins lie in Ancient Egypt or Carthage (modern-day Tunisia) and may have been associated with the Goddess Tanit.[3][self-published source?]
Khamsah is an Arabic word that means "five", but also "the five fingers of the hand".[4][5][6]
The Hamsa is also variously known as the Hand of Fatima after the daughter of the prophet Muhammad,[7] the Hand of Mary, the Hand of Miriam, and the Hand of the Goddess.
is speculated that Jews were among the first to use this amulet due to their beliefs about the evil eye.[14] The symbol of the hand appears in Kabbalistic manuscripts and amulets, doubling as the Hebrew letter "Shin", the first letter of "Shaddai", one of the names referring to God.[15] The use of the hamsa in Jewish culture has been intermittent, utilized often by Jews during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,[11] then less and less over time into the mid-twentieth century. However, the notion of a protective hand has been present in Judaism dating all the way back to Biblical times, where it is referenced in Deuteronomy 5:15, stated in the Ten Commandments as the "strong hand" of God who led the Jews out of Egypt.[11] The hamsa is later seen in Jewish art as God's hand reaching down from heaven during the times of late antiquity, the Byzantine period, and even medieval Europe. Its use by Ashkenazi Jewish communities from this period is well-known, and evidence has also emerged of the hamsa being used by Jews from medieval Spain, often associated with "sympathetic magic".[11] Historians such as Shalom Sabar believe that after the Jewish expulsion from Spain in 1492, exiled Jews likely used the hamsa as protection in the foreign lands they were forced to relocate to, however this assumption has been difficult to prove.[11] According to Sabar, the hamsa has also been used later by Jews in Europe "as a distinctive sign of the priesthood, especially when they wished to show that a person was of priestly descent...".[11]