Jason Jorjani
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Morphic resonance. Okay, yes, we were talking about morphic resonance because, you know,
Morphic resonance. Okay, yes, we were talking about morphic resonance because, you know,
Yeah, the hundredth monkey phenomenon. Look, they found this with rats too. They would run rats through mazes where they're shocked or rewarded depending on whether they can navigate the maze successfully. And they run the same kind of test with a completely different group of rats in a different country. And if the first group of... The first set of rats...
Yeah, the hundredth monkey phenomenon. Look, they found this with rats too. They would run rats through mazes where they're shocked or rewarded depending on whether they can navigate the maze successfully. And they run the same kind of test with a completely different group of rats in a different country. And if the first group of... The first set of rats...
Yeah, the hundredth monkey phenomenon. Look, they found this with rats too. They would run rats through mazes where they're shocked or rewarded depending on whether they can navigate the maze successfully. And they run the same kind of test with a completely different group of rats in a different country. And if the first group of... The first set of rats...
learns the maze successfully, the second set of rats in a different country picks up where the other group left off in their learning curve. So it suggests that there is this morphic resonance.
learns the maze successfully, the second set of rats in a different country picks up where the other group left off in their learning curve. So it suggests that there is this morphic resonance.
learns the maze successfully, the second set of rats in a different country picks up where the other group left off in their learning curve. So it suggests that there is this morphic resonance.
Yeah, Carl Prebram studied this in I think the 1980s, 70s, 80s. Carl Prebram. And he developed what's called a holographic brain theory that information is encoded in the brain. including skills.
Yeah, Carl Prebram studied this in I think the 1980s, 70s, 80s. Carl Prebram. And he developed what's called a holographic brain theory that information is encoded in the brain. including skills.
Yeah, Carl Prebram studied this in I think the 1980s, 70s, 80s. Carl Prebram. And he developed what's called a holographic brain theory that information is encoded in the brain. including skills.
are encoded in the brain, both content memory and behavioral memory, in a way that's similar to how an image is encoded in a hologram, where you can slice up the hologram any number of times, a true hologram, the kind that you need a laser beam to shine on for the image to pop out of, not the shitty cheap holograms that they distribute everywhere.
are encoded in the brain, both content memory and behavioral memory, in a way that's similar to how an image is encoded in a hologram, where you can slice up the hologram any number of times, a true hologram, the kind that you need a laser beam to shine on for the image to pop out of, not the shitty cheap holograms that they distribute everywhere.
are encoded in the brain, both content memory and behavioral memory, in a way that's similar to how an image is encoded in a hologram, where you can slice up the hologram any number of times, a true hologram, the kind that you need a laser beam to shine on for the image to pop out of, not the shitty cheap holograms that they distribute everywhere.
Like really good holograms where if you go to, I don't know, a museum or whatever exhibit and you see... super high fidelity.
Like really good holograms where if you go to, I don't know, a museum or whatever exhibit and you see... super high fidelity.
Like really good holograms where if you go to, I don't know, a museum or whatever exhibit and you see... super high fidelity.
Let's not put, I don't want Tupac winding up in the middle of this podcast.
Let's not put, I don't want Tupac winding up in the middle of this podcast.
Let's not put, I don't want Tupac winding up in the middle of this podcast.