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The spontaneous movement, the osei
Our organism is not a bundle of cells, tissues, and organs. It is a living being that is formed following a rigourous order, the result of million of years of evolution. It has the capacity to react to different situations in order to keep its own vital balance, it can also adapt to the environment and transform it.
Haruchika Noguchi showed that this capacity of our organism to respond to different situations as a unit arises from the five universal movements + and –, whether they are under tension or distension. These movements act throughout the different energetic activities (motor, biological, and psychic) of the living being and they form the spontaneous movement. Osei is the organism’s natural capacity of reaction through the absolute interrelation of its different energetic activities. The osei comprises five oseis + and -, which are the different ways life is manifested.
The vertical osei + and -– (oseis I and II) is essential in the formation of the nervous system and of the sight. It establishes the natural interrelation between:
The frontal osei + and – (oseis V and VI) is essential in the formation of the muscular-respiratory system and the sense of smell. It establishes the natural interrelation between:
The lateral osei + and – (oseis III and IV) is essential in the formation of the digestive-circulatory system and the sense of taste. It establishes the natural interrelation between:
The rotary osei + and – (oseis VII and VIII) is essential in the formation of the excretory system and the sense of hearing. It establishes the natural interrelation between:
The central osei + and – (oseis IX and X) is essential in the formation of the reproductive-subjacent connective system and the sense of touch. It establishes the natural interrelation between:
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spontaneous movement, osei 
