Scientists from Moscow have successfully demonstrated that the chromosome apparatus contains an holographic memory which is typically distributed, associative and nonlocal. Furthermore, their experiments directly tie this holographic DNA memory with quantum nonlocality at photon/radio wave polarization levels.
This research uncovers an uncharted type of memory called solitone holographic cellular radio wave memory within biomacromolecules like DNA, RNA and proteins – solitone holographic cellular radio wave memory is present here too and acts as an important carrier of genetic and general regulatory information.
How does it work?
Russian scientists have demonstrated how frequency modulation on laser and radio waves can directly impact DNA (genetic coding). This means we can use words and thoughts to program our DNA into healthy states – something esoteric and spiritual teachers have long promoted – but now it has scientific backing! Of course, for this to work properly it requires sufficient frequency frequency for effective communication with DNA.
Here comes the new theory of DNA as a wave biocomputer into play. According to this concept, chromosome apparatus operates at two levels – material (1% of genes) responsible for protein synthesis; and wave level (99% of genes), using principles of holography which results in figurative speech structures with quantum nonlocality and entanglement capabilities.
Gariaev proposed that DNA molecules provide an image of the organism as a whole in a continuum which is both holographic and programmable, linked with quantum memory of photons and radio waves polarizations. Furthermore, his model allows DNA-molecules to act like biolasers by recording their own laser radiations as broadband radio waves with photon polarization correlations.
According to one theory, DNA molecules emitting polarization-coherent light as gene-sign signals of amino acids form holographic images that represent protein synthesis systems within their chromosomes, which can then be “read” using solitone electromagnetic fields or photon radio wave polarization correlations – evidence of quantum nonlocality (Gariaev, 2013).
This approach allows us to understand how genes and DNA-machines communicate on both material and wave levels, providing important interpretation of a novel composite hierarchic model of material-field, field-sign, holographic semiotic-semantic language-enciphering DNA-wave biocomputer arrangements – key components of Linguistic Wave Genetics (LWG).
Why does it work?
This research shows that genetic information at the level of chromosomes is stored as nonlocal radiowave physical fields correlated by polarizations with photons – an approach enabling DNA preparations to function as biolasers and record environments for laser sign information transmitted by other biological molecules, including RNA and proteins. Furthermore, EPR principles and quantum nonlocality enable DNA-wave biocomputer models based on EPR to function as new types of computers as well as new forms of EPR spectroscopy.
Garjajev and his team have demonstrated that living DNA always responds to laser light modulated with language or radio waves with appropriate frequencies – this makes reprogramming cells for any type of organism possible without using archaic methods of cutting out and reinserting genetic material.
Reason being, biomacromolecules carrying information capture the frequency pattern of linguistic messages and transfer it into photon polarizations; then these photon polarizations are transferred back onto DNA molecules as an encoded sign continuum.
It explains why certain individuals can transmit frequency patterns of certain genes to other individuals through holding hands, with the sensation sometimes experienced when doing so believed to be linked with this process. Holding hands also seems to cause DNA entanglement with other people and to create information-carrying holographic nature of genetic information – thus explaining our ability to influence our genetic code through conscious intent and communication, an idea long held by shamans and spiritual teachers but now supported scientifically.







