The heart is called Yi [unified power] becuz when intent moves, spirit is agitated; qi is dispersed. Qi is the Mother of spirit; Spirit is the child of qi. The Mother as qi is the horse that guides/conducts the river chariot (yin spirit) in the water (yin jing). Once your mind is away from the lower Elixir Field, your Qi will be led away from it and be consumed. By gathering the Shen into the lower tan tien then the Qi follows it there. Light of eyes descend as Yang fire inner yin qi line
Saturday, October 26, 2019
On Listening as the origin of thoughts via Music (proven by new science)
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marisa_Hoeschele/publication/335608199_Temporal_modulation_in_speech_music_and_animal_vocal_communication_evidence_of_conserved_function/links/5d9dfeb7299bf13f40d0c99d/Temporal-modulation-in-speech-music-and-animal-vocal-communication-evidence-of-conserved-function.pdf?origin=publication_detail
pdf - following up on Daniel L. Bowling, et. al.
faculty of language in a broad sense=FLB
The capacity to entrain motor action to rhythmic auditory stimulation is highly developed in humans and extremely limited in our closest relatives. An important aspect of auditory-motor entrainment is that not all forms of rhythmic stimulation motivate movement to the same degree. This variation is captured by the concept of musical groove: high-groove music stimulates a strong desire for movement, whereas low-groove music does not. Here, we utilize this difference to investigate the neurophysiological basis of our capacity for auditory-motor entrainment. In a series of three experiments we examine pupillary responses to musical stimuli varying in groove. Our results show stronger pupil dilation in response to (1) high- vs. low-groove music, (2) high vs. low spectral content, and (3) syncopated vs. straight drum patterns. We additionally report evidence for consistent sex differences in music-induced pupillary responses, with males exhibiting larger differences between responses, but females exhibiting stronger responses overall. These results imply that the biological link between movement and auditory rhythms in our species is supported by the capacity of high-groove music to stimulate arousal in the central and peripheral nervous system, presumably via highly conserved noradrenergic mechanisms.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330285893_Pupillometry_of_Groove_Evidence_for_Noradrenergic_Arousal_in_the_Link_Between_Music_and_Movement/fulltext/5c373c8a92851c22a369e582/330285893_Pupillometry_of_Groove_Evidence_for_Noradrenergic_Arousal_in_the_Link_Between_Music_and_Movement.pdf?origin=publication_detail
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