One of the coolest articles on sound and vibration I can recall having read


Steve Deckert over at Decware recently came up with a great read:

http://www.decware.com/newsite/DECWARESOUND.pdf
128x128ivan_nosnibor
No, not really..Robinson is my real name and it was just the first play on my name that came into my head, actually. Nosnibor sounded vaguely Russian to me, and my first name is John, so Ivan it became.
Indeed it is. I was just curious why his user name was Robinson backwards. I had a biology teacher in high school who loved backwards spelling. So now I see it instantly.. 
I thought it might be a good story..


@ivan_nosnibor I’m not suggesting you read erewhon. I did and it sucked. But one of the secondary characters is Mr. Nosnibor. Just wondering where your playful user name came from..

I was just sceptical of the numerology intro. Otherwise, it started getting interesting just when I had to attend to other things. I’m intending to finish it tonight.. thanks for the share!
@toddverrone I’m fairly aware of the pitfalls of numerology and that, in this case, a minute could’ve been ordered certainly in a number of ways (but of course it wasn’t, antiquity settled on one, certainly), but I’m not at this point privy to the name of the book or books that Steve bases his article on, so I don’t really know what all he may or may not have oversimplified or may have included minus the original source’s corroboration for the sake of brevity. I simply elect for the moment to be respectful of his effort in bringing the subject to light for us in the first place...I myself can’t say for sure that he’s guilty of anything until he’s in my mind proven so, but I can’t say that reading his article has put me in a particularly suspicious mood. If anything, I’m more intrigued. Again, perhaps if I knew more directly about his source(s), I might be tempted to delve further to see for myself, but short of knowing what they were, I would likely have to initiate my own search and I’m badly short on time these days, so something like that for me that will easily have to go on the back burner for now.

I strolled through some reader reviews of erehwon and it looked to me like it might be perhaps a nice satirical exercise, but again, I’m having trouble getting through work weeks these days, so it will have to go on the same heap of things I don’t have time for right now, but hopefully will at some point, but I do in fact thank you for the pointers.

Regards,
John
Interesting, but there's a bunch of numerology type stuff in the beginning that really has no support for being apriori. A minute could just have easily been broken up into 30 chunks. Or 100. The claim that the great year is the basis for all of our time then dividing it by a number he chose as significant is meaningless until he adds all the meaning..

@ivan_nosnibor did you ever read erehwon by Samuel Butler? 
It seems whenever on those occasions I happen to find myself trying to examine some ancient historical context, what comes back at me time and again is just how much the ancients may indeed have been aware of (on their own I mean, without the help of UFO's), how much they may have actually known or how much they were able to accomplish by that knowledge - much of which that may have since, in turn, become lost to us somewhere down through the ages...and that generally we (in our instant-microwave existence) continue to blithely fail to comprehend the ancients themselves as anything but limited by the fact that they didn't have computers, modern science or that they had no social media, netflix or whatever. There's something refreshingly restorative and connective in being able to glimpse, now and again at least, that the "wisdom of the ancients" was often just that - wisdom. Heretofore unknown levels of ancient science that predate the establishment of the scientific method - always fascinating stuff.  A shout out to Mr Deckert for bringing it to our attention.

BTW, the impact of quantum physics on our lives is growing beyond the bounds of electricity and the cosmos - even opening new fields of study of how the human body may actually work (quantum biomechanics). And incidentally, doctors now say that there appears to be an actual "music center" in the brain, located midway between the centers of auditory and speech. 

Erik, I will definitely check out what Mr Bernstein has to say, thanks!

Nonoise, I, too, definitely had, while reading, the feeling of the giant clock! 

Regards, 
John

Leaving the concept of deity aside as a factor, a most interesting article. I wish I could follow the math better but the commonality of recurring fifths throughout, down from a fractal level and up to a galactic one, reminds me of a giant clock, orderly to a unprecedented degree, and we are all a part/product of it due to it's design and influence, which would explain how we compose music and the satisfaction we derive from it. We're repeating and reinforcing what is, down to a molecular level, ourselves.

Or something like that. :-)

All the best,
Nonoise

Very interesting Ivan, and great! Related to harmonic fifths is the circle of 5ths, as established by J.S. Bach in the 18th Century. In a video on You Tube, Leonard Bernstein explains and demonstrates musical theory, culminating in the 5ths. Highly recommended!---Eric.