M E D I C A L
R E S O N A N C E T H E R A P Y M U S I
C® a product of the Micro Music Laboratories®
leading medicine into the future
application of the natural harmony laws of the microcosm of music in favour
of health
© A A R E D I T I O N I N T E R N A T I O N A L 2001
Prof. Dr. James Lynch
(www.lifecarehealth.com)
is a board member of
The American Institute of Stress, on the staff of the Cardiovascular Rehabilitation
Program at Lifebridge Health, and Director of the Life Care Health Centre
in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. For more than 30 years, he served on the full-time
medical school faculties of the Johns Hopkins University, the University
of Pennsylvania, and the University of Maryland.
In 1977, he became the first to document how loneliness contri- buted to
all forms of premature death, especially from heart disease. His much publicised
and oft-cited best-seller:
"The Broken Heart: The Medical Consequences of Loneliness", caused a social
and medical stir both wide and deep, and was translated into 10 languages.
Dr. James Lynch is held by many leading medical experts around the world
as a pioneer and visionary in the field of mind/body/interpersonal health.
In his latest ground breaking work "A Cry Unheard. New Insights into the
Medical Consequences of Loneliness", Lynch sets forth a major hidden cause
of heart disease, the industrialised nations' leading killer, and recommends
a provocative set of solutions.
Prof. Dr.
James Lynch
"During the past
two decades,
Peter Hübner's "Medical Resonance Therapy Music" has been demonstrated effective
in helping to alleviate pain, insomnia, anxiety, headaches, and other stressrelated
complaints in a variety of hospital and out-patient settings.
This remarkable German musicologist and classical composer developed a sophisticated,
computerised, digital music labora tory to create compositions based on Pythagorean
precepts.
Although he is best remembered as a mathematician, Pythagorus was also an accomplished physician, astronomer, and musician. He taught that each of these disciplines, as well as all of nature, were governed by laws of harmonious proportion that were interrelated in some concordant fashion. He coined the term "cosmos" to describe this orderly and harmonious universe, where everything could be reduced to mathematical principles. In Pythagoras' day, both music and medicine were considered to be branches of mathematics, as well as an art or science, and pleasing music or good health required maintaining harmonious relationships. Since everything in the cosmos was interrelated, knowledge gained from a greater understanding of mathematical principles in the microcosm of music could be utilised to restore disruptions in balance and harmony that were responsible for different diseases.
In the most general sense, our approach to the treatment of heart patients encom-passes a similar view, one in which we attempt to bring patients back to what I believe is a biological state of "harmony" with the rest of their living world."
James J. Lynch
In his latest
ground breaking work:
"A Cry Unheard. New Insights
into the Medical Consequences
of Loneliness"