The Hundredth Monkey and the DNA Resonance Hypothesis: Flipping the Script — Moving Beyond Brain-to-Brain to DNA-Based Transmission Through Bioelectrical and Quantum Mechanisms
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This paper proposes an integrative framework linking quantum informational fields, endogenous bioelectric signaling, and linguistic patterning in biological systems as foundational to morphogenesis and consciousness. Drawing on models from Bohm’s implicate order, biofield physics, and emerging data from wave genetics and biophoton research, it outlines a hypothesis in which biological structure and cognitive function are not merely outcomes of genomic coding but active, field-mediated phenomena. The hypothesis suggests that DNA operates both as a receiver and transmitter of nonlocal information, modulating development through vibrational coherence and semantically structured fields. The framework synthesizes findings from Levin’s work on bioelectric patterning, Popp’s biophoton theory, and linguistic wave theory to argue for a field-based mechanism that underlies cellular organization, memory storage, and potentially even intention-driven effects. This model presents a challenge to classical gene-centric biology by proposing that semantic and energetic coherence across biological systems plays a central role in form and function. Implications include new directions for regenerative medicine, consciousness studies, and biocommunication, as well as a possible theoretical basis for observed anomalies in psi research and intentional influence on physical systems.KeywordsQuantum biology, bioelectric signaling, morphogenesis, consciousness, biophotons, wave genetics, implicate order, nonlocality, semantic fields, psi phenomena