DEUTSCHES ORCHESTER FORUM   DIE UNIVERSALE STIMME DER AKADEMISCHEN WISSENSCHAFT IN DER MUSIKAUFFÜHRUNG
ARCHIVE – MEDICINE

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Peter Hübner’s Cosmic Educational Program

Peter Hübner
Developer of the
University of the Future

ARCHIV

MEDICINE

Nature’s Laws of Harmony in the Microcosm of Music

Chronobiology

The Ear as a Medical Instrument

The Special Status of the Ear in the Organism

Music as a Harmonic Medical Data Carrier

Music and Brain

The Significance of the Soul to Medicine

The Significance of the Soul in Human Evolution

The Significance of Our Consciousness to Medicine

The Future of Pharmaceutics

The American Institute of Stress

World Health Organization (WHO)

Republic of Belarus

Stress - The Epidemic of Modern Society

The Unborn Child

Baby Care Unit

Harmonic Therapy

The Benefits of
Harmonic Information

The Social-Medical Significance of Medical Resonance Therapy Music

Headache Migraine

Modern Medication

Intensive Care Unit

How does the Medical Resonance Therapy Music function

Chernobyl









Peter Hübner  •  Music & Brain – Musical Perspective
The Physiology of Music
The physiology of music has two aspects: objective and subjective.

The objective aspect of the physiology of music concerns the entire range of the musical sound-space – as far as it does not directly include the field of creativity.

The objective field of the physiology of music includes the knowledge of the thinking process as well as the practical mastery over the mind as a musical instrument – the submission of the mind to the rule of the self-awareness, to the creative will of the musician.

Moreover, the objective physiology of music is concerned with the musician’s imagination regarding the faithful interpretation.

The subjective field of the physiology of music concerns the inner relations of powers of the musical compositional parameters – the harmony, the sequence, the melody, and the motif – with the musical sound-space, i.e. the junction point of our inner-human powers with our mind.

The effect of the inner mental production of music on the physiology of the musician or on the physiology of the listener therefore does not belong to the field of the physiology of music, but to its ecology.

The physiology of music, the entire structure of the musical sound-space on the level of the mind, is only the outer mental image of that which has been created within: the musical result in the mind of the musical artist. The physiology of music is the true musical premiere which the musical artist surveys with his sense of hearing.

      Peter Hübner