The blood can circulate by itself

Matthew Joseph Rodermund (1854-1919) performed many gruesome experiments on anaesthetised pigs and summarised them in his booklet: “Positive proofs that the blood can circulate without the aid of the heart”. Arterial blood flow is self-driven and flow in the pulmonary vein gets its power from inhaled oxygen.

A pig was anaesthetised and the aorta was drawn out and clamped so as to disconnect it from the pumping of the heart. The blood drained from the artery in no time at all which is proof enough in itself that the blood flow was not driven by the ‘pumping’ of the heart.

Sections of the aorta were clamped off and it was found that blood moved downstream, away from the second clamping, but remained in the clamped of section. When the lower clamp was removed, blood again drained away but less vigorously than before.

Hypothesis

A proposed mechanism for blood flow in the large arteries is that the blood is formed into a compact vortex structure by the heart and that the resulting ring vortices, charged with kinetic energy, will unroll and propel the blood along the artery. Very possibly these vortices can accumulate some energy from the ambient electromagnetic field structure, from heat transfer and from the ever present solar neutrino stream.

The blood is shaped by the heart into an extremely efficient geometrical structure which loses very little energy and will continue to self-organise and self-propel even when outside of the body if an artery should be ruptured; blood will spurt a long way!

See: Blood flow and scalar waves

In the case of the clamped off section of artery, the ring vortices are still spinning, still trying to move along and expending energy in the process. When the clamp is released they continue along their way but some energy has been lost.

These effects are not seen in the veins because the vortices do not make it past the capillary bed and so a different mechanism is at work here.


Action of the lungs

If the lungs are allowed to collapse the heart rate slows and the arteries will empty themselves of blood whilst the veins will become distended. When the lung function is restored, circulation s renewed and the heart in invigorated.

Breathing is somehow necessary in order for adequate circulation.

I have demonstrated it on many animals of various kinds, and it accords so well with the ideas of men who find that force acting upon matter bestows life and motion upon matter. Call this force what you will — call it electricity, call it oxygen or ozone, it is this element of so-called force without which all matter is lifeless, and without any power to move or alter itself” – Rodermund

Hypothesis

The necessary energy to propel the blood from the lungs to the heart is in the form of ‘field vortices’ in the air breathed. These electromagnetic packets of energy are incorporated into the fluids of the blood and work against the ambient bio-field to propel the blood along to the heart.

The blood at this point is charged with energy but does not have the same vortex structure as that in the aorta as it has been a while since it passed through the heart. Blood flow here will not be as vigorous.

In the pulmonary veins, there is no pulsation as is found in the rest of the arterial system, but in puncturing the pulmonary vein the blood will spurt out with a force nearly equal to that of the arteries.” – Rodermund


The heart is not a pump

Another point that demonstrates positively that the heart is not the real propelling power of the blood, is the fact known to the ancients, that after death the arteries are empty; it was from this phenomena that the belief arose that the arteries contained no blood, but air; hence the name artery (which means air-pipe). Now if the heart were a pump it would be impossible for the arteries to be empty after death, for when a pump ceases to do its work, the fluid pumped would cease to flow, consequently, the blood would remain in the arterial system” – Rodermund


Galen

Galen thought that the object of breathing was to take into the lungs what is termed pneuma or spirits. That air breathed underwent in the lung tissue a change which resulted in the production of vital spirits. The spirits according to Galen, was not the substance of atmospheric air, but something produced from it by the transforming agency of the lung

Galen is clearly talking about field vortices even if he couldn’t describe them as such. These vortices are taken up by the blood and very possibly assist with the circulation. See: Blood flow and scalar waves. In addition, such energy is delivered directly to the ATP/ADP in the blood for transport to every cell in the body. See: Do we breathe oxygen?

Again Galen says that the mechanical force of the heart was not the only one by which the animal fluids were drawn or impelled in the needful direction. He thought there was a physiological force which he compared with that of a magnet, by which the tissue attracted the ingredients for its nourishment, as we would express it to-day, that the electrical power has something to do with the circulation.”

Astonishing. The physical force compared to that of a magnet is the inward spiralling of a magnetic vortex structure. Energy is drawn inwards by the laws of physics to supply the tissues and blood with essential energy. The alveoli of the lungs play host to an electromagnetic field which is under the control of the lungs themselves and when the air enters during breathing, this vortex structure will attract the field energy in the air and transfer it to the bloodstream; no material exchange is necessary for this.

See: The bio-field of the heart


The lungs and heart

One strong feature can be noticed when watching the lungs and heart under experiment for hours — that the heart so to speak — “dances to the music of the lungs” This means that when the lungs are taking in pure air, and the blood normal, just as an engine responds to the steam from the boiler.

