The monstrous problem with astrology as a body of knowledge however explained is that it has become an assemblage of misinformation top to bottom and even thousands of years old. What remains understood is that the impulse to create product arose when we last had modernity before the Pleistocene Non Conformity. We also get initial parts of the Bible as well as the symbol of the Iching or a representation of the 3D Space Time Pendulum. So I do want to pay attention but am put of by the ocean of junk.
Everone who takes it seriously is trapped by the JUNK.
Yet Cloud Cosmology suggests our solar system is at least a huge globe of DARK MATTER acting as a media for all forms of EM energy. In this we also know that our planets act as natural dynamos. And all this is acting on each othger continously forever. Inforation flow including intent is not implausible at all in this environment,.
So there may be substance as well. Add in the interaction of the other side and we have an interested intelligence wanting to support our lifeway. How much of our future do they know and how much can they guide? Again, my own insight tells me that this is not zero but because of free will it is also not perfect or central.
The future is a complex spectrum of choices.
Astrology Explained: The Hidden Wave Mechanics of the Cosmos
Shattering Old Paradigms with Sacred Geometry, Scalar Fields, and Quantum Resonance
Dec 3
Quick Summary
From Myth to Mechanism: This essay reimagines astrology not as superstition but as a proto-science of cosmic resonance—a field-based framework linking celestial geometry to biological and consciousness phenomena through scalar, torsion, and morphogenetic dynamics.
The Return of the Aether: Modern physics’ rediscovery of vacuum energy, zero-point fields, and structured space suggests that “empty” space is an information-rich medium capable of coherence, communication, and nonlocal influence—reviving and updating the aether concept.
Cymatics of the Cosmos: Planetary alignments generate interference patterns—standing waves within this underlying field—whose resonant geometries may imprint on living systems, much like sound frequencies sculpt cymatic forms. Astrology thus becomes a study of wave harmonics rather than symbolic fate.
Toward a Unified Science of Meaning: Integrating quantum nonlocality, biofield research, and consciousness studies, this new paradigm envisions astrology as a bridge between science and spirituality—transforming it from predictive determinism into an inquiry into coherence, participation, and cosmic ecology.
From Kepler’s Dream to Tesla’s Vision
In 1596, Johannes Kepler published his Mysterium Cosmographicum, proposing that the spacing of planetary orbits reflected nested Platonic solids—the cube, tetrahedron, dodecahedron, icosahedron, and octahedron fitting precisely between the spheres of planetary motion. Though his geometric model proved incorrect, Kepler’s intuition that cosmic architecture follows sacred geometry may have been prophetic.
Three centuries later, Nikola Tesla would declare: “If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.” What if we could now unite these visions—Kepler’s geometric cosmos with Tesla’s vibrational universe—through a new understanding of how planetary alignments create interference patterns in the fabric of space itself?
Astrology, with its ancient claim that human lives mirror cosmic patterns, has long been dismissed by science as mystical fancy or coincidence. A skeptical, intellectually curious observer might ask: If planets truly affect us, where is the mechanism? Traditional physics offers no force that links the stars to our thoughts. Yet hints of a deeper connectivity pervade nature. Why does the universe sometimes behave as if coordinated across vast scales – from galactic alignments down to the firing of neurons? Modern experiments like quantum entanglement demonstrate that parts of a system can respond to each other instantaneously, defying the classical speed-of-light limit. Even the persistent statistical correlations reported by astrologers (controversial though they are) suggest some kind of nonlocal coherence. How could an “as above, so below” connection be physically possible?
As Richard Tarnas argued in his groundbreaking Cosmos and Psyche—a work that reintroduced astrology into intellectual discourse by grounding it in archetypal, historical, and cyclical analysis—the sky’s patterns correspond to epochs of human meaning. My aim here is to extend that insight into the realm of physics and biology by proposing a mechanism for how such correlations might arise.
This introduction outlines a visionary but grounded framework that reimagines astrology as a science of cosmic resonance rather than superstition. The key is to move beyond the outdated notion of empty space. We propose that planets and living organisms are linked not by gravity or magnetism, but through an information-rich field permeating space itself. In this view, celestial alignments create interference patterns in an underlying medium – an energetic substrate akin to the old concept of the aether – which encode information nonlocally and resonate with biological systems on Earth. By integrating insights from frontier physics (scalar and torsion fields, longitudinal waves, quantum nonlocality) with concepts from metaphysics and biology (morphogenetic fields, consciousness, cymatic patterns), we aim to respect scientific skepticism while expanding its horizons. This reframing treats astrology as a kind of proto-science: an early intuitive map of a real phenomenon of cosmic information transfer. We will explore how emerging ideas – scalar field physics, torsion waves, Kozyrev’s “time energy,” Maxwell’s forgotten potentials, morphic fields, cymatics – together paint a picture of a unified field cosmology in which “astrological” effects might occur. Crucially, this approach emphasizes explanatory depth over predictive fatalism. The goal is not to resurrect horoscopic determinism, but to investigate how subtle resonances could link the stars and life. In doing so, we uphold the wonder and open-minded inquiry that drove both ancient astrologers and modern scientists, without sacrificing rational rigor or free will.
