Memory transplant claimed in snails
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(2018-05-19, 12:07 AM)stephenw Wrote: ... I submit that the more specific and measurable elemental mental process is understanding. OK, so this is one of those times when I know what all the words mean - in a dictionary sense - but I understand none of it. Perhaps I am a non-starter because I can't yet grasp what you mean, exactly, when you use the word "information". Information, to me, is something about a thing - not the thing itself. Are you saying that there is no difference between the two? If so, I'm having a really hard time conceptualising that. With respect, when you write these explanations I'm getting the impression that you have assumed a level of understanding in the reader. That may well be true for some here but, right now, not for me. I guess that, if I were as devoted to the subject as you are, I would have read and digested a lot more information about information but I have yet to find a good enough reason to delve into the science to any significant extent.
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson
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(2018-05-19, 07:50 AM)Max_B Wrote: I know exactly what you meant... and my response is the same... In that case I have to say I'm baffled. Is there some difference between the two groups of donees that I've missed - other than that the RNA they were injected with came from different groups of donors?
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(2018-05-19, 08:41 AM)Max_B Wrote: You seem to think that the difference between the behavior of adult snails injected with RNA from other trained adult snails, compared to the behavior of adult snails injected with RNA from other untrained adult snails rules out any morpic-type-field effect... I don't know why/how you have come to that understanding? Simply because the first group of donees shows the response, and the second group of donees doesn't. Unless there's some reason why morphic resonance should affect the first group and not the second, then it doesn't appear to be an effect of morphic resonance. Obviously the idea of a control group is that it's identical with the experimental group in every respect except the one being tested - in this case, the injection of RNA from trained, rather than untrained, snails. Unless morphic resonance is somehow linked to the type of RNA that's injected, then the lack of response in the control group appears to rule out morphic resonance - or any other mechanism which would be equally effective for the control group and the experimental group. Unless, as I said, there's some other difference between the control group and the experimental group that I've missed.
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