Another point is always certain that whenever breathing is aroused, the heart action is also increased.

As already stated that the difference noticed in the action of the blood in the pulmonary veins and arteries, that the heart in its churning and contractile action agitates the blood, so as to give increased molecular activity to the charged blood-cells, and thereby give increased activity to the blood to circulate alone throughout the system. This accords well with the difference noticed when puncturing a large artery — the blood spurts out like a fluid that had been agitated, while puncturing the pulmonary vein, such phenomena is not noticed.” – Rodermund

The blood spurts from an artery because the vortex geometry and energy flow has been optimised by the heart to self-propel vigorously in a large open vessel whereas the blood in the pulmonary vein is instead the accumulation of smaller vortex energies from the capillaries and may be assisted by an electromagnetic filed within the lungs.

As already stated that the difference noticed in the action of the blood in the pulmonary veins and arteries, that the heart in its churning and contractile action agitates the blood, so as to give increased molecular activity to the charged blood-cells, and thereby give increased activity to the blood to circulate alone throughout the system.” – Rodermund


Fresh air and health

This particular phenomenon I think the most important of all when considered in the light of health and disease, its result upon the nutrition of the body and the action of such blood upon the chyle, and and the inactivity of such circulation upon carrying off the necessary waste products, debilitating all systemic functions, so that the same food eaten to-day, making us happy, as well as giving good nourishment to the body, to-morrow, the same food when taken without sufficient quantity and quality of oxygen in the air breathed, would produce results all the way from a dull feeling to some severe form of dis¬ ease. Poor food and good air will do so the same, but not so readily.”

What is meant by “quality of oxygen”? Surely all oxygen is the same? Not necessarily. Air that has already been breathed has been depleted of some of its energy; it is low on electromagnetic vortices. This will be invisible to and unmeasurable by scientists but may be true nevertheless.

Konstantin Meyl has claimed that the field vortices breathed in make a significant contribution to overall energy intake, citing two examples where they are actually necessary.

One is the ability of migrating birds to make huge journeys without eating much and the other is the phenomenon of endurance athletes who reportedly train for extended periods (months) at a measurable calorie deficit.

Conjecture: Pneumonia is primarily caused by the breathing of stale air. Already sick patients are confined to bed and forced to breathe second-hand air, depleted of vortex energy. They are missing energy but more to the point there are insufficient vortices to produce a decent flow of blood within the capillaries of the lungs. The tissues of the lungs are similarly deprived and infection sets in.



References:

Positive proofs that the blood can circulate without the aid of the heart – Matthew Joseph Rodermund
https://archive.org/details/101211053.nlm.nih.gov/page/6/mode/2up

Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport: Many athletes at risk due to prolonged, severe calorie mismatch – Adam Ward
https://healthsci.mcmaster.ca/relative-energy-deficiency-in-sport-many-athletes-at-risk-due-to-prolonged-severe-calorie-mismatch/

The bio-field of the heart

The heart is at the centre of a rather large electromagnetic field (depicted) that is measurable several feet from the human body, but nobody seems to know much of its structure or function. This page makes some speculations based upon vortex physics.

Assertion: The heart is at the centre of an inward spiralling energy vortex generated in the muscles and other tissues and it is an extension of this field that is measurable outside the body. Energy accumulates at the vortex centre to drive the physical processes of the heart and to provide power for a fully developed cognitive system (a heart-brain) that monitors and controls the entire of the circulatory processes including blood pressure at every point and even the movement of blood in each section of artery and capillary.

Absolute proof of this is not to be found but we can:

  • Demonstrate a need for such a field
  • Give a geometrical argument for a toroidal arrangement
  • Suggest a mechanism for such a system
  • Argue that the field is ‘cognitive’ in nature
  • Give some ideas as to its functioning

Energy conservation

The usual description of the heart’s field is of an electromagnetic field generated by the heart itself, which then radiates outwards from the heart, passing through the bodily tissues largely unscathed to radiate outwards beyond the body for several feet before dissipating into the electromagnetic wasteland of the Earth’s magnetosphere.

This is a monstrous waste of energy from the Human body and gives little clue as to the function of the field. What is it for? What is the effect of the field passing through the bodily tissues?

The heart is already at a temperature whereby it might ‘cook’, so how does it cope with fluctuations in energy requirements? Where does the extra energy come from and how is excess energy dissipated? If excess energy is simply carried away by the blood stream then it is highly fortuitous that the quantities match; that the extra blood flow produced during exercise exactly corresponds to the extra heat produced by the heart.

