Mesodermic
Holoenergetic Resonance and Form Recognition
Pour la version FRANÇAISE originale, voyez : Racines
biophysiques des langages sacrés
NOTE: This is an
edited version of a paper originally submitted for the poster session at Tucson
2000 that has not been retained by the Selection Committee. We understand that
this paper is provocative for mainstream neurobiology when we claim that the
role of the brain is secondary. However, this claim is substantiated by our
observations in daily practice of holoenergetic vascular resonance, which shows
that the brain works only as an hologram of the body and that consciousness is
a global process not limited to any part of the body.
This paper has been published in French under the title « Racines biophysiques des langages sacrés » (Biophysical Origins
of Sacred Languages) in Les Voies de la Connaissance,
#36 (3rd Quarter), p. 3.
In Tucson II (Abstract
#330) we offered the hypothesis of electromagnetic ectodermic
consciousness and gravitationnal mesodermic consciousness. In Tucson III
(Abstract #977) we emphasized the radar role of the mesoderm as an active
scanner in the interferometric consciousness loop.
This essential triad loop,
or Receiver-Transformer-Transmitter, which is a dynamic system, is found at
many levels of complexity:
* in molecular pigments;
* in the DNA-RNA-Protein cellular triad that rules the
biosphere; and
* in the tri-functional embryonic tri-layer structure
(ecto-meso-endoderm) still active in the adult body.
All these dynamic systems
share a common vibratory pattern, or topodynamic equivalence, which provides a
physical basis to the analogy process, and our ongoing clinical research with
vascular holoenergetic resonance indicates that form recognition is mainly a
function of the mesoderm, not of the neuroectoderm.
Vascular holoenergetics is
a clinical tool that measures the resonance between pigments of Wratten-Kodak
filters and the cellular pigments that control biochemical reactions. There is
no life without pigments, so there is no consciousness (CS) without pigments.
Pigments have a
bi-directional function. On the one hand, they are molecular diodes that
bring about a Fourier Transform (FT) between undulatory electromagnetic (EM)
waves and particular electronic chemical energy, and reciprocally, they can act
as laser diodes from the particular to the undulatory.
Our experience shows that
ancient Hebraic ideograms and symbols such as hexagrams or mandalas also work
clinically as dynamic systems which can bring about FT between mind and matter.
Form recognition is a FT
between outside and inside worlds, realized by the gravitational mesoderm and
not by the electromagnetic neuroectoerm. The role of the brain is secondary in
this transaction, since neuroectoderm works as a local processor and mesoderm
as a non-local processor. In this context, brain and body can be considered as
particles, and consciousness as a wave.
The FT of a wave is
expressed as a frequency spectral line. Such spectral lines are detected clinically
at the external ear by holoenergetic vascular resonance. Different forms have
the same holoenergetic spectral line. Allosteric inhibition, or
"competition of forms", allows us to detect topodynamic
equivalence, or functional similarity between pigments and other
forms such as ideograms from Hebraic, Sanskrit or Chinese origin, which
bring about FT between local visible (form) and nonlocal invisible (mind).
These clinical findings
regarding the resonance between biological cellular information and written
cultural information support the hypothesis of René Thom in Biolinguistics
that endoderm acts as the subject, mesoderm as the verb and ectoderm as the
object. Topodynamic resonance between molecular, cellular and organism levels
indicate that, at the basic level of life and consciousness, in the
informational molecular triad, DNA is similar to mesoderm, with a verb-like
function, RNA is similar to endoderm or subject and protein is similar to
ectoderm or object.The endoderm is subjective, the mesoderm is transjective and
only the ectoderm is objective.
© Jean Ratte Jean Ratte
jean.ratte@holoener.com