Ludwig van Beethoven
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Beethoven lives in the fifth dimension!

Artist reviewed by:
SongBlog

It is no secret that the three dimensions traditionally known are height, width and depth. Albert Einstein here from the fourth dimension, time is added.

But now, a new discovery puts musicians in the center of scientific attention: classical music is located no more and no less than in the fifth dimension. Or what is the same, the fifth dimension is musical.

This discovery was published on the web submediant, which states that scientists of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN, in English) shows how to detect a whole collection of Western classical music.

According to this publication, the scientists were conducting a routine search of the fifth dimension, for which they used the Large Hadron Collider, or particle accelerator, and suddenly detected the existence of that great full of works musical field that even reside beyond the limits of human perception.

The director general of CERN, Rolf-Dieter Heuer, said that "classical music transcends both the flow of linear time progresses, as the Euclidean space we are used: a musical work is a mysterious entity whose essence totally eludes our senses" .

But there's more: physicists say that any classical music recording sound is a kind of hologram projected in our daily reality for the real musical work, which vibrates eternally in a floating ethereal medium in and around us at all times.

I guess what I mean is that this fifth dimension really is not an exclusive field for classical music. I think all art, regardless of musical genre, but which is involved in a truly creative, hard work, creating a hologram of the fifth dimension.

"Think of the 'Fifth Symphony' by Beethoven. Sure, you might have searched the score and perhaps have heard or sought what orchestra plays. But he has ever encountered in its pure? Way," he says Heuer scientist, to which replied: "leaving a museum, you know that the paintings are still there but where does the 'Fifth of Beethoven' when you're not around Now we know.?".

While scientists have measured the density and the charge of classical music and have followed up their position in the cosmos, its role in the universe can not be explained yet.

Some astrophysicists have speculated that the Western classical canon of music can indeed be called "dark matter" and thinks this constitutes 95% of matter in the universe. Other astrophysicists are less certain.

"Classical music exists in a dimension impenetrable to humans, so we can not understand it fully," said theoretical physicist at Stanford, Leonard Susskind.

"It's exciting that science has finally proved that classical music inhabits a separate, autonomous kingdom, apart from our worldly experience," he continued. "But the question remains, what is classical music, even in our universe in the first place?".

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