New paper on General Resonance Theory about inter-organ synchrony in humans, other mammals and octopi

Tam Hunt
2 min readJan 7, 2022

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Our paper on the Slowest Shared Resonance principle has been recently accepted and provisionally published as part of a special issue of Frontiers on Human Neuroscience on electromagnetic field theories of consciousness

Here’s our new paper, with Asa Young as first author and Marissa Ericson, Ph.D., as senior author: “The Slowest Shared Resonance: A Review of Electromagnetic Field Oscillations Between Central and Peripheral Nervous Systems.”

Here’s the abstract:

Neural electromagnetic field oscillations are increasingly being viewed as causal drivers of consciousness. Recent research has highlighted the importance of the body’s various endogenous rhythms in organizing these neuronally generated fields through various types of entrainment. We expand this approach by examining evidence of extracerebral shared resonances between the brain and other parts of the body, in both humans and animals. We then examine the degree to which these data support one of General Resonance Theory’s principles: the Slowest Shared Resonance (SSR) principle, which states that the combination of micro- to macro-consciousness in coupled field systems is a function of the slowest common denominator frequency or resonance. This principle may be utilized to develop a spatial hierarchy of brain-body shared resonance systems. It is predicted that a system’s SSR decreases inversely with distance between resonating structures in the body. The various resonance relationships examined, including between the brain and gastric neurons, brain and sensory organs, and brain and spinal cord, generally match the predicted SSR relationships, empirically supporting this principle of General Resonance Theory.

And here’s the link to the full paper, provisionally published (fully final version will be published shortly): https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnhum.2021.796455/abstract

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Tam Hunt
Tam Hunt

Written by Tam Hunt

Public policy, green energy, climate change, technology, law, philosophy, biology, evolution, physics, cosmology, foreign policy, futurism, spirituality

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