This is a general problem in biology, that energy in must exactly match energy out in order to avoid a dangerous accumulation of waste (heat). Moreover, this must happen at every physical scale from the whole organism down to the individual cell.

The heart field of a horse is five times more powerful than that of a human despite having to make its way through considerably more tissue – so again, why doesn’t it overheat? Where is the huge power line that supplies the heart with energy?


Toroidal energy flow

Many researchers have identified circular (electric) currents within organisms and these exist at all scales. An electric circuit is easy to imagine but not a 3-dimensional object full of such circuits. The requirements are that each circuit must be complete, that no circuit may cross over another and that there may be no singularities or infinities in the system.

A spherical arrangement is not possible according to the hairy ball theorem of topology, with the only sustainable arrangement for continuous flow in three dimensions being the torus (shown).

Electrical currents flow from the heart to the periphery (Beraia) where they are said to be ‘earthed’ – but what does this mean? Where does the current go to? Electricity likes to flow in complete circuits.

Consider an alternative whereby the field energy is recycled back through the bodily tissues, eventually returning to the heart after receiving a boost from energy generated in almost every cell in the body.

The overall flow then would be some sort of torus with the heart at the centre. This is precisely what is measured outside of the body and is consistent with what is measured inside the body.


The Chakras

A multi-hole torus with the heart, brain and solar plexus would give us a system that naturally creates energy centres analogous to the Chakra system of Eastern medicines.

Field energy is created in every cell of he body and moves inwards to wards the chakras.

Increased physical activity results in an increased energy production. Sufficient energy is guided inwards towards the heart and any excess is diverted outwards where it is measurable as the external bio-field. In this scheme, the excess energy is never allowed to accumulate and is diverted from the heart before it gets anywhere near it.

The power system is therefore distributed and needs no cable to supply it. Supply is highly flexible and maximum intensity is only reached at the vortex radius which coincides with the heart itself.

People with a weak bio-field have little surplus energy.

Physical exercise enhances the ability of the body to direct energy inwards towards the heart, increases heart activity and promotes extra muscle mass.

An athlete is someone who can create and sustain a strong inward spiralling vortex and whose heart can withstand this pressure in the short term and adapt to it over the long term. This doesn’t do them much good though as they don’t live as long as the rest of us on average and suffer from both long and short term cardiac problems.

The heart is not a pump and so a strong heart is not a pre-requisite for pumping but rather a result of a strong circulation. The heart is very likely having to do a lot of work to actually slow down the blood flow and regulate the pressure. (The Heart and Circulation)

Moderate ‘movement’ develops harmony in the energetic circulatory system whilst hard exercise puts strain on the heart.


The bio-field as a regulatory system

So far, all that has been described is a distributed power supply centred at the heart. This may serve to drive the electrical system of the heart as described above but also acts as an infrastructure for a distributed communication system.

Such a system is clearly a necessity for regulation of blood pressure at least.

The heart and circulation Branko Furst

  • The heart is not a pressure pump
  • The blood propels itself around the circulatory system
  • Responses to change in posture and activity are global and instantaneous

One overwhelming impression after reading this book is that there is a constant and very reliable maintenance of functional blood pressure no matter what the circumstances:

  • On moving from seated to standing posture, the heart rate will increase to compensate in the space of one heartbeat
  • If a giraffe were to lift its head from drinking position to vertical then it will not faint (even in an emergency) owing to low blood pressure in the head
  • Attempts in a laboratory to impede blood flow by blocking an artery in one place will result in an immediate compensatory mechanism somewhere else

Any local disturbance to the blood pressure results in an immediate global adaptation to the flow; the whole system ‘knows’ what it is wants and will instigate changes in pursuance of that teleological aim.

By the time you have stood up, your whole system has already adapted to the new situation. This suggests that the changes are actually pre-empting the action and are somehow triggered by the knowledge that you are intending to stand up.

Without this idea we are stuck with the notion that the circulatory system simply makes local adjustments to itself according to micro-changes in its own pressure system. Moreover, without some sort of ‘computation’ we will have to believe that all this happens according to the laws of fluid dynamics alone!


An independent ‘cognitive’ system?

As described above, changes to circulation are coordinated globally which immediately implies a distributed information system or ‘field’ with almost instantaneous communication speed.

Each part of the system is apprised of happenings elsewhere and adapts accordingly. This suggests complex computation comprising an abstract map of the entire circulatory system somewhere and an implicit ‘aim’ in the sense of an engineering control system.

