Musica universalis
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- "Music of the spheres" redirects here; for other senses, see music of the spheres (disambiguation).
At the time, the sun, moon, and planets were thought to revolve around Earth in their proper spheres. The most thorough and imaginative description of the concept can be found in Dante's Divine Comedy. The spheres were thought to be related by the whole-number ratios of pure musical intervals, creating musical harmony. Johannes Kepler used the concept of the music of the spheres in his Harmonice Mundi in 1619.
According to Max Heindel's Rosicrucian writings, the heavenly "music of the spheres" is heard in the Region of Concrete Thought, the lower region of the World of Thought, which is an ocean of harmony. It is also referred in Esoteric Christianity that this is the place where it occurs the state of consciousness called the "Second heaven."
There are three branches of the Medieval concept of musica:
- musica universalis (sometimes referred to as musica mundana)
- musica humana (the internal music of the human body)
- musica instrumentalis (sounds made by singers and instrumentalists)
See also
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