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Post by piglet on Jun 15, 2024 9:41:10 GMT
I remember driving through anglia when i was very young to the seaside, we passed through a village and i said to my parents that i used to live there, i knew it inside out. They of course ignored it, i watched the village dissapear from the back window, i remember thinking i was happy there. There is an article in the Mail about such. Such experiences do seem to be geographically orientated, that we are born into the same areas.
Then there is near death experiences, ghosts, spiritualism, clairvoyance, remote viewing.....etc.
Is it hard to think there is more?
That the human brain, that thunks.....that to poo poo such means that you know it all?
You do not. The universe is a huge organism, connected, like the internet. No sparrow falls unnotivced. By god.
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Post by Baron von Lotsov on Jun 15, 2024 11:49:18 GMT
Answer: covalent atomic bonds.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 15, 2024 14:59:52 GMT
Answer: covalent atomic bonds. Really, what was the question? Scripture says "The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God." Maybe that's an answer.
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Post by Baron von Lotsov on Jun 15, 2024 15:37:53 GMT
Answer: covalent atomic bonds. what was the question? Why is it so hard?
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Post by Deleted on Jun 15, 2024 15:54:15 GMT
Ah, OK - so you were trolling the mind zone. Weren't you complaining about this sort of behaviour elsewhere?
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Post by Dogburger on Jun 15, 2024 16:02:29 GMT
DNA memory would explain it . We pass down traits through genetics why not memories ?
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Post by Baron von Lotsov on Jun 15, 2024 16:05:39 GMT
Ah, OK - so you were trolling the mind zone. Weren't you complaining about this sort of behaviour elsewhere? I was just taking the piss out of the title. My titles do tell you what the thread is about. Sorry, I did not notice which zone it was in. I'll shut up now and leave you to it.
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Post by ProVeritas on Jun 26, 2024 20:19:35 GMT
DNA memory would explain it . We pass down traits through genetics why not memories ? Have to say I find the idea of Genetic Memory very interesting. I mean what are "animal instincts" if not some form of Genetic Memory? All The Best
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Post by sandypine on Jun 26, 2024 21:21:09 GMT
DNA memory would explain it . We pass down traits through genetics why not memories ? Have to say I find the idea of Genetic Memory very interesting. I mean what are "animal instincts" if not some form of Genetic Memory? All The Best I do not think it is genetic memory as such more like programmed behaviour. If A happens do B etc. There has been a lot of research towards whether memory is passed on and so far there is no evidence. A bit like one gets passed on muscles that will respond to exercise but they do not remember being strong if the parent was a weightlifter.
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Post by ProVeritas on Jun 27, 2024 8:33:57 GMT
Have to say I find the idea of Genetic Memory very interesting. I mean what are "animal instincts" if not some form of Genetic Memory? All The Best I do not think it is genetic memory as such more like programmed behaviour. If A happens do B etc. There has been a lot of research towards whether memory is passed on and so far there is no evidence. A bit like one gets passed on muscles that will respond to exercise but they do not remember being strong if the parent was a weightlifter. Not sure what you know about frogs. My uncle has a pond, lots of frogs and frogspawn. We wanted some frogs in our pond, so as soon as the frogspawn was laid he gave us some. At this point the spawn is just an egg. A few weeks after being placed in our the spawn hatches, tadpoles emerge, and start to grow into frogs. 3 Months later the tadpoles are becoming fully fledged frogs. As soon as they entered the adult frog stage we started losing a few frogs each night. At the same time my uncle (lives about 250 yards away) starts seeing an influx of "new frogs". Including three of four that had very distinctive markings, and that had previously been in our pond. The egg-stage frogspawn has no learned or programmed behaviour, it is an egg. But the adult stage frog somehow knows how to get from where it is, to where the egg it emerged from was spawned. All The Best
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Post by see2 on Jun 27, 2024 10:09:33 GMT
Answer: covalent atomic bonds. Really, what was the question? Scripture says "The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God." Maybe that's an answer. There is no proof that God exists. But the human Sensory System that can neither rationalise nor apply logic, creates feelings that the thinking brain attempts to apply 'logic and rational' to.
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Post by see2 on Jun 27, 2024 10:25:30 GMT
DNA memory would explain it . We pass down traits through genetics why not memories ? Humans, and probably all animals are hard wired to be wary. It is this piece of DNA that triggers feelings mainly related to the presence or absence of actual or perceived danger. In this way the non-logical sensory system (that works at a faster speed than the logical mind) is learning and remembering things about the world and its experiences starting even before the logical brain is formed. In short, AFAICS, we are who we learn to be.
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Post by piglet on Jun 27, 2024 10:43:07 GMT
To state that god does not exist is not science, to discount anything in whatever field is to limit yourself, and be ignorant. Invisible energies like electricity, gas, would never have been discovered with this thinking. To say that there is god to you is futile, you must find it for yourself, if you want to.
The mind is the crucible of creation, think it and it becomes..... See2, the universe is connected, can you explain how that works, you seem to know it all....that god, a greater existence, does not exist, you must have evidence. There is evidence god exists, am i getting into an endless argument with you?...no.
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Post by ProVeritas on Jun 27, 2024 12:14:40 GMT
To state that god does not exist is not science, to discount anything in whatever field is to limit yourself, and be ignorant. Invisible energies like electricity, gas, would never have been discovered with this thinking. Actually these things were discovered, and examined and eventually understood precisely because our ancestors rejected the "gods did it" bullshit propagated by priests with vested interests in retaining power and wealth over the masses. Also see2 NEVER said "god does not exist", he said "there is no proof that god exists" - two very different statements. All The Best
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Post by sandypine on Jun 27, 2024 18:20:55 GMT
I do not think it is genetic memory as such more like programmed behaviour. If A happens do B etc. There has been a lot of research towards whether memory is passed on and so far there is no evidence. A bit like one gets passed on muscles that will respond to exercise but they do not remember being strong if the parent was a weightlifter. Not sure what you know about frogs. My uncle has a pond, lots of frogs and frogspawn. We wanted some frogs in our pond, so as soon as the frogspawn was laid he gave us some. At this point the spawn is just an egg. A few weeks after being placed in our the spawn hatches, tadpoles emerge, and start to grow into frogs. 3 Months later the tadpoles are becoming fully fledged frogs. As soon as they entered the adult frog stage we started losing a few frogs each night. At the same time my uncle (lives about 250 yards away) starts seeing an influx of "new frogs". Including three of four that had very distinctive markings, and that had previously been in our pond. The egg-stage frogspawn has no learned or programmed behaviour, it is an egg. But the adult stage frog somehow knows how to get from where it is, to where the egg it emerged from was spawned. All The Best The fertilised egg has all teh information programmed into it to build an adult frog that will behave in a certain way both from external stimulus and its own innate programming.
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