Before there is chemistry, there is electricity. The heart generates a field detectable several feet away from the body. The brain produces oscillating currents that synchronize across hemispheres during states of deep focus. Cells communicate through ion gradients, bioelectric signals, and electromagnetic pulses that propagate faster than any chemical messenger. The body is, at its foundation, an electrical system.
This is established science. It has been since Galvani made frog legs twitch with a metal probe in 1780, and confirmed repeatedly in the two and a half centuries since. We have EEG, ECG, electromyography, and galvanic skin response. Medicine reads the body’s electricity constantly.
And yet almost no consumer technology is designed with this in mind.
Most wearables measure output from the body’s electrical systems without interacting with them. Phones, laptops, and wireless devices emit fields that the body has to navigate alongside its own signals. Technology designed to work with the body’s electrical nature, rather than alongside it indifferently, would be a fundamentally different category of tool.
The researchers who are asking that question are finding interesting things.
Michael Levin’s lab at Tufts has spent years mapping how bioelectric gradients control the development and regeneration of tissue. Not just in frogs and flatworms, though those are the most dramatic cases. The same bioelectric patterning governs how wounds close, how tumors decide whether to grow or stop, how organs know what shape to become. The body’s electrical field carries information about structure. Change the field, and you change the outcome.
Pulsed electromagnetic field therapy has been cleared by the FDA for bone healing since 1979. It is used to encourage fracture repair when conventional approaches stall. The mechanism: the applied electromagnetic field mimics the body’s own signaling, giving cells the information they need to do the work they already know how to do.
Heart-brain coherence research at HeartMath shows that the heart’s electromagnetic field, the strongest in the body, changes in measurable ways depending on emotional state. In coherent states, the field becomes more ordered. That ordered signal can be detected in the brain waves of people nearby. The body broadcasts. Other bodies receive.
Taken together, this paints a picture of a body that is deeply responsive to its electromagnetic environment, one that sends and receives, that learns from frequency, that heals and self-organizes according to electrical instructions.
Technology built on this understanding would look different from what we have now. It would work with the body’s inherent intelligence. It would add coherent signals to an environment that has grown chaotically noisy. It would amplify the body’s own healing capacity rather than route around it.
Some devices are moving in this direction. PEMF mats, binaural audio tools, photobiomodulation devices, near-field resonance technology. The field is young and the research is uneven. But the underlying premise, that the body responds to frequency, that coherent signals support coherent function, is solid enough to build on.
The next wave of meaningful health technology will probably look less like pharmaceutical intervention and more like tuning an instrument. The body already knows the right notes. The job is giving it the conditions to play them.
