Dolphin sound is a highly effective tool for healing and fortunately, an individual does not need to believe in it for it to work. However there is another factor that can greatly amplify the effectiveness of healing.
Creative intention, it may be a long time before mainstream medicine recognizes the importance of intention. In contrast, most vibrational energy practitioners, including sound healing therapists. They use a holistic approach that addresses both mind and body. When the power of intention is held, the chances of a successful outcome are greatly intensified. Intention consists of using your focused thoughts, feelings and visualizations to attract whatever is desired, such as enhancing one's health. It seems possible that the energy of intention is carried on the frequencies of sound. American sound healer, Dr Steven Halpern, believes that, 'Sound is a carrier wave of consciousness.' One's intention is the spiritual counterpart of the sound and the combination of sound and intention create the outcome of healing. Another American sound healer, Jonathan Goldman, created this simple formula: Sound + Intention = Healing Dolphin CymaScope, is beginning to show promise. The CymaScope can simplify the complex sounds a dolphin makes into picture words so communication possible that we call CymaGlyphs, each picture representing a dolphin's word for a given object.
Dolphins have regular eyes but they also 'see true sound' and can beam a sound picture of a predator to other dolphins. This is done by creating a lexicon of dolphin CymaGlyphs, it should eventually be possible to hold a rudimentary conversation in which a computer converts a human word into a dolphin word and the dolphin's reply is then converted into human words - an exciting prospect.
CymaScope.com are working in collaboration with Florida-based speak do in a bid to catalogue the first reliable dolphin picture words. Book club press release story that went out worldwide. Songs from the Sea and deciphering Dolphin language with picture words the dolphin key words Dolphin, 'Cetacean, acoustics, holography language transmitted cymascope' its an important breakthrough in deciphering dolphin language, researchers in Great Britain and the United States have imaged the first high definition imprints that dolphin sounds make in water.
The key to this technique is the CymaScope, a new instrument that reveals detailed structures within sounds, allowing their architecture to be studied pictorially. Using high definition audio recordings of dolphins, the research team, headed by English acoustics engineer, John Stuart Reid, and Florida-based dolphin researcher, Jack Kassewitz, has been able to image, for the first time, the imprint that a dolphin sound makes in water. The resulting "CymaGlyphs," as they have been named, are reproducible patterns that are expected to form the basis of a lexicon of dolphin language, each pattern representing a dolphin 'picture word.'

Dolphins have regular eyes but they also 'see true sound' and can beam a sound picture of a predator to other dolphins. This is done by creating a lexicon of dolphin CymaGlyphs, it should eventually be possible to hold a rudimentary conversation in which a computer converts a human word into a dolphin word and the dolphin's reply is then converted into human words - an exciting prospect.


Certain sounds made by dolphins have long been suspected to represent language but the complexity of the sounds has made their analysis difficult. Previous techniques, using the spectrograph, display cetacean (dolphins, whales and porpoises) sounds only as graphs of frequency and amplitude.
The CymaScope captures actual sound vibrations imprinted in the dolphin's natural environment-water, revealing the intricate visual details of dolphin sounds for the first time.Within the field of cetacean research, theory states that dolphins have evolved the ability to translate dimensional information from their echolocation sonic beam. The CymaScope has the ability to visualize dimensional structure within sound. CymaGlyph patterns may resemble what the creatures perceive from their own returning sound beams and from the sound beams of other dolphins. professor Reid of dolphin world Florida said that the technique has similarities to deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphs. "Jean-Francois Champollion and Thomas Young used the Rosetta Stone to discover key elements of the primer that allowed the Egyptian language to be deciphered. The CymaGlyphs produced on the CymaScope can be likened to the hieroglyphs of the Rosetta Stone. Now that dolphin chirps, click-trains and whistles can be converted into CymaGlyphs, we have an important tool for deciphering their meaning.

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