For context, my interest in astrology has never been casual. I have studied charts since I was seventeen, eventually accumulating and analyzing thousands of them in what became a long-term phenomenological investigation. Before I ever began building theoretical models, I immersed myself in the lived texture of astrology — the patterns, synchronicities, anomalies, and consistencies that emerge only through direct experience with actual human lives. This empirical engagement forms the experiential substrate for the framework presented here: an attempt to articulate, in scientific terms, what decades of observation have revealed in practice.
The Return of Aether: Space as a Structured Medium
For centuries, astrologers implicitly assumed some invisible medium through which planets influenced life on Earth – often calling it the aether. Modern physics, however, discarded the aether in the 20th century, viewing space as an empty vacuum where only forces like gravity and electromagnetism operate. Yet a growing body of evidence suggests that space is anything but empty. Quantum field theory tells us the vacuum is teeming with fields and “virtual” particles. Even the common statement that an atom is 99.999% empty space is misleading – that “empty” space is filled with energetic fields and quantum fluctuations. Physicist John Wheeler famously described the quantum vacuum as a “seething cauldron” of energy, not a void. In other words, emptiness is illusory – every cubic centimeter of space contains immense latent energy and structure.
[Quantum field theory visualization depicting virtual particles in the vacuum of space. Even empty space holds non-zero vacuum energy, which appears differently to observers in regions of varying curvature—showing that as long as quantum fields exist, so too does vacuum energy (the cosmological constant). — Derek Leinweber]
Historical scientists like James Clerk Maxwell had a similar intuition. In his 1873 Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, Maxwell modeled electromagnetism as vibrations of an all-pervading elastic medium – a mechanical aether – and calculated that it must have enormous energy density to carry light waves. Later experiments (such as Michelson-Morley) and Einstein’s relativity theory led mainstream physics to abandon the aether concept. However, modern physics has quietly reintroduced aether-like ideas under new guises: we now speak of spacetime as having a “fabric,” of zero-point vacuum energy, of ubiquitous fields like the Higgs field. These are essentially describing an energetic substrate filling space. Contemporary researchers explicitly suggest that what we call “dark matter” or “dark energy” may be manifestations of an underlying field in the vacuum – essentially a modern ether. The word “aether” may be out of fashion, but the concept of a hidden medium is returning.
What would it mean if space is a living plenum rather than a void? One helpful analogy comes from water. In ordinary conditions, water is a disordered liquid; but when water contacts certain surfaces or energies, it can form an ordered, crystalline phase. Biophysicist Gerald Pollack discovered that water next to hydrophilic surfaces forms an exclusion zone (EZ): a region hundreds of microns thick that is almost crystal-like in order, excludes impurities, and carries an electric charge separation. This structured water behaves more like a gel than a liquid, and crucially, it self-organizes when energy (especially infrared light) is available. Pollack dubbed this ordered state the “fourth phase” of water – a phase between solid and liquid that stores information and energy. If even mundane water can shift into a structured, field-like phase, could space itself have a “fourth phase”? In the conventional view, space is like bulk water – uniform, featureless. But perhaps under the right conditions, space can form an ordered aetheric structure that sustains patterns (much as EZ water sustains charge separation). In other words, the vacuum might have an internal structure – an invisible matrix that can carry information in ways our current physics only hints at. We might call this structure a scalar field, meaning a field that has magnitude but no single direction, filling all of space as a kind of substrate for coherence.
Several pioneering scientists describe such a scenario. The late physicist David Bohm spoke of an “implicate order” in the vacuum – hidden information structuring what we see. Others, like electrical engineer Eric Dollard, use the term “counterspace” – a complementary spatial framework where distances behave differently and instantaneous connections become thinkable. In this view, two distant points might be intimately connected through the internal geometry of the medium. We can imagine space not as an empty stage but as a kind of cosmic crystal or foam. If one could “ruffle” this medium, the disturbance might propagate in unusual ways: not as a transverse ripple (like an electromagnetic wave) but as a compression or twist that can be instantaneous or lossless. These theoretical disturbances are often called scalar waves or longitudinal waves (to contrast with the transverse waves of light).
Intriguingly, Nikola Tesla – a century ago – claimed to have detected and used such waves. Around 1900, Tesla experimented with high-voltage coils and reported evidence of “non-Hertzian” waves: signals that propagated through the Earth with negligible attenuation and seemingly superluminal speed. He spoke of using the Earth-ionosphere as a giant resonator to send energy from point A to point B without inverse-square loss – something ordinary radio waves cannot do. Tesla’s contemporaries largely dismissed these claims, but today a cadre of researchers (both in the West and in Russia) have revisited them. They suggest Tesla’s longitudinal waves were real and are best explained by scalar field pulses traveling through the underlying medium rather than through standard space. Unlike familiar electromagnetic waves, which weaken over distance, scalar waves might maintain strength and ignore shielding (passing through Faraday cages, for example). They act more like vibrations of the medium itself than energy flying through empty space. If such waves exist, they provide a physical mechanism by which distant objects could affect each other with no obvious force – precisely the kind of coupling a new astrology paradigm would require.
