It's medical science and it's reality. Memories are not some magical emergent property. They must physically exist somewhere, and they are stored in the brain:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-memory-trace Where else would they exist? Some higher dimension that we could never measure? Some sort of magic? It's not fundamentalist at all to say what I've said, since there is basis for this in medical science. -William -----Original Message----- From: Daniel Canarutto <[email protected]> To: The Horn List <[email protected]> Sent: Sun, Jul 10, 2011 9:29 am Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Send in the clones... On 10Jul 2011, at 8:02 , [email protected] wrote: > Believe it or not, if there was a way to clone a human being in the > same method where molecule for molecule is the same - and the person > is the exact copy (same age, etc.) then the memories and skills and > talents would still be intact. The reasoning for this is that muscle > memory is not only built into the muscles, but the brain stores > memories as specific chemicals, so they are physically there and are > measurable. How do you happen to KNOW all this, so that you feel you can make such absolute statements? I find it always very funny that fundamentalists like you make totally unscientific, unproved and illogical statements in the name of science. Daniel Canarutto mathematical physicist & dedicated amateur hornist http://www.dma.unifi.it/~canarutto/ http://www.corno.it/ _______________________________________________ post: [email protected] unsubscribe or set options at https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/valkhorn%40aol.com _______________________________________________ post: [email protected] unsubscribe or set options at https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org
