IUBio

You Must Remember This

Liar42 liar42 at aol.com
Mon Oct 29 15:04:31 EST 2001


>Any relationship to memory is speculative, and I don't think they really
propose how it works (which is why some of the criticisms expressed in this
thread doesn't hold, because the proposal is too vague to
criticize.)

Lol ...

But apart from that if I use two main systems for long term memory and then
some dude comes hopping 
that suddenly some generalized stuff 
that does not point out what would differentiate the special systems from other
systems that I do not regard as long terms 
is supposed to have this sort of mystical memory storing thingie in the DNA,
as if that would mess up nothing 
concerning stuff rattling down the gene triplets & having to do with substances
productions 
if it kept altering around there any time 
some stuff is learned by my used long term memory systems (that are not all in
the brain, I am aware of that)
it ain't really throw me off the rocker due to being overly impressed by that
idea.

Apart from that how would my magic systems fish the stuff out the cells, and
there not just cell internal stuff but straight even sort of a level deeper,
the inner part where the double helix is?

Giggle.

And now I don't even wish to wreck my brain if one had an alteration into:

A-T
C-G
A-T
G-C

or whatever, if the off-reader were to rattle down the other side of the
genestring what that is then suppose to be for a memory.

This is not realistic, but GAAAAAA! would then turn to TTTTTTC! in my
exclamations about someone, or what?!

Giggle.

(Actually my laugher might throw me faster off the computer chair 
than being impressed by some dude coming hopping with a theory that long term
memories are supposed to be stored in the genes 
or something like that.)



But just for fun, what about the other gene string in a cell, the symbiont, it
just sits there or it is supposed to be involved in this mysterious memory
storing straight in the genes?


GAA-Greetings (or would that be TTC?)
                                                          Ci.







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