The frequency of 37 Hz produces all the triple-digit frequencies (shown above), but its inverse, 73 Hz, is also fascinating. Dr. Paul Nogier (1908-1996) was a neurologist in Lyons, France who developed what are known as the Nogier Frequencies, based on 73 Hz. His son, Dr. Raphaël Nogier, has expanded his father’s research into a field of healthcare known as auriculotherapy or the stimulation of ear points. (For more information, see “History of Auriculotherapy” on PubMed.) From this developed the field of auriculomedicine, or “frequency medicine.”
The Nogier Frequencies are all octaves of Harmonic 73 and Dr. Paul Nogier used them to support and heal aspects of the nervous system.
But what’s truly curious about Harmonics 37 (scaled up to 74 Hz) and 73 is their proximity to the note of D in the harmonic series.
According to archaeomusicologist Richard Dumbrill, the ancients used the note of D at the frequency of 576 Hz as the center note of their scale, extending notes at 5th and 4th intervals in either direction. The note also functioned as the central string of the enneachordal (9-stringed) lyre.
In this video, I speculate that this construction of a scale allowed them to avoid the problematic note of F, that shows up last when generating 5ths in the key of C, and always follows the “moon” of accidentals or black keys on a piano.
The note of D enters the harmonic series at Harmonic 9 and scales up to 36 Hz, right next door to 37. It also scales up to 72 Hz, right next door to 73. So in this small bit of harmonic real estate, we have 72 (the third octave of D), 73 (the basis of the Nogier Frequencies), and 74 (the first octave of 37, a number central to freemasonry).
And while the note of D is a power-of-3 value, the reduced values of the octaves of Harmonic 73 follow the power-of-2 pattern of 1-2-4-8-7-5 in the Mobius Circuit.