To summarize, modern physics is increasingly amenable to an aether-like idea: a sea of energy and information in which all matter is immersed. This “quantum vacuum” or scalar field can be seen as the missing link for long-range coherence. As one theoretical paper recently showed, if we restore James Clerk Maxwell’s forgotten equations (his original quaternion-based EM theory had extra terms representing an etheric pressure), we mathematically predict a new kind of wave that travels faster than light and doesn’t dissipate. In fact, physicists Dunning-Davies and Norman demonstrated that including Maxwell’s discarded scalar component yields an equation with solutions that exceed the speed of light – essentially resurrecting the possibility of instantaneous field effects in a controlled way. While this challenges standard relativity, it aligns well with quantum insights and doesn’t violate causality so much as circumvent it through a deeper layer of reality. The famous Aharonov–Bohm experiment in 1959, for instance, proved that electromagnetic potentials (the underlying fields) can influence particles even in regions where classical forces are zero. Electrons changed their interference pattern “knowing” about a magnetic field they never touched – implying the field information itself was nonlocally effective. This experiment rocked physics because it showed that what was once considered a mathematical artifact (the EM potential) is physically real and can have action at a distance. All these clues converge on one point: space is not a barren void but a dynamic medium capable of subtle, far-reaching connections.
The Geometric Architecture of Aspects
If planetary alignments create interference patterns in this medium, those patterns should have geometric structure. Here we find a remarkable convergence: the angles between planets that astrologers call “aspects” correspond precisely to the fundamental geometric patterns found in the Flower of Life—an ancient symbol containing the mathematical blueprints for the five Platonic solids.
Each aspect can be mapped to a specific interference geometry, a corresponding Platonic solid, and an elemental resonance:
This isn’t arbitrary symbolism. These geometries emerge naturally from wave interference mathematics. When two wave sources meet at 120° separation, they create a stable three-point rotating symmetry—a triangle. At 90°, they form a cross with quadrature phase relationship. At 60°, the hexagonal pattern of the Flower of Life itself appears, as stable as the hexagonal columns of basalt or honeycomb cells.
If Earth and the other planets are embedded in this kind of medium, then whenever planets move or align, they would stir the medium and create field patterns. Astrology, under this lens, becomes the study of those field patterns rather than an art of symbolic interpretation. We might say the planets don’t send anything to Earth; rather, their movements set up standing waves or interference geometries in the ever-present field that already surrounds us. Think of the solar system as akin to a pond: each planet is like a stone dropped in the water, creating ripples.
Most of the time the ripples are complex and overlapping. But at certain alignments (say a full moon, when Sun, Earth, and Moon line up), the waves can briefly synchronize into a larger pattern, like two sets of ripples creating a standing wave. Those interference peaks and troughs – the nodes of the standing wave – would be the carriers of astrological influence. And crucially, because this is a scalar (longitudinal) wave phenomenon, it would not fade with distance the way gravity or light does. A node formed by Jupiter and Saturn interfering, for example, might stretch across the entire solar system, subtly tuning the space in and around Earth. In this way, the planetary positions modulate the local field environment continuously.
This perspective reframes the old astrological idea that planets “radiate energies” or “cast aspects” upon us. Rather than hurling mystical rays through space, the planets can be thought of as vibrating handles on a vast cosmic drumhead—the invisible medium of space itself. When they align in certain geometric relationships, their vibrations interact to form resonant, stable patterns. Earth, as part of that same drumhead, feels these patterns directly.
The question then becomes: how might such field harmonics influence the rhythms of life? The cymatic video below offers a vivid analogy, showing how interference patterns naturally arise within a medium—like tones tuned between two fixed points, or planetary strings resonating across the fabric of the aether.
Astrology as Cymatics: Geometry in Wave Interference
Cymatics is the study of how waves generate patterns. If you sprinkle sand on a metal plate and vibrate it with sound frequencies as above, the sand spontaneously organizes into geometric shapes (known as Chladni figures). At certain tones, the plate develops standing wave nodes where it is not vibrating, and sand grains rush to those calm lines, tracing out beautiful mandalas; in other regions, the plate vibrates strongly and the sand is repelled. In essence, vibration creates form. We can imagine the solar system similarly: as planets oscillate in the “aetheric medium,” they set up standing waves where some zones are nodes of constructive interference and others are quiet nulls. Astrological aspects (the angles between planets as seen from Earth) correspond to these interference geometries.
The Cosmic Proof: Geometry Written in the Sky
This isn’t mere theory—we can observe these geometric patterns in nature at multiple scales:
Planetary Scale: Saturn’s north pole displays a perfect hexagonal standing wave pattern spanning 20,000 miles across. Atmospheric dynamics at specific rotational frequencies spontaneously organize into this six-sided geometry—a planet-sized cymatic pattern visible in telescope images.
Orbital Scale: Venus and Earth perform an elegant geometric dance. Over eight years (13 Venus orbits = 8 Earth orbits—both Fibonacci numbers), their relative positions trace a perfect five-petaled rose or pentagram in space. Ancient Mayan astronomers tracked this 8-year cycle, recognizing the sacred pentagonal geometry emerging from planetary motion itself. This pattern connects directly to the dodecahedron and icosahedron—the only Platonic solids with pentagonal faces—and to the golden ratio φ that governs natural growth from nautilus shells to galaxy spirals.
