Genetic Memory: The Foundation of Mind

How do we inherit the blue print of our body and mid from our parents at conception? This blue print comes in the form of information stored in a part of genetic memory called phylogenetic memory. It is the subject of study of study in Phylogenetics, a specialization in the discipline of biology. In time, the phylogenetic memory is overlaid by another layer of genetic memory containing information on the extent to which various genes should express themselves. Information about gene expression is studied in another specialization in biology called Epigenetics. Information stored in epigenetic memory changes the effect of the information stored in our phylogenetic memory.  

We inherit phylogenetic memory from our parents at conception and we start accumulating epigenetic memory soon thereafter. Thus, content of genetic memory at birth is the phylogenetic memory inherited at conception plus epigenetic memory accumulated since conception. That explains how newborns prefer the tastes, smells, and sounds experienced prenatally.

We referred to strong and weak natural forces in the mental domain keeping the universe going just like as the natural forces in the material domain. In the mental domain, natural forces are transmitted as inbuilt natural instincts or tendencies through phylogenetic inheritance. We inherit the inbuilt instincts of our mind phylogenetically from our parents, they inherited them from their parents and so on back to the first ever primitive single cell life form that existed on the planet billions of years ago through. The genetic chain continues unbroken from now back to antiquity. We accumulate epigenetic memory as we respond to our environment personally. Both the phylogenetic and epigenetic memory runs our brain or mind unconsciously without any awareness on our part.