Organ transplants and cellular memory

In your opinion, can transplanted organs transfer memory or certain traits of the donor?

Organ transplants have long inspired both fascination and fear. Official medicine claims that memory and personality are encoded solely in the brain, so a heart or kidney cannot “transfer” memories. However, there are accounts of patients who, after transplantation, suddenly changed habits, preferences, or even character – some began to enjoy foods or music they had previously disliked, others claimed to experience strange memories connected to the donor’s life. This phenomenon is sometimes called cellular memory, and for some it is proof of subtle mechanisms science has not yet explained, while for others it is merely a psychological effect and suggestion. Do transplants conceal a mystery that official science is afraid to admit?


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