Biological Scale: The same patterns appear at the origin of life. A human embryo’s first eight cells arrange themselves into a star tetrahedron—two interlocking pyramids, one of the key forms within Metatron’s Cube, which itself derives from the Flower of Life. DNA’s double helix contains exactly 10 base pairs per turn, creating a decagonal (10-sided) symmetry that relates to pentagons and, through the golden ratio, to the dodecahedral geometry we’ve linked to cosmic resonance.
Galactic Scale: Spiral galaxies follow Fibonacci spirals (φ-based geometry), while galaxy superclusters arrange into filaments and nodes some cosmologists have modeled as icosa-dodecahedral networks.
For example, a conjunction (0° aspect) – two celestial bodies aligned – would be like two speakers playing the same tone in phase at the same location. The waves reinforce each other, yielding one stronger combined oscillation. In our model, a conjunction might produce a focused beam of scalar potential or a particularly strong node in the field. Astrologically, conjunctions are said to meld the energies of the planets; here that translates to their waves synchronizing.
We can associate conjunction with the dodecahedron—Plato’s “symbol for the cosmos” with its 12 pentagonal faces. Intriguingly, a 2003 cosmological study suggested the universe itself might be finite and dodecahedral in shape. The zodiac contains 12 signs, each separated by 30°, creating a 12-fold division that resonates with this cosmic solid. A conjunction represents all elements fusing at a single point—an aetheric unity where a new composite frequency emerges. Like two laser beams meeting precisely in phase, it creates a powerful scalar node.
An opposition (180° aspect) is like two speakers facing each other with the same tone half a cycle out of phase – a classic recipe for a standing wave. Between them, along the line connecting the two, the waves can cancel out at the center and reinforce at points outward, creating a seesaw of energy distribution.
It’s easy to imagine Earth near the middle of such an arrangement during a full moon (Sun and Moon opposite with Earth in between): there could be a null zone of field pressure at Earth’s position but heightened zones just beyond. Interestingly, even conventional science notes full moons coincide with higher tidal ranges and certain biological and geomagnetic effects; a scalar model would add that an opposition sets up a longitudinal pressure node that might subtly perturb organisms and minds (without any classical force involved). A square (90° aspect) is more complex: two sources at right angles never line up in phase, so their waves produce a less stable, turbulent pattern. In wave terms, a 90° phase difference doesn’t fully cancel or reinforce, but creates a mixed interference – often chaotic, with energy trapped in swirling vortices.
The trine’s 120° separation inscribes an equilateral triangle, connecting to the tetrahedron—the most fundamental Platonic solid, associated with Fire. Each elemental grand trine (all fire signs, all earth signs, etc.) could correspond to one face of a tetrahedron, with the four faces representing the four classical elements. The tetrahedron’s perfect stability mirrors why astrologers experience trines as effortless flow—it’s a self-reinforcing three-phase resonance where energy circulates harmoniously among the three points, like a three-blade turbine spinning in perfect balance.
Astrologers indeed characterize squares as tense, conflict-ridden aspects; our analogy suggests a square could induce a turbulent scalar field pattern that makes systems work harder to find equilibrium (much like turbulent airflow induces stress in a vessel).
Conversely, a trine (120° aspect) involves sources separated by a third of a circle, which often yields a harmonious division of waves. A 120° separation can form a symmetrical standing wave with three nodes around a circle. This could allow for a more free circulation of energy without blockages, aligning with the astrologers’ view of trines as flowing, supportive angles.
In this way, each astrological aspect could be thought of as a particular geometric mode of resonance within the solar-system field. A person’s full natal chart – all the planetary positions at their birth – would correspond to a complex interference pattern imprinted in the local field at that time. It’s as if the cosmic orchestra struck a chord at the moment of birth, and the detailed pattern of nodes and anti-nodes in the field formed a unique “fingerprint” that could subtly tune the developing organism. We might whimsically call it a “cosmic DNA” – not a code in the genetic sense, but a resonant template that the living system “listens to” and aligns with as it grows. This offers a novel physical spin on astrology’s ancient aphorism, “As above, so below.” Instead of a mystical correspondence, it could be a literal statement of field coupling: the patterns in the sky imprint analogous patterns in our bodies and psyches via resonance.
This idea gains plausibility when we consider that living organisms are extraordinarily sensitive to fields and rhythms. Even in orthodox biology, we know that circadian rhythms (the day-night cycle governed by Earth’s rotation and the Sun) affect virtually every creature. Lunar cycles affect reproductive patterns of marine life (e.g., coral spawning), and certain animals navigate via Earth’s magnetic field. These are usually explained by known forces (light, gravity, magnetism), but they illustrate that life evolved as part of the cosmos, attuned to cosmic cycles. Our proposal extends this attunement to the more subtle scalar interference patterns created by planetary motions. Could it be that over billions of years, life on Earth “learned” the music of the spheres – that is, organisms became fractal antennas tuned not only to light and gravity, but to the informational patterns in the aether?
It might sound far-fetched until we examine some emerging research. In morphogenesis – the process by which organisms take shape – the British biologist Rupert Sheldrake has argued for morphogenetic fields, organizing fields that guide cells and development beyond the instructions in DNA. Sheldrake’s hypothesis of “formative causation” posits that biological forms inherit a kind of memory from past similar forms via nonlocal fields, accounting for phenomena like synchronized behavior or regeneration that genes alone can’t explain. While controversial, this notion dovetails with our model: it implies that fields carry pattern-information for life, and these fields could easily be influenced by larger cosmological patterns. Indeed, some integrative thinkers have suggested the entire universe is one massive field of consciousness and form – what one called the “Fabric of Creation” – with individual morphogenetic fields nested within it. In such a nested field hierarchy, planetary-scale patterns might trickle down to influence biological patterns by resonance.
