DNA teleportation
DNA teleportation is a speculative concept suggesting that the electromagnetic signature of DNA can be transmitted and replicated remotely, a notion lacking scientific validation. It posits that diluted DNA's electromagnetic signals, when recorded and re-emitted, can induce DNA replication in a separate sample.
Where the word comes from
The term "DNA teleportation" is a modern coinage, combining "DNA," the deoxyribonucleic acid carrying genetic instructions, with "teleportation," derived from Greek "tele" (far) and Latin "portare" (to carry). It emerged in scientific discourse around 2009.
In depth
DNA teleportation is a pseudoscientific claim which suggests that DNA can produce electromagnetic signals (EMS) that are measurable when highly diluted in water. The claim suggests these signals can allegedly be recorded, transmitted electronically and re-emitted on another distant pure water sample, where the DNA can replicate through polymerase chain reaction, despite the absence of the original DNA in the new water sample. The idea was introduced by the Nobel laureate Luc Montagnier in 2009. It...
How different paths see it
What it means today
The notion of "DNA teleportation," as introduced by Luc Montagnier, stands as a curious intersection of cutting-edge biology and speculative physics, evoking ancient ideas of sympathetic magic and the pervasive influence of unseen forces. While firmly situated outside the scientific consensus, the concept touches upon a deep human yearning to understand how presence and essence might be conveyed across distance, a theme explored for millennia in esoteric traditions. Mircea Eliade, in his studies of shamanism, chronicled how certain cultures believed in the transmission of spiritual essence or vitality through objects or rituals, suggesting a form of energetic transference. Similarly, the concept of a universal "Akashic field," a subtle energetic medium described in various spiritual philosophies, posits that all information and events are imprinted and accessible. The modern fascination with information as a fundamental aspect of reality, independent of its physical substrate, echoes these ancient intuitions. While science seeks to understand DNA's molecular mechanisms, the idea of its "teleportation" taps into a more poetic, almost alchemical, understanding of life's fundamental codes. It invites us to ponder whether the informational patterns that constitute life might possess a plasticity and reach far beyond the confines of the cell. This speculative leap, however scientifically unsupported, encourages a contemplation of the subtle energies and interconnectedness that might underpin the material world, a contemplation that has long been the province of mystics and philosophers.
Related esoteric terms
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