Even students of the Cayce legacy may be surprised to learn that the subject is discussed in more than twenty-five hundred readings. These readings suggest that all force is vibratory in nature, and they explore the topic of vibrations in terms of consciousness, healing, the material world, even the nature of God and physical reality. One of the few individuals to thoroughly examine the Cayce material on vibrations was longtime Cayce scholar Everett Irion, who stated:
Vibration is not only a deep subject, with far-reaching implications; it is a vast one, encompassing mathematical areas such as geometry and optics, the aesthetics of color, such metaphysical considerations as the nature of time and space, and various philosophical and theological concepts.
Irion, pgs. vii-viii
Irion pointed out that even though vibrations are the basis for all matter (and even consciousness) that exists, the subject remained relatively unknown by most individuals in spite of its importance. On one occasion, he used an analogy comparing vibrations to the roots of a tree in a forest. Although the roots support and feed the tree and without the roots the tree would not exist–no one ever cares about the roots. However, just as without the roots the tree could not exist, without vibration, there isn’t anything at all that could exist.
Another Cayce scholar and researcher, David McMillin, has found an amazing similarity between the Cayce information on vibrations and the nature of physical reality as it is theorized by the Superstring theory of physics. The Superstring theory essentially describes how the primary forces of nature are all just different manifestations of the same one force–this is the same