Книга SUBVOCAL FIELD GENERATION Dr. Orveldane Trexwick

SUBVOCAL FIELD GENERATION

How Unexpressed Thoughts Produce Measurable Electromagnetic Disturbances in Adjacent Space

Език: Английски език
Корици: С меки корици
Издател: Independently published
Наличност: Очаква се зареждане
Издание 07. 06. 2026
19.83 38.78 лв
SUBVOCAL FIELD GENERATION How Unexpressed Thoughts Produce Measurable Electromagnetic Disturbances i...

Информация за книгата

Език
Английски език
Корици
Книга - С меки корици
Издадена
2026
страници
150
EAN
9798199815505
Enbook ID
52770987
Издател
Теглоt
192
Размери
152 x 229 x 10

Пълно описание

SUBVOCAL FIELD GENERATION How Unexpressed Thoughts Produce Measurable Electromagnetic Disturbances in Adjacent Space

You are thinking right now. You are forming sentences, composing reactions, swallowing opinions. You believe this is happening in private.

It is not.

In the autumn of 2009, Dr. Orveldane Trexwick and his team made a discovery in a converted university basement that took four years to believe and fifteen years to fully document: every thought that reaches linguistic form in the human mind generates a measurable bioelectric field that propagates beyond the skin and into the space surrounding the body. The muscles of the vocal tract, responding to the motor programs of internal speech, produce electrical output that does not stop at the surface. It continues outward. Into the air. Into the people near you.

This is not neuroscience as you have encountered it before. This is the physics of the unexpressed.

In this extraordinary work, Dr. Trexwick takes readers through the entire architecture of a phenomenon that was hiding in plain sight. He explains why the body can never truly be silent, how the laryngeal muscles encode the phonological content of thoughts you have chosen not to speak, and how the resulting bioelectric field carries that information into the physical environment around you at distances up to forty-three centimeters under documented laboratory conditions. He describes the spatial geometry of thought space, the field that surrounds each person, shaped by attention and amplified by emotion, strongest in the direction of the face, most intense toward the people a speaker is looking at.

Then he presents the results that change everything: controlled experiments demonstrating that the subvocal field of one person produces measurable physiological changes in a nearby person's throat musculature, below the threshold of conscious awareness, through direct bioelectric coupling. Strangers. Couples. People holding hands. The effect is real, it is reproducible, and it scales with emotional intensity and physical proximity in exactly the ways the physics predicts.

The implications move in every direction simultaneously. For technology: devices already exist that exploit these signals, and non-contact detection of internal speech is closer than most people realize. For health: chronic emotional suppression generates larger, not smaller, bioelectric output, and the fields that chronic suppression creates may influence the long-term physiology of the people in proximity. For ethics: a phenomenon that renders unexpressed thought partially detectable requires legal frameworks that do not yet exist. For intimacy: the reason a room changes when the right person enters may be measurable.

Dr. Trexwick writes with the precision of a scientist and the sensibility of someone who has spent fifteen years reckoning with a finding that refuses to be contained. He is honest about what the evidence establishes and careful about what it only suggests. The result is a book that is simultaneously rigorous and astonishing, a work that changes the reader's sense of what it means to be in a room with another person and to keep something to themselves.

The silence was never empty.

What it contained was waiting for instruments sensitive enough to find it.

A landmark work at the intersection of electrophysiology, social neuroscience, and the science of human presence.