Noncommutative music quantum biology is nonlocal & real: tubulin precognitive superradiant acoustics

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#music #nondualism #meditation #quantum
My noncommutative music quantum biology playlist! thanks
"We demonstrated that human neurons are also capable to respond to ultrasounds (Branca et al. 2018)"
Branca JJV, Pacini S, Morucci G, Bocchi L, Cosentino A, Boni E, Ruggiero M. Effects of ultrasound and selenium on human neurons in vitro. Arch Ital Biol. 2018 Dec 31;156(4):153-163. d
He, Marco Ruggiero, is so close - yet not quite there. hahaha. He's stuck on the "fractal" commutative geometry math.
" Fourth, tubulin in the context of microtubules can function as a Fabry-Perot interferometer able to detect the interaction between sound and electromagnetic waves (Ruggiero 2023). The Orch OR theory hypothesizes that tubulin forms into oscillating dipoles in microtubules. These oscillating dipoles can interact with each other to form qubits, which are the basic units of quantum information. "
...."tubulin, a constituent of microtubules, is influenced by audible sounds. ... a sound-sensitive protein that is responsible for forming the pore of mechanosensory transduction channels in the hair cells of the inner ear of vertebrates, and with those of bacterial FtsZ (Filamenting temperature-sensitive mutant Z), a bacterial protein homologous to tubulin. The results show that mouse and human alpha-tubulin are 100% identical, whereas sequence homology of human TMC1 and human tubulin alpha 1A chain is scarce, with only 17.31% identity. A higher degree of similarity was observed in the presence of aromatic amino acids as well as in the propensity to form alpha-helices. Based on these results, it is hypothesized that the response of tubulin to audible sounds is mediated by the external alpha-helices as it occurs in TMC1. "Hi Dr. Marco Ruggiero: Thanks for your fascinating mantra monk tubulin sound study! I have several books on this topic. I have corresponded with Stuart Hameroff a bit - I got an email reply from him around 20 years ago at first. I did my master's degree in 2000 and have done independent study since then. Lately in the past five years or so I have corresponded with quantum physics professor Basil J. Hiley several times. He said he loved my music article on noncommutativity as meditation.
So in terms of the mantra - there was a fascinating article by quantum physics professor Larry (Lawrence) Domash on the mantra activating the 1/2 spin nonlocality of the neurons - the process being the mantra tying down the left side language processing of the brain, thereby "opening up" this nonlocal force-information to resonate through. What is fascinating in terms of the brain is that the right side is frequency dominant and the right side vagus nerve connects to the left side of the brain but the left side vagus nerve does not connect to the right side of the brain.
Another key point to realize is that in tinnitus research it was proven that the highest pitch humans can hear actually resonates the brain internally as ultrasound! Andrija Puharich, a military medical paranormal researcher, realized this ultrasound activates the vagus nerve, splitting the water, creating a time-reversed nonlocal force via the quantum beats that are precognitive. This is basically the same as the recent superluminal acoustic phonon water claim in the microtubules - the research co-authored by Jack Tuszynski.
Hiley's talk emphasizes noncommutativity and then his 2022 quantum consciousness article argues that noncommutativity fundamentally changes how we understand quantum biology. Why? Because noncommutativity is not limited to the microscale and so the nonlocal quantum coherence does not need to collapse at the macroscale!
noncommutativity. Only Fields Medal math professor Alain Connes corroborates the truth of music as noncommutativity - see his "Music of Shapes" talk for a start.
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Sounds like you might actually be interested in the content in terms of the particulars though and not necessarily the deeper experiential meaning. So on a more superficial level, in consideration of your comment about the format of the content - let's take a closer look: "If you want people to see the text" - never had that intention for this vid but I'm glad you hint at that interest. Literally you click on CC to see the text of a video. But if you mean the text of the books in the video? Let's see... you would have to order those books yourself. I don't think they are archived as free reading. Yes that's kind of how things work for books unfortunately - and it does get pricey but these books are available used also. I did do early videos on these books already though. I'll find those for you.
More vids I did on Yakir Aharonov:
Here's some earlier vids that I did on Dean Rickles and Harald Atmanspacher:
Here's earlier vids that I did on Eddie Oshins:
"If you want people to hear your words"... Do you use headphones or CC? Both those tools help hear sound on the internet. Yes the video is not loud I agree but if you have don't have a hearing problem then it's definitely loud enough to hear with headphones.
But I don't really have a "method" here - just posting a simple video. I don't think a "method" is required by any law?
So it does require effort on your part to understand the video as it is free information. In other words I am not just a product and you are not just a customer.
"If you have collected an hours' worth of things to say, maybe take a bit of time to present the information more effectively." I actually didn't "collect" anything - I just turned the camera on and I even surprised myself with what I would say. I like to live spontaneously like that.
Why? Because people often have psychological reasons to deny the information and therefore just make excuses about the "form" of the in"form"-ation. This is called "neoformalism" - meaning the form is important than the content. So yes I understand what you are trying to convey here about your inability to engage with the content of the video.
And so my research is not in some future that you want me to have in your particular fashion. It's kind of like if you travel to another country they probably are not going to have things set up how you like but ideally you would not demand that the country change, rather you would say, "wow this country has existed for forty years and thus I should look into their 40 years of past to understand why they are so different in their presentation of information!" Let me give you an example - when I went to Morocco there was a McDonalds in Rabat but my friend was required to say a litany of traditional Arabic greetings before she could order and the actual food sold at the McDonalds was not your typical U.S. McDonalds food (I can't remember at all what the meal was).
Unfortunately in the U.S. people often travel to other countries without learning about the past of those countries - especially considering the U.S. is an empire with over 700 military bases in other countries around the world, etc.

voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang
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Thankyou so much for reading to me. It was such a wonderful experience.

brendawilliams
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Thankyou but I don’t go radical even though it is with appreciation for the information I relay to you. Thankyou

brendawilliams