These are all characteristics of a fully developed ‘cognitive’ system. That is to say, a biological control system every bit as sophisticated as the brain and analogous to the proprioceptive system that ‘knows’ exactly what is going on everywhere all the time and is in full control of all meaningful parameters.

Information concerning pressure from every section of artery or grouping of capillaries is produced from baroreceptors and synthesised into a coherent cognitive map in a format for further computation. Similarly formatted ‘data’ from the brain is integrated into the whole and a decision is made (in the heart itself?) and action taken.

Action signals travel back to the capillary system and to the heart and as a result the existing flow parameters are updated to form a new dynamic state appropriate to the new circumstances or even to anticipated circumstances.

The reaction of the heart rate to the cognition of fear is proof of a meaningful connection between the computational systems of both brain and heart. Both systems are now of a cognitive nature which makes communication between them natural and ensures correct interpretation of even high level constructs such as emotions.

We can think of the phenomenon of fear as an emergent product of the firing of neurons, a mere side effect of the laws of physics, and we can think of the speeding up of the heart as being triggered by a similar set of neuronal firing, but surely simpler to admit that the heart forms its own ‘intelligence’ that is able to communicate with the brain on its own terms, which is to say, thoughts, requirements, intentions and feelings?

Brain says “I feel fear” and heart responds “Ok I will beat faster”.

This happens instantly, surely faster than a gland can manufacture adrenaline and transport it to the heart itself? What sort of messenger is adrenaline? How many dimensions of information can a single chemical carry? What are all the nerves connecting the brain and the heart for if all we need are one-dimensional chemical messengers?


The executive functions of the bio-field

  • Energy accumulation and distribution
  • Collation of distributed information
  • Liaison with the brain
  • Management of blood pressure
  • Management of heart rate
  • Control of dynamic vaso-dilation
  • Energisation of blood cells in the heart
  • Direct control of blood flow in capillaries
  • Synchronisation of pulse between individuals

Post mortem blood flow dynamics

On the driver of blood circulation beyond the heart– Zheng Li, Gerald H. Pollack
This paper has some interesting videos of blood flow after the heart has been stopped.
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0289652

Postmortem arterial blood flow dynamics: video
In this video (screenshot below) the heart is stopped and an instantaneous reaction is seen in the arterial blood flow. First the blood stops flowing and then it begins to resume but in a haphazard fashion.

Flow seems to be independent of any overall scheme and different sections of artery exhibit different flow rates and even direction. The system seems to first go into shock and then to recalibrate in the absence of a pulse before an overall flow is eventually organised and circulation will then continue for some time without a pulse.

An outstanding feature is the apparent independence of flow in different sections of artery. Blood is almost inert in the main branch whilst a narrower section develops a rapid flow, seemingly sucking the blood from the larger vessel at will.

At one point there is clearly pulsatile flow in the thick branches whilst the narrow tubes maintain a continuous flow.

Crucially, flow seems to resume in the small vessels first, before resuming in the larger ones (the ones closer to the heart). Flow then is clearly not driven by the heart and is not driven by pressure.

How and why is the blood behaving in this way?

A hypothesis

  • The blood contains the energy required for movement
  • The bio-field gives the direction of the blood flow

The energy is in various forms of vortex energy:

  • Fluid vortices
  • Ring currents in the red blood cells
  • Heat
  • ‘Other’ field vortices (?)

These are given a good boost of mechanical and electrical energy when passing through the heart and may also accumulate additional energy whilst circulating from heat transfer (vortex transfer), infra-red photons and possibly solar neutrinos.

The bio-field provides an enclosing electromagnetic field of some structure, possibly contained within the arterial walls, which is sufficient to drive the vortices one way or the other and at a desired flow rate.

The following video is not the same mechanism as blood flow but has some similarities and might make the idea sound more plausible. The battery is the energy supply, it does not need an external energy source to push itself around. Here the battery itself produces the spiral electric field it needs to gain momentum.

In the case of the circulatory system it is envisaged that it is the bio-field itself that has complete control of the enclosing electric (magnetic?) field and hence complete control over the movement of every single section of artery in the entire body.

The system is mapped and codified into a single functional system similar to the proprioceptive system whereby the brain has complete knowledge of, and control over, almost every individual cell in the body – but without having to know about any of the individual cells in the body.

In films of blood flow through the smallest capillaries, the red blood cells are seen to form an orderly queue in the blood vessels. This is because the cells themselves contain circular (orbital) electric currents and necessarily form magnetic dipoles with north south alignment along the length of the blood vessel. The magnetic aspect of the cells amounts to a long range attractive force between the RBC whilst the negative electric charge (zeta potential) creates a short range repulsive force thus maintaining the spacing between the cells.

