Yes we all know that there was a huge effort to find these relationships but taking just one example from your links, Palladio's room size theory recommends as follows:
1. Circular
2. Square 1:1
3. The diagonal of the square 1:1.414....etc.
4. A square plus a third 3:4
5. A square plus a half 2:3
6. A square plus two-thirds 3:5
7. Double square 1:2 1. Circular
2. Square 1:1
3. The diagonal of the square 1:1.414....etc.
4. A square plus a third 3:4
5. A square plus a half 2:3
6. A square plus two-thirds 3:5
7. Double square 1:2
It's pretty obvious that this covers just about every possibility (not including curves and other heathen variations). Anything bigger than a double square is going to look like a corridor ( but there are plenty of examples where that works perfectly well as a room - think of 'long galleries' - how horribly incorrect :roll: ). Anything smaller, down to a square, is going to be close enough to one of these options as to make no difference. It follows that any room you care to look at it is also going to be close - whether or not that was the intention.
But then there are a whole other set of rules with other variations - in fact
everything is probably conforming to one or another of them!
In the end it's down to taste - personally I prefer wild, primitive, over decorated
St Marks to harmonious, sterile and tidy
St Georges
new proportioning systems used by the better modern architects,
Some do some don't. Le Corbusier's modular thing was more a stylistic device than a practical reality. Other builder's modular systems are more related to material sizes and are just practical. Le Corbusier's 'Modulor' was based on 2.2 metres. Building regs ceiling height is 2.3 metres
and on the gothic etc. etc.
What was their system then? Obviously very different from the classical. I thought they were mainly preoccupied by going ever upwards and structural issues were the main concern.
Getting back to your harmonious drawer proportions - which system would you prefer? Classical, neo classical, Gothic, ditto revival, muslim, "Le modulor" etc etc or just take a punt on it - make them each an inch bigger than the preceding one.
Or - to be utterly harmonious, make them all the same size!
PS
These are interesting. You could just scale one off with dividers but I reckon equal increments bigger than say 1/2" would probably look good. Any finer tuning might not be apparent.