WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2026 Poal.co

419

It makes me wonder. I've never had raw chicken yet I'm certain I know precisely what it tastes like.

It makes me wonder. I've never had raw chicken yet I'm certain I know precisely what it tastes like.

(post is archived)

[–] 5 pts

White babies have a natural aversion to blacks. Whites see a jewish phenotype and immediately become distrustful. Genetic memory is very real.

[–] 1 pt

Holy fuck we got a baby guy! Can I use you to quote the value on spic kids beaners abandoned at the border... you know for the cali govt. bro...

[–] 5 pts

Well I know this much, there was a video on here of a sheepherder dog who had never herded sheep before, and likely had never been around sheep it’s whole life, got out and it had brought someone else’s flock back to its owners. This kind of dog was bred to herd sheep, yet this particular dog was never trained to do it. How did it know what to do, and why did it feel the need to? There must be some genetic element in memory

[–] 1 pt

Not even epigenetics is needed. Selection exerts enormous influence on genes. It essentially designs them to be appropriate for environment. Genes are a record of what our genome has experienced. They are the memory it uses to learn from experience.

[–] 2 pts (edited )

Yeah but I think the point is is that there is no animal that does this naturally, so the first dog that was bred for this purpose had to be trained how to do it. And now all of The other dogs in it’s genetic succession also somehow carry that training

[–] 0 pt

Sounds like the argument that an eye couldn't have formed because there are supposedly no intermediate forms that are useful. Same argument. Choose the best of the litter to breed, and slowly they have characteristics you want. Not saying it must have been selection, but selection is more capable than suddenly popping behaviors out fully formed in one generation.

[–] 1 pt

Same experience, we had a Newfoundland which are bred as water rescue dogs. We took it to a lake for the first time, where everyone was swimming and she immediately jumped in the water and started trying to pull people out. She did this all day and she invented the process herself where she would get you to take her leash then she would take her leash in her mouth and paddle to shore. Kids had fun but she was a basket case.

[–] 1 pt

I have a rat terrier, and when we moved to the country, it was unbelievable. He can find exactly where a mole is hiding in their tunnels, dig them out with his snout and kill them. Our Pyrenees tries, but he just ends up biting and pawing at dirt . . . it's pretty funny to watch him try to do what the other instinctively knows.

[–] [deleted] 4 pts

Epigenetics

[–] 3 pts

Crows have it.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

That sucks for them..

[–] 0 pt

It's actually to their benefit. If there is a danger the warning is passed down to the next generation.

DNA hold the memories you had right up until conception.

That's damned cool. Gives your kids an advantage if you're smart.

[–] 0 pt

faith and trust related, as well. pronoia or paranoid? encodes

[–] 1 pt

I found the book Biology of Belief to explain this well.

[–] 1 pt

Polynesians love Spam because they have genetic memory of cannibalism...it supposedly tastes about the same. I, White, love Spam too, I don't know why.

Well I certainly don’t believe trauma from the Holocaust is genetically inherited.

[–] 0 pt

Lying about it for gain, is, though

[–] 0 pt

In reptiles, there is a tremendous amount of inherited memory for shapes, smells and even muscle movements and motor control.

Rats and mice have instinctive knowledge of how to react when a bird appears overhead, what smells to avoid and which to approach.

Humans have instinctive recoiling for spiders and rodents.

If anything, screens completely undo a lot of natural instincts and genetic knowledge.

[–] 0 pt

Smell is an explanation of how we know what something probably taste like.

[–] 1 pt

That doesn't explain mouth feel :)

Load more (5 replies)