DIGIPHARM
DIGIPHARM
SCIENTIFICALLY INTRODUCING UNIVERSALITY TO ACADEMIC LIFE
   Faculties:   Music & Musicology · Philosophy · Medical Sciences · Education · Pythagoras · Consciousness · Humanities · Natural Science · The Dragon · The Veda · Culture · Opera & Arts



Home

Site Map

Basic Law of the Academy

The Cosmic
Education Programm

Introduction to the University of the Future

Peter Hübner
Developer of the University

 

Faculty of
MEDICAL SCIENCES

Leading Thoughts

Logical Path - Theory

Logical Path -Practice

CURRICULUM

Theoretical Fundamentals

Scientific Research

Medical Music
Preparations on CD

CHRONOMEDICINE

Periodic Duration

Pain Sensitivity

Activity Rhythms

Cosmic Rhythms

Three Way Structure

Endogenous Rhythms

Muscular Rhythms

Pain Wave Rhythms

Circulation & Respiration

Puls Breath Frequency

Rhythms in Sleep

Therapeutic Changes

Inhalation & Heart Period

Mother & Child

Heart & Arterial Oscillation

Phase Coordination

Walk & Heart Rhythm

Breathing & Heart Rhythm

Autonomic Rhythm

Hierarchy of Rhythms

Spontaneous Rhythms

Muscular Blood
Circulation

Healing & Resistance

Spontaneous Rhythms

Conclusion

Literature

 

 

Astronomy of Mind EQ x IQ

Hall of Harmony

International Experts

Educational Program
Health

Scientific Research

International Media

International Congresses

Membership

Application to the University

 

 






Prof. Dr. med. Gunther Hildebrandt  • Chronobiological Aspects of Music Physiology



Rhythm in normal musical experience, be it for aesthetic enjoyment or with an edu­ca­tional and therapeutic purpose, assumes there are structures in humans which follow musical conformities to a natural law.
This is not only true for the immediate receiving organ of hearing, for which e.g. in the form of a snail corresponding laws of formation are known (cf. HAASE 1976), but it must apply to the whole organism; for the whole of a human being participates as a moving organism, as a sensory organism and as an intellectual organism in experiencing music.

Music and musical movement are art forms which are realized in a time area and form time organisms. Of the basic elements of music (melodics, rhythmics, metrics, harmony, agogics, etc.), metrics, rhythmics and agogics are mainly temporal determinations.
Melodics and harmony are at first glance more likely to present elements of an aesthetic content, but they also are ultimately based on regulating features determined by time with regard to tonal steps and tonal conditions.

There is therefore sufficient reason to search for biological time structures in humans which can be considered for the musical work and experience as equivalent or reagent – whatever their nature might be. Particularly in view of the educational and therapeutic resources of music, it is likely to be of importance to know in which way and where musical-temporal function orders and structures are realized in the organism.

The results of modern chronobiology and chronomedicine have shown that the human organism does not only have a complicated interior design in terms of space structure, but also has a highly sophisticated time design which is built up from numerous rhyth­mi­cal time structures.




Illustration 1

Overview of the favored periodic duration (fre­quency ranges) of the rhythmic functions in humans. The scale of periodic duration is divided logarithmically. The stable frequency ranges of the spontaneous rhythms are specially em­pha­sized.

(According to HILDEBRANDT 1975, changed)
Illustration 1 shows a spectrum of the main types of rhythmical func­tions which is arranged according to the periodic duration (loga­rith­mi­cally). It includes approx. 2 x 12 oc­taves, from approx. one millisecond to an order of one year. The series of given functions show that with an increasing periodic duration, the complexity of the rhythms grow, from the cellular rhythms via the tissue and organ rhythms to the rhythms of complex systems, and finally to those which include the entire organism and even imply beyond (reproduction and popu­la­tion rhythms). More and more par­tial functions are put together for joint action, so that a hierarchical structure exists, determining, in what way the longer wave functions also include the shorter ones in their rhythm.












MEDICAL RESONANCE THERAPY MUSIC®
Medical Music Preparations on CD
 
Listening Program:
Concentration / Memory

RRR 128 Concentration / Memory


If you like to look at the complete program,
if you like to listen to the Medical Music Preparation or
if you want to download it,
please click on the CD-cover above.

If you click on the title, it will lead you to the
scientific research.