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Re: How does a person wake up from coma speaking Welsh

By: DigSpace in ALEA | Recommend this post (0)
Fri, 06 Sep 13 1:10 AM | 77 view(s)
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Msg. 14587 of 54959
(This msg. is a reply to 14579 by orda)

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an issue with this might be structural, at some point one would need a larger hard drive unless new and fancy methods for data compression were steadily evolving. and, regarding beginning, beginning of the species or beginning of life. a few hundred thousand years of cumulative experience is one thing, but e few billion years would seem a bit taxing. as DNA is presumably not cogent of specialization so to speak, one would want know when the cumulative memory clock started. If an experience could be recorded in a single nucleotide, the human genome would have only be good for recording about one experience per year, and it would be full.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: How does a person wake up from coma speaking Welsh
By: orda
in ALEA
Thu, 05 Sep 13 7:38 PM
Msg. 14579 of 54959

My theory is that our DNA harbors all experiences from all of our ancestors going back to the very beginning. A sort of super database.

This is what instinct is. What gets passed down from one generation to the next. It also explains deja vu and reincarnation. And those organ transplant stories where someone, for example, was not a smoker but received an organ from a donor who was and then proceeded to smoke.

Somehow, in some people these past experiences are awakened from their DNA.

Probably somewhere in his past an ancestor was Welsh.

Someday perhaps someone will invent a DNA "reader" and then we'll be able to "see" all events from history by collecting and reading the DNA from all living things.


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