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Dr Peter Gariaev and His Team Discover That Our DNA Can Be Modified With Sound

peter gariaev dna

Dr Peter Gariaev and his team have discovered that our DNA can be altered with sound waves – an effect known as Linguistic Wave Genetics.

His research teams included Linguists, Biophysicists, Molecular Biologists and Embryologists; these individuals demonstrated that “junk DNA”, found in all mammals, follows grammatical rules and is imprintable by words and sounds in terms of acoustic frequency and electromagnetic fields.

Quantum Consciousness of the Linguistic-Wave Genome

While Western scientists devoted most of their attention to studying only five percent of the genome, Russian researchers (Biophysicists, Molecular Biologists, Embryologists and Linguistic experts) took an altogether broader approach. They realized that non-coding regions weren’t just random collections of “junk DNA”, but actually created by language structures designed to reach some still unknown goal.

Their studies demonstrated that the syntax of DNA code could be modulated using sound and laser light, enabling transmission of its meaning through encoded DNA sequences into biosignals known as Mitogenetic Radiation or Gurvich Rays that could then be used to generate and store holographic images of genomes using polarization waves.

These results substantiate the quantum holographic prediction that DNA serves as an active adaptive phase conjugate mirror/holographic transducer that encodes and decodes genomic polarization-wave information. When illuminated with an electromagnetic field that is coherent enough, DNA molecules emit radiation with encoded/decoded information in form of polarization waves that resonate resonantly emit a beam containing this encoding/decoding information in form of radiation beams resonantly emitting from them.

Furthermore, polarization-wave genomic information carriers can be registered as holograms in DNA molecules using optical rotatory dispersion of visible light and circular dichroism; this allows one to observe long distance correlations between different regions of DNA as well as between chromosomes.

Genomes store an immense amount of information and can carry it over great distances, even across entire biosystems. Their information stores can influence both cellular evolution and development as well as whole organism development; after all, these linguistic-wave holograms serve not just as memory but as powerful biocomputers able to read and process it at quantum nonlocal speed.

The Matrix

The Matrix is a science fiction action film which tells of a parallel world hidden beneath our own reality, where sentient machines use human heat and electrical activity as power sources, with Neo discovering this truth and joining a rebellion against these machines. The movie contains many references to cyberpunk subcultures as well as philosophical/religious beliefs as well as cultural touchstones like Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Hong Kong action films and Spaghetti Westerns that make up its narrative framework.

The Matrix was both commercially successful and critically acclaimed, winning several Academy Awards along the way. It became the fourth highest-grossing film of 1999 and produced two sequels: The Matrix Reloaded and Revolutions. Many consider this sci-fi classic an exemplar, often drawing parallels between this and Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey or Fritz Lang’s Metropolis.

Film features elements of various genres, yet is best classified as a sci-fi thriller with some action and martial arts sequences. Mainly shot on sound stages in Sydney to keep production costs down while some outdoor scenes were also shot within Sydney itself with familiar landmarks such as Sydney Harbour Bridge, AWA Tower and Martin Place featuring in some shots.

The Matrix pioneered several cutting-edge visual effects and motion capture techniques with its groundbreaking use of “bullet time.” Engineers at Manex Visual Effects created new film interpolation and digital compositing techniques which allowed for this effect.

The film’s opening sequence presents a group of green characters resembling computer code, but without knowing their purpose or significance. According to visual-effects supervisor Simon Whiteley, these were taken directly from cookbooks and their exact meaning is currently unknown – perhaps alluding to how much one believes they exist within the matrix?

The Sound Matrix

The sound matrix is an essential piece of audio equipment, used to mix, separate, and switch multiple audio signals. This article introduces its basic principles, usage scenarios and operating methods – commonly found in radio/TV engineering facilities, conference halls, large screen display engineering projects and TV teaching applications as well as command/control centers.

The Wachowskis’ groundbreaking use of sound was key to The Matrix film’s groundbreaking special effects. By trusting and relying on their sound team led by supervising sound editors Dane Davis and Stephanie Flack, they were free to innovate new possibilities in film audio production.

They sought to develop a system that would create a seamless audio environment while still capturing the raw emotion of its characters, leading them to create an interlocking system of sounds that accompanied action to trigger emotional responses in viewers.

These sonic elements were captured using both acoustic and electronic devices, including custom microphone arrays designed for each scene and echo cancellation techniques to produce clear signals without adding unwanted artefacts to them. The results were breathtaking, often being compared with Star Wars in terms of soundscape.

This was the first time The Matrix sound team could work closely with its visual counterparts and it proved successful; building on it in subsequent films. For this film alone, their sound design team added new effects while expanding existing ones – pushing boundaries even further than before.

Gariaev and his team’s research led to an astonishing discovery: that spectra are fractal-like structures, featuring self-similarity and multiscale identity. This discovery can be linked to Bohm’s universal hologram associated with waves, which can be read using laser scanners.

Researchers believe that DNA contains information encoded as holographic waves, and this data could be transmitted via lasers between cells. They anticipate this resulting in medical breakthroughs where human patients could receive their own individual sonic health matrix that contains all the knowledge needed for lifelong wellness – something they will listen to each day as part of daily self-care routine.

The Light Matrix

Gariaev believes that our physical health and interactions are controlled by an LWG code which contains information. He sees frequencies and wave structures for healing and cell regeneration as the future of medicine; an approach already used by certain companies like NovoCure (a large international company which uses specific frequencies to treat illnesses).

Gariaev discovered during his experiments that laser photons interacting with DNA are connected non-locally and coherently to radio waves, creating what is known as the DNA-phantom effect; an electromagnetic pattern left after DNA has been physically removed from an experimental apparatus – similar to what happens after physical removal of photographic negatives.

Holographic patterns produced by DNA signals resemble the patterning of light seen during development of lizard tails or organ regeneration. It seems likely that such quantum information carriers deliver crucial bits of vital knowledge necessary for living systems to form.

According to the theory of bio-holography genome, DNA comprises two antiparallel helixes that function like adaptive phase conjugate mirrors/holographic gratings; under certain conditions this DNA can act as both an electromagnetic (EM) signal projector and receiver.

Gariaev suggests that the LWG translates the blueprint of human organisms described by DNA into an electromagnetic field that guides molecular growth on both cellular and whole body levels. He defines this matrix as being self-similar and multiscale Identifiable.

Fractal mats are powerful information carriers, capable of transmitting electromagnetic (EM) signals from various points within our bodies to a central point. As a result, this matrix has often been called bio-hologram, biological holographic memory or organism’s eye-brain. Trusting our matrix to stay healthy is integral part of life!

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