Capture of microparticles by bolus flow of red blood cells in capillaries – Takeishi, Imai
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-05924-7

The organisation of blood cells is clearly depicted in this paper. Note also the vortex movement of nano-particles.


The mechanism

Both information and energy are transferred around the system by means of electromagnetic ring vortices (water vortex shown). These rings will conduct in the myelin sheath surrounding the nerves (Scalar waves and nerves) and create an electrical current within the conductive tissues of the nerves.

The electrical ‘current’ within the nerves is assumed by most to contain the information necessary for cognition but electricity is a crude communicator compared with the possibilities afforded by the ring vortices.

The pattern of flow is that magnetic ring currents will form in the insulating material round the nerves and these will give rise to an induced electric field in the conductive environment within the nerves. The electric current is measured and imagined to be paramount but it is a side effect of the ring vortices.

“Information is the structure of a scalar wave” – Konstantin Meyl

Energy transfer is also via ring vortices. A ring is formed from available field energy and is transmitted along a conduit (nerve, wire, microtubule). Energy loss is minimal and is largely independent of the amount of energy or information being transferred (desirable), unlike traditional ‘current’. When the ring vortex reaches its destination, the energy is unwrapped in accordance with the nature of the ambient electromagnetic field at that location and thereby transformed into useful ‘work’.

Power supply for the brain?

The brain is a scalar wave (ring vortex) computer according to Meyl (What is the brain?) and so information travels from the heart up to the brain via this means.

There are said to be many more nerves conducting information from heart to brain than the other way around (Heart Math) and this has led to the claim that there is more information travelling from heart to brain than the other way around.

But where is the proof for this? Does ‘information’ really take up lots of space? Why do our brains not fill up then? Time to consider that the nerves may be used for energy transfer as well as information transfer.

The brain itself radiates a significant electromagnetic field and surgeons operating near the crown will see sparks fly between the soft tissues and their metal instruments. So where does all this power come from? The brain is not a chemical battery as there is not vast amounts of waste product and nor is it a dynamo as there are no moving parts.

The brain is not at the centre of a large vortex like the heart and so it is getting its energy from somewhere else. Vortex energy spirals inwards toward the heart where it is used to regulate heartbeat etc. Some of this energy then moves into the blood to energise the corpuscles and some moves up the conduit of the nervous system to the brain in order to maintain the necessary electrical function.

A moving field in the brain gives rise to an external toroidal field and this is what is measured.

The measured field outside the brain is still smaller than that of the heart even though there is little tissue to absorb it, thus giving further support to the idea that the measured heart field does not come from the heart at all but the surrounding tissues of the torso.


The cognitive torus

Energy is created in the torso; some spirals inwards to the heart to form a strong vortex field whilst some is directed outwards as ‘waste’ and this forms the measurable bio-field. Physical exertion produces more energy and this is carefully managed to avoid overload on the heart and circulatory system.

How likely does this sound? How does it happen?

First note that the idea of vortex field is completely in tune with electromagnetic theory. Electric fields have a natural tendency to produce this sort of pattern so we are already halfway there and the body just needs to gain some finer degree of control over the field in order to produce the effects that are observed.

Nobody knows how this works but to see that it is at least plausible, consider the video below from David Rogers of a white blood cell chasing a bacterium.

The blood cell is acutely aware if its surroundings and responds instantly to the movement of the bacterium. It is managing its own energy supply (whatever that consists of!) and information is clearly distributed across the whole organism in order to coordinate movement.

The neutrophil behaves with intelligence and ‘intent’ and all this with no heart, brain circulatory system or even nerves!

The human amoeba

Time then, to start thinking of a human being, not so much as a machine comprised of smaller ‘parts’ but rather as a very large blob of intelligent jelly that has accrued some extra organs to manage and a few ‘super-highways’ to expedite the transmission of power to energy hungry parts of the organism.

Energy is produced globally, the heart does not ‘pump’ but directs accumulated electrical energy away from the vortex centre and somehow the blood flow is managed on a circulation-wide basis. How or where are such computations performed is up for grabs but obvious candidates are the brain or the heart itself.

An alternative idea is to simply say that the computation is distributed around the entire network somehow. Many will find this fantastical – but why? It seems natural to suppose that something like a brain is capable of this but that is only because we have allowed ourselves to become comfortable with the idea and not because it makes any sense.

It is easy to imagine a brain as doing all the computing but a brain is still just a lump of electrified jelly and so simply delegating all computational duties to this organ isn’t really solving the problem but merely shifting it from a large bunch of jelly to a slightly smaller bunch of jelly!