Biological Antennas: How Life Might Tune to the Cosmos
Where might these cosmic field patterns interface with biology? One obvious candidate is our nervous system and brain – an electrical organ oscillating with brainwaves, immersed in the geomagnetic environment. Another is our DNA, the helical molecule in every cell that not only carries genetic code but also behaves like an antenna. DNA is an electrically charged, coiled structure on the nanometer scale; it emits and absorbs photons (biophotons) and carries oscillating current patterns. Remarkably, experiments by physicist Konstantin Meyl and others have indicated that DNA can act as a transmitter and receiver of electromagnetic and possibly scalar signals. Meyl reported that he could detect electromagnetic and longitudinal wave emissions from DNA samples in vitro, at frequencies correlating with cellular biophoton emission. In essence, he hypothesized that the DNA double helix can launch scalar waves along its length, functioning as a kind of nano-scale radio tuned to the body’s field environment. If confirmed, this suggests every cell’s DNA might be sampling the ambient field for information. Separately, Russian research in the 1990s (Gariaev et al.) went so far as to claim that DNA could be influenced by directed energy such as lasers and radio waves carrying information – even proposing that “junk” non-coding DNA might operate as a data receptor for environmental signals, perhaps even linguistic in nature. While these claims are on the fringe, they point to a tantalizing direction: biology could have non-local communication channels, riding on field phenomena rather than chemical or nerve impulses alone.
Beyond DNA, consider the entire brain-body system. The human brain contains billions of firing neurons generating oscillating electric fields measured as brainwaves (delta, theta, alpha, etc.). The heart produces a strong electromagnetic field that extends outside the body (detectable several feet away). Organs like the gut and the network of fascia may act as signal conduits. There is mounting evidence in bioelectromagnetics that the body is highly responsive to fields in its environment, even when those fields carry no net energy. For instance, some studies have found that if you expose cells to two opposing electromagnetic fields that cancel each other out (so no conventional EM field remains), the cells can still register a response – implying the canceled fields produced a scalar disturbance that the cells detected. Another example: practitioners of meditative arts like qigong often report a tangible “ball of energy” when holding their hands facing each other a short distance apart. Thermal and magnetic sensors have indeed measured slight increases in temperature and magnetic fluctuations in the space between the palms during such exercises. What’s happening? When the hands (each emitting their own bioelectromagnetic field) oppose each other, the fields may partially cancel in that space, giving rise to a localized node of scalar potential or a torsion column. In effect, two coherent EM fields in opposite phase can nullify their transverse components and unleash a concentration of field potential – a phenomenon noted by researchers like Tom Bearden in the context of scalar wave theory. The person perceives this as a warm, tingling “ball” because a subtle energy density has formed, which can even produce mild thermal and magnetic effects. This is a human-scale demonstration of interference producing a scalar field, analogous to how two planets in opposition might generate a scalar interference node in space. It underscores that living systems can create and be affected by such nodes.
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Sep 22
From the cosmic perspective, Earth itself generates numerous fields – geomagnetic, ionospheric, Schumann resonances (the global electromagnetic resonances in the cavity between Earth and ionosphere). These provide a carrier environment that could be modulated by external influences. A planetary alignment might ever so slightly tweak Earth’s magnetic field or the distribution of ionospheric currents; these changes could in turn influence the human brain and cardiovascular system, which are known to be sensitive to geomagnetic fluctuations. Even if the effects are tiny, living systems are non-linear and adaptive – they might amplify and integrate such signals over time (much like organisms use tiny cues like the length of daylight to trigger massive physiological changes for seasonal breeding). In our model, we also allow for more direct coupling at the information level: if a scalar wave carries pattern (much like a radio wave carries a signal), a suitably tuned biological system might pick up that pattern without any intermediate physical change. This is a bold idea, but it resonates with Sheldrake’s concept of morphic resonance – that organisms tune into collective field patterns, a bit like tuning a radio to a broadcast of collective memory. Here, the “broadcast” could be coming from the solar system’s configuration itself.
Time, Torsion, and the Role of Consciousness
A discussion of cosmic resonance would be incomplete without touching on the enigmatic work of Nikolai Kozyrev, a Russian astrophysicist who in the mid-20th century conducted ingenious experiments suggesting that time itself is an energy that can be harnessed. Kozyrev’s experiments are legendary in frontier science circles: he claimed to detect instantaneous effects of celestial events. For example, during solar eclipses, Kozyrev observed anomalous signals in torsion pendulums and other detectors at the moment of totality, even accounting for light-travel delay – as if the alignment of Sun-Moon-Earth created an immediate disturbance in his lab. He spoke of this as a “density of time” changing, or a kind of torsion wave (a twisting of spacetime) being emitted. In another famous series of trials, Kozyrev pointed a telescope at star positions where they should be observed in real-time versus where they appear in the sky due to light delay. Astonishingly, his instruments (which were sensitive to subtle pressure or inertia changes) registered a signal when aimed at the actual present position of stars (which are invisible to normal sight due to light delay), but not at the visible position.
