La Symphonie Du vivant

The Symphony of the Living


From original vibration to the art of sounds:
The biochemical harmony of life



Here I present to you the main works which have allowed me to rigorously study the frequency domain and its biochemical relationship with the organism.
This has led to the development of research in "molecular sound chemistry" for over 3 years. Therapeutic tuning forks are one of the results of these studies and experiments linked to my fundamental research with the "song of plants".

Here is the list of the main references and influences:

- Electrophysiology by Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose
- Water and vortex energization seen by Viktor Schauberger
- Epigenetics seen by Joël De Rosnay
- Biocommunication by Cleve Backster
- The Cosmic Octave by Hans Cousto
- The theory of proteodies by Joël Sternheimer

Electrophysiology by Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose

A pioneer in research on electromagnetic waves and radio waves,
Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose began studying plant behavior in 1903.
He was able to generate an impressive number of experiments and created numerous measuring devices including the crescograph which made it possible to measure the electrical activity of a plant almost 110 years ago.

As a botanist and nature lover, Jagadish Chandra Bose contributed to a better understanding of plant behavior and provided evidence that the plant kingdom functions in a very similar way at the physiological and biological level to the animal kingdom. By extension, this also applies to humans.

He makes several observations on the virtues of the active properties of plants and their capacity to regulate or re-harmonize an environment.


Click here to download the book "Comparative Electrophysiology" for free:
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k9792692x.texteImage


Water as seen by Vicktor Schauberger


Viktor Schauberger is an observer of the passing cycles of life and the actions of water on the environment.

It was around the 1920s, while observing the trout in the mountain streams of his region, that Viktor Schauberger (1885-1958) wondered how these trout could remain motionless in a strong current. His question mainly focused on the technique they used to overcome the eddies (water whirlpools) and swim up waterfalls without too much effort.

The shape of the vortex and the spiral movement formed by the water allows the elements stimulated by this current naturally managed by the environment to be energized.

Epigenetics as seen by Joël De Rosnay

Joël de Rosnay, Doctor of Science, is Director of Forecasting and Evaluation at the City of Science and Industry of La Villette .

Between 1975 and 1984, he was Director of Research Applications at the Pasteur Institute.

He was also a researcher and teacher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the field of biology and computer science. He was successively Scientific Attaché to the French Embassy in the United States and Scientific Director at the European Company for the Development of Enterprises (a Venture Capital company).

He is particularly interested in advanced technologies and applications of systems theory.

With the book "The Symphony of Life", he explains to us through epigenetics how to regulate our health to the point of modifying our DNA through fundamental principles to apply on a daily basis.

Another vision of the harmony that life and our exchanges with other living organisms offer us in order to preserve the balance of our ecosystems.


Biocommunication by Cleve Backster

Cleve Backster's work is gaining recognition, and the HeartMath Institute in California continues to develop his research and contribute to the understanding of interspecies biocommunication through various projects, including "Tree Rhythm."

Cleve Backster speaks in terms of "primary perception" regarding the study of the behavior of plants in different situations that require the plant to make choices.

In the large experiments produced, he confronted plants with human intentions, with distress reactions of other living organisms such as animals or even the interaction between plants to understand their biocommunication.

The Cosmic Octave by Hans Cousto

In 1978, Hans Cousto, a Swiss mathematician and musicologist, discovered natural law
of the COSMIC OCTAVE as a link between different types of natural phenomena

occurring periodically, such as the orbit of planets, weather, colors, rhythms, and tones.

In many areas of existence - from the macrocosm to the microcosm - harmonic oscillations can be observed.

The phenomenon of resonance is specific to them. The oscillations are transmitted and
stimulate other oscillations (lat. re-sonare = to sound again).

The constant rotation of the Earth causes, for example, our wake and sleep rhythms or its solar circulation the growth cycles in nature.

For the sake of life on Earth, it is advisable to artificially and artistically attune the generated vibrations to the natural rhythms of our planet.

The Proteodies by Joël Sternheimer

Genodics is the science developed around the theory of proteodies.
It allows the calculation of amino acid sequences to stimulate or inhibit certain proteins, mainly in the agricultural context.

By working on the vibrational phenomenon of molecules, Joël wanted to see if we could "play" music from the frequencies of molecules like amino acids. His theory is used but remains approximate because a molecule's frequency, as we demonstrate, must remain at the correct "frequency" and not linked to a musical note in a tempered scale with a defined tuning fork that does not correspond to the same frequency.

This distorts several parameters including the exact height of the initial information.

This work has allowed us to improve our harmonic understanding of how living things function with sound differences between two natural frequencies that do not correspond to "known" intervals in musical practice.

This is the art of nature, to share with us a wealth of nuances of which only it knows the essence and origin.

The song of plants by Renaud Ruhlmann

And here I am.
To help you discover the symphony of the living , one of the most exciting adventures produced thanks to the " song of plants ".

I am one of the pioneers of electrophysiological research combining art and science to understand inter-species biocommunication.

Much of my work on frequencies is based on the fruitful collaborations I have with the plant kingdom through measurements and analyses of their biochemical signals, which I convert into audible sounds.

I created the first sound herbalism in 2019 and I have been developing work around frequencies and their uses in therapeutic functions since 2016.

It is through the design of a new measuring device for plant activity that I oriented my work to seek the vibrational relationship between the sound of plant songs and the frequencies of molecules based on the findings of proteodies. Thus, since 2021, my research activity has expanded to better understand and use precise frequencies linked to biochemical activities and the molecular vibrations of living things.

Nature speaks to us, let's listen to it.

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