If you don’t believe the body can have intelligence then how can you think a brain can have intelligence?


Self-organisation

Heart cells are seen beating in a tissue culture. They are not part of a working heart and are not connected to a brain and yet seems to have organised themselves into a coordinated beating system which propagates in a wave from left to right.

Imagine that these cells had formed, not a hemisphere, but the shape of a heart and that the contraction wave propagated along the spiral muscle of the heart. The whole thing is pretty much working already and there is not much more to do other than supply it with sufficient energy and enough information to control the pulse rate.

The effect we are seeing is an emergent effect created from bottom-up organisation of the individual cells, but a functional heartbeat is controlled by a top-down influx of information from a distributed control system. Information is collected from the organism as a whole and condensed down to simple instructions for the heart.

In biological systems we have a consistent pattern of: bottom up emergence, top down control.

If we don’t have the top down information flow then we are left with lots of interesting effects but not a viable life form. Mainstream texts seem to ignore the organisational aspect and regard a human simply as a collection of interesting effects; they seem ok with this!

Note that the seemingly intractable problem of complexity in biological function is always understood in these terms: low level activities are more ordered and sympathetic to life than most people imagine and so higher level control systems have less ‘work’ to do. The instructions from top to bottom are not in any way digital and do not necessarily reflect the underlying physical (molecular) reality but instead are ‘cognitive’ representations of the ‘state’ of the system as a whole or parts thereof.


Top down causation

Mainstream science from physics to biology is fixated on a view of causation that is ‘bottom-up’ in terms of scale, radiative in terms of causation and downhill in terms of organisation (2nd ‘Law’ of Thermodynamics).

However, the laws of electromagnetism support the idea of vortex formation and everywhere in nature we see an inward spiralling of energy and an accumulation of ‘information’ at smaller scales:

  • Blood flow starts in the periphery and moves towards the heart
  • Energy moves from the torso to the heart in a vortex pattern
  • Information flows from the extremities to the heart and back again
  • A distributed bio-field modulates local activity

Blood flow and scalar waves

Various researchers have given up on determining how blood flows around the circulatory system and have decided that whatever energetic motivation there is from the heart is insufficient to describe the total flow and that there must be some other forces at work.

The widely accepted pressure-propulsion circulation model fails to explain an increasing number of observed circulatory phenomena”

“Experimental and phenomenological evidence suggest the opposite, namely that the blood possesses autonomous movement sustained by the metabolic demands of the tissues at the level of microcirculation.“ – Branko Furst

So the blood appears to move by itself. This contradicts the laws of physics, so we must look to some other source of energy to explain the blood flow and some physical mechanism by which this energy is harnessed and converted to kinetic energy.


Assertions:

  • Blood flow is organised into scalar waves
  • Scalar waves exist within red blood cells
  • Scalar waves form within the blood plasma
  • Scalar magnetic waves may exist as an etheric blood flow
  • These waves are energised by solar neutrinos
  • These structures are instrumental in circulation of the blood

Start with a drawing from Viktor Schauberger of water flow in a pipe.

The flow of water is largely spiral and almost friction free. The main body of the water has separated from the walls of the pipe (observed by Schauberger) thereby reducing friction even more and toroidal ring structures (scalar waves) exist at intervals to act as bearings to further help reduce friction and propel the main flow.


Such flow was measured by Schauberger (here) to demonstrate a sinusoidal response to increasing pressure and to actually develop negative resistance at certain flow rates. This result was reproduced by independent researchers and implies that some extra input of energy is coming from somewhere.


An image from Charlie Peskin’s PhD thesis shows fluid flow (top to bottom) through a valve structure such as may be found in the heart or veins. Vortices can be seen forming around the valve outlet and they will, when fully formed, close the valve behind them.


Another image from the paper by Merab Beraia showing spiral structures everywhere in the arterial system with even supposedly ‘turbulent’ blood flow being comprised of highly organised helical flow. The suggestion is that the blood is not behaving as a simple Newtonian fluid at all but that its movement is largely determined by electromagnetic forces, with spiral formations being typical of the interaction between charged particles and magnetic fields.


So the blood is forming toroidal structures known as ‘scalar waves’ which are electrically structured and largely self-sustaining and highly energy-efficient. The performance of such structures allows for the blood to actually accelerate as it comes out of the heart and to propel itself along the arteries.

Short video shows similar structures in sea water.


Here we see luminescence in sea water that is attributed to plankton. Maybe, but waterfalls have demonstrated the same phenomenon and Viktor Schauberger claims to have reproduced the phenomenon in a laboratory.


