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What Scientists Got Wrong About Consciousness

What if your memories, personality, and identity aren’t stored only in your brain?

In Part 1, we examined cases of people living normal lives with almost no brain tissue and the theory that consciousness could exist beyond the physical organ. Now, we go even deeper.

In this video, we explore documented cases of organ recipients who inexplicably inherit their donors’ habits, cravings, and memories. We delve into the science of “cellular memory,” why the heart has its own nervous system, and the intriguing near-death experiences of patients who accurately described events while clinically dead.

If consciousness can travel through a transplanted organ … and persist when the brain flatlines … then where does it actually live—and where does it go?

🖋️ Jerry and Carter Heart Transplant Case (Paul Pearsall Study)

🖋️ 74 Organ Transplant Cases Over a Decade (Pearsall et al.)

🖋️ Danielle’s Heart Transplant and Guitar Playing

🖋️ Claire Sylvia’s Chicken Nugget Cravings

🖋️ 2024 Study: 89 Percent Personality Changes, Heart Recipients Twice as Likely

🖋️ Dr. Mitchell Liester’s Cellular Memory Hypothesis (6 Types)

🖋️ Pam Reynolds Near-Death Experience Case

🖋️ The Lancet Dentures Case (Netherlands Cardiac Arrest)

🖋️ Dr. Janice Holden’s 93-Patient NDE Interview Study (92.5 Percent Accuracy)

🖋️ Dr. Jeffrey Long’s 617-Case Survey (97.6 Percent Accuracy)

🖋️ Non-Local Consciousness Theory (Dr. Larry Dossey)

🖋️ Consciousness Does Not Go to the Grave—So Where Does It Go?

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