He interpreted this as evidence that some influence from the star – call it a time wave or torsion current – was reaching us instantaneously, independent of light. In effect, the stars might be “communicating” their current state through a medium of time or ether, which travels far faster than light. Kozyrev even mused that the stars are linked by a kind of telepathy through this time-energy channel. Though his ideas were met with skepticism and are still not fully accepted, they align strikingly with our paradigm: information may propagate through the scalar/torsion field network instantly, linking distant objects in a way physics hasn’t fully codified.
Torsion field theory, pursued by Russian researchers like A. E. Akimov and G. I. Shipov in the 1990s, further claims that spinning masses or polarized electromagnetic fields can generate torsional disturbances in the fabric of spacetime – corkscrew-like waves that move absurdly fast (billions of times the speed of light is often cited) and are not blocked by matter. If such torsion or time-density waves exist, planetary rotations and orbits could be pumping them out constantly. Rotational motion (day-night spin) and orbital motion (yearly revolution) might stir the ether in both periodic and event-driven ways. Notably, torsion fields are believed to interact with consciousness – some torsion experiments report that focused human intention can alter the behavior of detectors, hinting that mind itself has a torsional aspect. This raises an intriguing possibility: astrology might work not just through physical biology but through consciousness directly. Perhaps the human mind, as an emitter and receiver of subtle fields, resonates with planetary patterns on an unconscious level. This could manifest as mood shifts, intuitive insights, or predispositions aligning with cosmic cycles. While empirical evidence for this is nascent, it is consistent with the age-old astrological assertion that we are participants in a meaningful cosmos.
Indeed, if we entertain the idea that the universe has a field of consciousness (sometimes called the Akashic field in mystical literature, as well as by Western thinkers such as Erin Laslow in the Akashic Science), then astrology could be viewed as the study of the structure of this consciousness field at a given time. Planetary alignments might act as a kind of lens or modulators in the field of consciousness, creating specific “thought-forms” or archetypal imprints that filter into human experience. This is admittedly speculative, but it provides a holistic angle: not only might physical DNA and brains be picking up or tuning into signals, but our very awareness could be entangled with cosmic patterns. As the quote attributed to Kozyrev’s own introspective writings suggests, “time is not a sterile arrow but a resonant current – an Akashic river that flows through star and soul alike, instantly everywhere.” In that poetic vision, each moment of time carries a quality, a field pattern, that links the motions of planets and the stirrings of our consciousness in one tapestry.
From Fate to Resonance: A New Vision of Astrology
Recasting astrology in these terms has profound implications. First and foremost, it shifts astrology away from fatalism. In this framework, planetary alignments are not seen as rigid determinants of fate, but as environmental resonances – like changing weather or musical keys that set a background tone. Just as a full moon creates a high tide but does not dictate the path of a sailing ship, astrological conditions might create energetic “tides” in human affairs without overriding our free will. We remain agents, but we are navigating within a flowing medium of influences. This addresses a key skeptical objection: the idea of planetary determinism. Our new model explicitly posits that astrological forces are subtle and informational, not gross physical pushes. They “flavor” rather than force outcomes. In the words of an analogy often used, the Moon guides the tides but does not enslave the ocean – the water still has freedom to slosh within the lunar pull. Likewise, human minds and societies might be nudged by the rhythms of the sky – gently, rhythmically pulled, but not compelled. This nuanced view preserves room for personal choice and for myriad other causal factors, while granting that we live embedded in cosmic cycles that likely influenced us as we evolved.
One of the most significant of these rhythms is the axial precession of Earth — the slow, 25,800-year wobble known as the Platonic Year. This cycle shifts the backdrop of the equinoxes through the zodiac constellations roughly every 2,160 years, defining the so-called “Ages” (Pisces, Aquarius, and so on). Unlike many symbolic or cultural frameworks, precession is a measurable astronomical fact — a genuine macro-cycle of our planet. If biology has adapted to daily, monthly, and annual rhythms, it is reasonable to consider that human consciousness and culture might also be entrained, subtly or archetypally, to this great turning of the ages.
Secondly, this reframing invites scientific inquiry rather than forbidding it. Traditional astrology, with its symbolic language and lack of mechanism, has understandably been rejected by science. But if we claim that astrology is really early “quantum biology on a cosmic scale,” as one might put it, then its assertions become testable in principle. We would expect, for example, that during certain alignments there should be measurable changes in the local environment – perhaps in geomagnetic fields, ionospheric currents, random number generator outputs, or even aggregate human physiology (similar to how some global consciousness projects attempt to measure effects of collective meditation). If the Sun and planets orchestrate a kind of symphony of frequencies, life on Earth may have adapted to dance to that music. We might find that a 180° alignment of Jupiter and Saturn (an opposition) correlates with subtle shifts in solar activity or Earth’s magnetic field that in turn correlate with patterns in human mass behavior or mood. These are hypotheses that can be statistically examined with modern instruments and big data techniques. In fact, some researchers have already begun looking at correlations between planetary cycles and solar dynamics or geomagnetism, with intriguing preliminary results. The key point is that by providing a physical model (scalar fields, resonance), we can generate concrete predictions – something astrology in its traditional form struggled to do in scientific terms. In this sense, astrology could evolve from a semi-mystical art into a proto-scientific framework: one that doesn’t yet have all the quantification of a mature science, but is pointing the way toward one.