Konstantin Meyl gives the following hypothesis: Small vortices created in the water act as receivers for solar neutrinos and then release the energy as photons. Neutrinos are already in the form of a charge-vortex (right), making their absorption into similar structures highly plausible.

This would be a good explanation then for Schauberger’s observation of ‘negative resistance’; the water flow is already friction free and is absorbing additional energy through neutrino transduction.

Time to consider the possibility that vortical eddy currents in arterial blood will also absorb neutrino energy thereby magnifying their own action and helping propel the blood cells through the capillaries.


The Influence of the Golden Ratio on the Erythrocyte

This paper from Purcell and Ramsey claims that red blood cells are constructed according to the Golden Ratio.

If in addition we have an electric current flowing around the blood cell, we have precisely the conditions for the generation of stable scalar waves.
The blood is energised by an electric field in the heart and toroidal currents are maintained by input from neutrinos.

The capillary problem. Fluid flow at small scales is profoundly different from that of macro scale flow. Here, viscous forces completely dominate the flow dynamics, making even distilled water seem, not so much like honey, but thick warm tar.

Scott Turner explains:


Intuitive ideas of fluid flow arise from observations at the macro level and do not translate well to the micro-cosmos. Any explanation of capillary flow emerging from such intuitions must be considered invalid.

So how are blood cells squeezing through capillaries that are smaller than themselves? The idea that pressure generated a billion cells away can do this without exploding the intermediate arteries is a very big stretch of the imagination.

If our new toy is toroidal waves fuelled by neutrinos then it is time to consider this surely?

Scalar waves were described above as created from physical matter (water) but with some electrical properties which help organise the matter into spiral flows and toroidal rings. Meyl, however, in his book Scalar Waves, describes them as stable dynamic states within the electromagnetic field itself with no need for any supporting material substance.

These waves can exist by themselves and carry energy and information around biological systems. One German scientist documents how they can apparently organise physical conduits within the cells in order to facilitate communication and then dismantle them when no longer necessary.

If blood is observed by competent scientists to ‘propel itself’ around the capillaries then maybe such field waves are implicated here, after all: what else is there?


Capillary flow (Pollack) The video clip from Gerald Pollack of water flowing autonomously through a tube (left to right) can be found here. “Unending flow through the tube; it can go on for a full day” – Pollack

We see water with no discernible source of power flowing steadily into a tube. The phenomenon only works with hydrophilic tubes and is enhanced by application of infra-red or ultra-violet light.

The whole phenomenon is self-organising, with the ability to absorb external energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation and to use it as ‘fuel’


From chaos to order in active fluids – Morozov. Wu et al

In this paper, some biological substances including ATP were mixed with water and the resulting solution placed in small tubes and cylinders.

The fluid spontaneously organised itself into vortices, the vortices oriented themselves with respect to each other and then the whole thing started to move in a single unidirectional flow.

The diameter of the tubes determined the speed of flow and small notches made in the cylinder walls could be used to control the direction of the flow.

The flow then is not driven by a pressure gradient and the author asks if the idea of ‘pressure’ even makes sense in such liquids.

We know that the heart creates vortices of blood at the scale of centimetres but this paper now suggests that at lower scales, i.e. in the capillaries, there is scarcely a need to mechanically shape the blood flow as it seems quite capable of organising its own affairs.

In dogs whose heart has been stopped, the blood continues to flow for up to a hour. This blood is clearly not being driven by the heart but by some residual energy left in the bloodstream that continues to organise and implement flow independently of whatever catastrophe may have occurred elsewhere.


The venous problem. If the blood is pumped around by pressure alone then the rather slow flow emerging from the capillaries will speed up into the veins and eventually emerge as a flow into the heart that seems as fast and vigorous as the flow exiting the heart after being pumped.

Venous flow is claimed to be by muscular contraction, with the valves preventing return flow, but if the flow into the heart is a fast as claimed then there is surely no return flow to mitigate against? And what happens when we are asleep or bedridden?

The valves may well prevent return flow but they also serve the purpose of restoring vortices to the blood which in turn can now transmute ambient vortex energy to kinetic propulsion of the blood.

In addition, the construction of scalar waves will give the blood flow a specific direction. It is no good postulating some sort of energetic input to the bloodstream without both a description of a mechanism of how flow is generated and a way of determining the direction of that flow. The idea that scalar waves are produced by venous valves fits these requirements precisely.


Branko Furst: “Experimental and phenomenological evidence suggest .. that the blood possesses autonomous movement sustained by the metabolic demands of the tissues at the level of microcirculation”. So the blood flow is regulated and physically caused by the actual demand for the blood flow and this happens at the capillary level!

