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The application
of music in medicine has been practised in all high cultures. The most
famous representative for this is the father of our scientific thinking:
the Greek scholar, physician, musicologist, mathematician and philosopher
Pythagoras (around 500 B.C.). He not only investigated the close connection
of music to mathematics but also explored its relevance to promoting
health and healing.
As the classical
composer Peter Hübner pointed out in his lectures at the Universities
of Tel Aviv, Heidelberg and Magdeburg, Pythagoras assumed that
those same universal laws of harmony which naturally govern the microcosm
of music also determine the harmony of the natural functions in the
interior world of man himself and, furthermore, accord with those laws
of harmony which direct the entire course of biological evolution
(3).
Pythagoras`s
insights were explored further 1500 years later. The famous scholar
and physician Avicenna took them up again and propagated them in the
medical world. Avicenna knew about the power of emotions on bodily functions
and medical music for him was a discipline to restore emotional balance
and thus to relieve psychosomatic disorders.
For Avicenna the art of healing rested on three pillars: the treatment
with music, the application of medically effective substances and on
physiotherapeutic treatments, including surgery (4)
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