Finally, this integrated vision restores a sense of meaning and participation to our view of the cosmos. One of the appeals of astrology has always been its implication that we are woven into a larger order – that our joys and challenges are somehow meaningfully timed with the dance of planets. Detractors call that an illusion of meaning. But our reframing suggests it’s not pure illusion; rather, the meaning was a perception of real, if subtle, connections. We are indeed, as the poet Goethe said, “children of the cosmos,” biologically and perhaps mentally entangled with our starry milieu. This does not mean the cosmos micromanages our lives, but it may provide an archetypal backdrop – a set of prevailing themes or energies – that we interact with. Just as a sailor attunes to the seasons and winds but still chooses his course, human societies might unconsciously attune to the great cycles (like the 20-year Jupiter-Saturn conjunction cycle often coinciding with social shifts, or the 11-year sunspot cycle influencing moods). Recognizing this interplay can enrich our self-understanding: we start to see ourselves not as isolated entities in a dead universe, but as nodes in a living, breathing cosmic web. Every thought and biological oscillation in us might be in subtle dialogue with the movements of planets and the Sun.
Such a paradigm also encourages a more participatory approach to astrology. Rather than using it purely for fortune-telling (“what will happen to me?”), we might use it as a tool for conscious alignment (“how can I adjust my own patterns to harmonize with the larger field right now?”). If an upcoming configuration suggests turbulent energies (in our model, perhaps a highly perturbed scalar interference pattern), one might respond by engaging practices that stabilize one’s biofield – meditation, grounding exercises, collective intention setting. In effect, we can treat astrological knowledge not as a strict script, but as a weather report or a musical score, guiding us on when to improvise softly or play with intensity. Interestingly, experiments in collective consciousness (such as groups intending peace in war-torn areas, or mass meditations measured by instruments) have shown statistically significant effects on physical systems. This hints that the coupling may be two-way: not only can cosmic patterns influence us, but human collective consciousness might influence the field (and thereby perhaps even the broader environment). In the grandest view, we are co-creators in the cosmic resonance – the “music of the spheres” is an improvisational jam between the heavens and humanity, not a one-way broadcast.
From Theory to Practice: Astrology as Lived Experience
The framework we’ve outlined—astrology as geometric interference patterns in a resonant field—isn’t just theoretical speculation. Practitioners worldwide are independently arriving at similar insights through direct experience.
Pam Gregory, one of the most respected voices in contemporary astrology, has spent over 40 years studying thousands of charts. I had the great honor of interviewing her about the evolution of astrological practice, mirroring our scalar field model almost exactly—despite approaching it from phenomenological observation rather than physics.
In this dialogue, Gregory discusses several themes that validate our approach:
On the Nature of Astrological Influence:
“It’s not fate as often old astrology has been. It’s going to really help us to be sovereign by using astrology rather than victim of the planets.”
This shift from compulsion to resonance is precisely what emerges when we understand aspects as field patterns we can consciously attune to rather than forces that control us.
On Consciousness and Healing:
Describing her experiences at Dr. Joe Dispenza’s workshops, where she witnessed “miracles in every moment—people standing up from wheelchairs, tumors disappearing,” Gregory emphasizes: “Once we get love and coherence, everything goes back to the blueprint. We can be healed in moments.”
This is scalar field physics in action: coherent consciousness creating constructive interference patterns that restore biological systems to their optimal geometric template—their “blueprint.”
On Collective Field Effects:
Her weekly meditation practice demonstrates measurable reality of field coherence. Participants report “overwhelming love” and spontaneous healing—not through individual effort but through collective resonance. As she notes, quoting Lynne McTaggart’s research: “The greatest healing happens when you’re sending love to somebody else... in a group.”
This is the interference pattern principle made practical: multiple coherent sources create stronger nodes than any single source.
On Expanding Consciousness:
Gregory speaks of newly discovered dwarf planets as representing “higher octaves of consciousness” and bridges to “galactic connection.” She’s tracked cases of people receiving “galactic instruction” for advanced healing technologies—precisely the kind of information transfer our model suggests is possible through torsion/scalar field coupling.
The Bottom Line:
When experienced practitioners describe astrology shifting from prediction to participation, from fate to frequency, from external control to internal resonance—they’re articulating the same framework we’ve derived from physics. The convergence of mystical practice and scientific theory suggests we’re touching something real.
Gregory’s work demonstrates that this isn’t just abstract philosophy. Real people are using these principles to heal, to co-create, to navigate life with more grace and power. The cosmic geometries we’ve mapped aren’t just mathematical abstractions—they’re living patterns we can learn to dance with.
Conclusion – Toward a Science of Cosmic Resonance
What we have outlined is admittedly a visionary synthesis. It ventures beyond established science into an interdisciplinary weave of physics, biology, and metaphysics. Yet it remains grounded in known phenomena: the reality of field effects, the nonlocal quirks of quantum mechanics, the sensitivity of organisms to environment, the strange experiments on record (from Tesla to Kozyrev to modern biofield research) that don’t fit conventional frameworks. This new astrology does not ask for superstition; it asks for an expansion of our scientific canvas to include fields, resonance, and consciousness as central players. If we succeed in that, astrology might be recognized as an embryonic attempt at cosmic systems science – one that arose intuitively in ancient times and can now be reformulated in modern language.
