Publisher's Synopsis
CONTENT
- Foreword 3
- Bibliography 4
- The Frequency of Reality and the Vibrational Language 5
- The Inner Architecture of Sound 7
- Silence as a Medium of Cognitive Revelation 9
- Consciousness as the Decoder of Creation 10
- Frequency as the Universal Language 12
- Inner Harmony as a State of Vibrational Coherence 14
- Music: The Primal Language of Creation 16
- Silence as the Sacred Space of Sound 18
- Vibration as the Bridge Between Matter and Spirit 19
- Collective Consciousness and Vibrational Ecology 20
- Silence as the Matrix of Vibration 22
- The Human Instrument: The Vibrational Archetype 24
- Inner Music and the Ecology of the Soul 26
- The Vibration of the Sacred in Everyday Existence 27
- The Word as Creative Vibration 29
- The Art of Listening as a Spiritual Practice 31
- Inner Time and the Frequencies of Memory 32
- The Temple of Silence: Between Sound and Transcendence 33
- The Art of Listening: Beyond Hearing 35
- The Word as Creative Vibration 37
- Silence: The Matrix from Which All Things Are Born 38
- Consciousness, Sound, and Subtle Healing 40
- The Body as a Sonic Temple 41
- Sound Archetypes and Collective Memory 43
- Vibration as a Bridge Between Science and Spirituality 45
- Vibrational Ecology and Inner Responsibility 46
- Consciousness, Vibration, and the New Sciences of the Sacred 49
- The Music of Silence: The Power of What Is Not Heard 51
- The Song of the Universe: From Logos to Frequency 53
- Sound as a Vehicle of the Transcendent 55
- Vibrational Ethics: The Responsibility to "Sound Well" 57
- Sound Ecology and Healing the Planet 59
- Inner Music and Intuition 60
- Sacred Harmony and the Geometry of Sound 62
Bibliography
- David Bohm - Wholeness and the Implicate Order
For the idea of the universe as a unitary process, where the "exploded" reality is actually an unfolding from a hidden (implicate) order.
- Erwin Schrödinger - What Is Life?
For the approach to consciousness as a fundamental principle and the unity of life as an informational structure.
- Max Planck - Public Lectures
"There is no matter as such. Everything is vibration." - an argument for the vibrational nature of existence.
- Jean Gebser - The Ever-Present Origin
On leaps in consciousness and the relationship between perceptual structures and reality.
- Rudolf Steiner - The Philosophy of Freedom
For the idea that human freedom arises from the conscious capacity to participate in creation.
- John Cage - Silence
An artistic exploration of silence and perception, relevant in the context of the anechoic chamber and sound perceived without a source.
- Michel Serres - The Five Senses
For a philosophical view of the senses as gateways between order and chaos.
- Pythagoras (via Philolaus, Iamblichus) - Fragments
"All is number and proportion." - vibration as a universal form of order.