The Planet’s Pulse: Can Earth Have a Biological Heartbeat?

Authors

Swati Pal

Senior Assistant Professor Indraprastha College for Women Delhi University, Delhi (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2025.12110044

Subject Category: Environment

Volume/Issue: 12/11 | Page No: 469-477

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2025-11-22

Accepted: 2025-11-28

Published: 2025-12-05

Abstract

The question of whether the Earth possesses a biological heartbeat invites a profound interdisciplinary inquiry that bridges planetary science, ecology, philosophy, indigenous cosmology, and systems theory. Traditionally, Earth has been perceived as an inanimate sphere governed by mechanical forces, yet emerging research across climatology, complexity studies, oceanography, geophysics, and biospheric feedback processes suggests that the planet demonstrates rhythmic, self-regulating patterns analogous to biological pulse. Atmospheric oscillations, carbon absorption cycles, thermohaline circulation, Schumann resonances, geomagnetic pulses, vegetation rhythms, and tectonic breathing reveal coordinated fluctuations essential for maintaining habitability. These patterns resemble the dynamic equilibrium that a heartbeat sustains within living organisms. Indigenous traditions, from the Vedic concept of Pṛthvī Mātā to Andean Pachamama, have long regarded Earth as a sentient being with breath and pulse, offering interpretive frameworks that modern science is only now rediscovering through empirical observation. Climate disruption, biodiversity collapse, and hydrological instability can be understood as planetary arrhythmias—signals of systemic distress triggered by human activity. This perspective reframes environmental crisis not simply as degradation of resources but as trauma within a living system. Recognizing Earth’s rhythmic coherence challenges anthropocentric models and calls for a planetary ethic grounded in kinship rather than dominance. Listening for the planet’s pulse becomes both a scientific task and a moral responsibility, suggesting that the future of environmental thought lies in integrating measurable planetary rhythms with a renewed philosophy of relational existence. In this sense, the heartbeat of Earth is not merely a metaphor but a transformative lens through which humanity may reimagine its place within the living world.

Keywords

planetary rhythm; Gaia theory; Earth system science; complexity and emergence; climate destabilization; hydrological cycles; biospheric feedback; Schumann resonance

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References

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