The Hebraic Alphabet:
The association of the Hebrew alphabet with Qabbala has always been based on the total number of 22. I have mostly neglected the Hebrew origins in my work because of this. After reconstructing the Tree of Life into a more balanced and symmetrical form, there was no logical way for it to have only 22 paths. The new structure seemed to prove that there were 5 "symbols" missing from the Hebraic. I originally thought that these must be the 5 unwritten vowels. Since I had no way to apply them numerically without purely guessing, I left them out and proceeded only with sets of 27.
Nearly 20 years later I happened to be trying to translate some Hebrew text. When I searched for the alphabet that I had long before abandoned, I found a table with 27 letters instead of 22. After studying this table, and digging out some old books, I realised these characters had been there all along. There were still only 22 names, but I had ignorantly overlooked the 5 "final forms" as they are called.
These final forms are not vowels as I had assumed, but separate versions of other characters. Unlike the other 17, these letters take on an entirely different shape snd meaning when they appear as the final letter of a word. I still have not found out why only these 5 are special, but they are of consistent name and number in every source I have found. Thus, the Hebrew alphabet does indeed represents the proper paths of both the traditional and the Tet-Ra forms of the Tree of Life.