What are we to make of this? The body is making its own requests for blood flow at the cellular level, with each portion of capillary making a small contribution to the overall blood flow. We can suppose that requests for extra blood are made by the transfer of scalar waves somehow from organ to capillary and that these waves will then absorb neutrinos and maybe actually help drive the blood through the capillary to the required degree.

So running upstairs leads to surplus heat ‘waste’ (vortex energy) in the muscles which spirals inwards towards the capillaries, becoming more concentrated as it does so. This energy passes through the capillary walls and has an effect similar to the application of infrared light. The overall blood flow increases with this extra energy and the heart beats faster as an end result of the increased blood flow, not as an initial cause of it.

The blood enters the heart as fast as it exits (this must be the case anyhow) – so is the heart causing the blood to flow or is the flow causing the heart to pump? The speed of the blood entering the heart cannot be caused by blood that was pumped out of the heart and around the body as the two flows are decoupled from each other causally by both the capillary and venous blood flow, neither of which are dependent upon arterial blood pressure.

Is the heart sucking up the venous blood (opinions seem to differ on this) or is the blood simply moving by itself with the beating heart simply interpolated in the middle and acting as some sort of regulator?


Pulmonary circulation is the system of transportation that shunts de-oxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs to be re-saturated with oxygen before being dispersed into the systemic circulation.” – NIH
So blood flow out of the lungs is via dispersal. This really is avoiding the question.

Konstantin Meyl (here) points out that there is considerable energy stored in water vortices in humid air and that these contribute a significant portion of the energy input to the human body. There is less energy in the air we breathe out than the air we breathe in.

So it is possible then, that scalar waves from the air we breathe directly enter the pulmonary blood flow and make a contribution to the circulation. This makes a lot of sense with an increase in breathing leading increased energy input which then directly causes an increase in circulation. The requirement is determining the physiology as described by Furst. See also: Do we breathe oxygen?

How else is blood assumed to flow away from the delicate lung capillaries? Is there really enough pressure maintained here to continue pumping the blood all the way around the body? Is this local pressure somehow micro-managed by the beating of the heart according to demand? That really would be a miracle!

Are conditions such as legionnaire’s disease and pneumonia largely the result of bad pulmonary circulation as a result of lack of fresh (energised) air? See: What causes pneumonia?


The Yin and Yang symbol is not far off a stylised depiction of a scalar wave and descriptions of Qi energy tie it closely to the blood: “Blood nurtures and supports Qi, or the body’s life force; in turn, Qi supplies the power, intelligence, and messages to propel Blood into all the physical structures where it’s required “

Blood is the mother of Qi; Qi is the commander of Blood”

Blood is the material substance that courses through our veins. But without the messages and wisdom of Qi and the power of its flow, we could not live. Without a sufficient quantity and quality of Blood, at the physical level, you cannot create Qi. All the body, mind, and spirit actions you perform in your daily life depend on the value and quality of Blood and Qi. The quality of your Qi helps Blood flow properly throughout your body.” – TCM

A very clear dependent duality here that mirrors the scalar wave theory of Konstantin Meyl


References:

The Heart and Circulation: An Integrative Model
Author: Branko Furst
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 144715276X
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1447152767

The Heart and Circulation: an Integrative Model – Branko Furst
The introduction to the book
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/bfm:978-1-4471-5277-4/1.pdf
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/288981713_The_Heart_and_Circulation_-_An_Integrative_Model

Living energies – Calum Coats
https://www.foodforthoughtstore.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Living-Energies-Callum-Coats-Part-1.pdf

Living energies – Calum Coats

http://www.foodforthoughtstore.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Living-Energies-Callum-Coats-Part-2.pdf


Flow patterns around heart valves – Charles Peskin – PhD thesis 1972
https://www.math.nyu.edu/~peskin/papers/csp_thesis.pdf

Neutrino Power – Konstantin Meyl
https://www.meyl.eu/go/indexa90a.html

The influence of the Golden Ratio on the Erythrocyte – M Purcell, R Ramsey
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/331103066_The_Influence_of_the_Golden_Ratio_on_the_Erythrocyte

Physics of Life – Life at Low Reynolds Number – Scott Turner
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZk2bMaqs1E

Scalar Waves – Konstantin Meyl
https://www.meyl.eu/go/index92d2.html

Blood and Qi – Traditional Chinese Medicine World Foundation
https://www.tcmworld.org/blood-and-qi/

Physiology, Pulmonary Circulation – Boyette, Burns
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK518997/

Potential vortex, newly discovered properties of the electric field – Konstantin Meyl
https://www.meyl.eu/go/indexb830.html