The potential rewards are enormous. We would gain a more integrated understanding of how the macrocosm and microcosm relate – how galaxies and neurons might be reflections at different scales. We might discover new ways to promote health (if living systems are tuned by cosmic frequencies, perhaps those frequencies can be used in therapy – an area some call “scalar medicine”). We might develop instruments to detect subtle field fluctuations, leading to predictions of solar or geophysical events via planetary geometry. We could even approach consciousness research from a new angle: if mind has a field aspect, then the long-standing puzzles of telepathy or intuition might begin to make sense as field coupling rather than spooky action. In short, by reuniting astrology with physics and biology, we open up a holistic science of interconnectedness.
For the open-minded skeptic, none of this requires abandoning critical thinking. It does, however, require extending thinking into domains traditionally labeled “occult” or fringe, with the humility that today’s fringe could be tomorrow’s frontier. Throughout history, ideas that were once magical (like invisible microbes causing disease, or rocks falling from the sky as meteorites) became scientific fact when we developed the means to investigate them. Perhaps astrological correlations, once scorned as magical thinking, will likewise find a place in an expanded science – not through the old fatalistic lore, but through a new understanding of the subtle mechanics of the cosmos.
In this reframed vision, the cosmos speaks in a language of waves and fields. Planets are like graceful dancers in a cosmic ballet, their steps sending ripples through an unseen ether. Our brains and cells, being tiny dancers within that same dance, hear the faint music and adjust their steps accordingly. We find meaning in astrology not because the planets deliberately “guide” us, but because we, the planets, and the stars are all part of one integrated symphony. The ancient maxim “As above, so below” may turn out to be quite literal – with scalar field science illuminating how the above and below are linked in a continuous feedback loop. It’s a majestic, humbling idea: when we look up at the night sky, we are not lonely observers of distant burning balls of gas; we are participants in a vast information exchange, enmeshed in the creative flux of a living universe. The hope of this new approach is to honor the mystery and beauty that made astrology endure, while rigorously exploring the mechanism behind that mystery.
The journey has just begun, but the path is beckoning – a path where science and spirit reunite in the investigation of how cosmos and consciousness intertwine. By respecting both skepticism and wonder, we can carry astrology from the realm of lore to the realm of knowledge, forging what might be called a true physics of synchronicity or a cosmic biology. In doing so, we do not diminish the mystery of existence – we deepen it, and perhaps learn to navigate it more wisely.
In the words of one explorer of these ideas: time and space may be like a bright river, and we are like fish swimming within it – largely unaware of the currents, but capable of turning and moving with them once we become aware. Astrology, reconceived as the study of those currents, could guide us toward that awareness.
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GCI (Global Coherence Initiative). Interim Report on the Human-GEO Solar Connection (2012). A compilation of studies by the HeartMath Institute and others showing correlations between planetary magnetic indices, solar cycles, and collective human measures (like heart rate variability and social unrest indices). While not conclusive, it points toward the possibility that cosmic cycles (e.g., solar rotations, geomagnetic fluctuations influenced by planetary positions) correlate with biological and psychological patterns.
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Endnotes
1. Dunning-Davies, James, and Richard L. Norman. “Deductions from the Quaternion Form of Maxwell’s Equations.” Journal of Modern Physics 11, no. 9 (2020): 1361–1371.
2. Aharonov, Yakir, and David Bohm. “Significance of Electromagnetic Potentials in the Quantum Theory.” Physical Review 115, no. 3 (1959): 485–491.
3. Sheldrake, Rupert. A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Formative Causation. Los Angeles: J.P. Tarcher, 1981.
4. Rivera-Dugenio, Jere. “Scalar Wave Morphogenetic Field Mechanics and Ozone Therapy.” Unpublished white paper, c. 2015.
5. Meyl, Konstantin. DNA and Cell Resonance: New Wave Biophysics. Research monograph, 2003.
6. Del Giudice, Emilio, et al. “Effects of Weak Electromagnetic Fields on Biological Systems.” International Journal of Radiation Biology 50, no. 4 (1986): 613–636.
7. Kozyrev, Nikolai A. “On the Possibility of Experimental Study of the Properties of Time.” Originally published in Russian, 1967; reproduced in Time and Universe, 1971.
8. Akimov, A. E., and G. I. Shipov. “Torsion Fields of Earth and Universe.” Earth and Universe no. 6 (1996): 9–17.
9. Global Coherence Initiative. Interim Report on the Human-GEO Solar Connection. HeartMath Institute, 2012.
10. Nelson, Roger D., et al. “FieldREG II: Consciousness Field Effects: Replications and Explorations.” Journal of Scientific Exploration 12, no. 3 (1998): 425–454.
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19. “Your Body’s Hidden Technology: The Scalar Field Between Your Hands.” GreenMedInfo Substack, August 8, 2025.
20. Rivera-Dugenio, Jere. “The Language of Our DNA – Scalar Energy.” International Journal of Advanced Research and Publications 3, no. 3 (2019): 173–181.
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