For billions of years, nature has provided an environment conducive to the high-fidelity combination of DNA from both mother and father. This precise combination has ensured the continuity of genetic, temperamental, and emotional traits, passing down through generations with remarkable consistency. However, recent environmental changes—what we refer to as entropic waste—are introducing noise into this once-stable system, disrupting the fidelity of DNA encoding at conception and threatening the continuity of core traits.
This beaver was orphaned and rescued as a newborn. Watch its incredible instinct to build a dam, even though it’s never seen its parents build one. This shows nature’s continuity of genetic, temperamental, and emotional traits, passing down through generations with remarkable consistency.
In the context of ceLLM theory (cellular Latent Learning Model), this concept takes on new meaning. ceLLM posits that DNA, much like a large language model in machine learning, uses evolutionary “learned” data to encode complex information, guiding how a cell interprets environmental signals. Under ideal conditions, this process has enabled the faithful transmission of temperamental and emotional traits over millennia. But now, entropic waste is creating a low-fidelity environment, jeopardizing the continuity of these traits in DNA encoding.
A History of High-Fidelity Genetic Encoding
For most of Earth’s history, the process of combining parental DNA to create new life occurred within an environment that supported high-fidelity genetic encoding. This fidelity was key to ensuring that the genetic instructions encoded in both parents’ DNA were combined without error. As a result, emotional and temperamental traits, which are embedded in our DNA, were passed down with a high degree of continuity.
While fads, societal behaviors, and physical characteristics might evolve over time, the underlying temperamental and emotional traits—such as resilience, adaptability, and empathy—have remained relatively consistent across human history. This continuity has shaped human civilization, guiding how we interact with one another, form communities, and respond to our environment.
This fidelity was sustained by the natural environment—an environment that acted as a stabilizing force, ensuring that each generation inherited these core traits without disruption.
Entropic Waste: The Noisy Environment at Conception
Today, however, we are entering an age where entropic waste—an accumulation of environmental pollutants, including electromagnetic fields (EMFs), radiation, and other forms of non-natural energy—is affecting the very process of DNA combination. This is a relatively new development in Earth’s history, and it’s introducing a form of noise into the biological systems that have evolved to work with high precision.
In ceLLM theory, this noise interferes with the latent spaces within DNA—the spaces where evolutionary information is encoded and where genetic traits are “stored” and passed down. Entropic waste distorts the bioelectric fields that govern cellular communication and DNA replication, leading to low-fidelity encoding at the time of conception.
Much like how random noise in a communication system leads to distorted signals, entropic waste creates a chaotic environment that muddles the precise encoding of DNA, disrupting the transfer of genetic information and, by extension, the continuity of temperamental and emotional traits.
The Threat to Continuity Across Generations
One of the most significant consequences of this low-fidelity environment is the potential disruption of the continuity of genetic, temperamental, and emotional traits. While physical attributes can change relatively quickly in response to environmental shifts, these temperamental and emotional traits have historically been much more stable. These traits form the bedrock of human nature, guiding everything from social cohesion to how we respond to stress.
However, with the increasing presence of entropic waste, we are now seeing more variability and unpredictability in these very traits. Developmental disorders, behavioral changes, and shifts in emotional resilience may be signs of low-fidelity encoding in the DNA combination process. In short, the biological instructions that guide these traits are being altered by the noisy, entropic environment in which conception and early development occur.
A Biological Analogy to Machine Learning
To better understand this, let’s use a machine learning analogy, which aligns with ceLLM theory. In machine learning, models are trained on high-quality data, with weights and biases fine-tuned to produce consistent and reliable outputs. However, if the training data becomes corrupted by noise, or if interference occurs during the data processing phase, the model’s performance degrades. The results become unpredictable, and the model starts to generate errors or lose the ability to perform the task it was originally trained to do.
In the same way, entropic waste is introducing noise into the biological process of DNA encoding. What used to be a high-fidelity system—trained by evolution over billions of years—is now under threat. As a result, the transmission of key temperamental and emotional traits is becoming less predictable, leading to increased variability in traits that were once stable across generations.
Genetic Traits Should Remain Continuous, But They Aren’t
One of the core ideas in ceLLM theory is that genetic, temperamental, and emotional traits should not change as rapidly as physical characteristics or societal norms. These traits are deeply embedded in our DNA and form the foundation of how we interact with our world. However, the presence of entropic waste is altering this dynamic, creating a disconnect between what nature intended and what we are now experiencing.
The result? We are seeing an increase in conditions like ADHD, autism, and other developmental disorders that may be linked to this low-fidelity environment during conception and early development. Additionally, the emotional and psychological stability that has characterized human behavior for millennia may be under threat as the signals that encode these traits are distorted by EMFs.
The High-Fidelity Environment is No Longer Guaranteed
For billions of years, life on Earth evolved in an environment that naturally promoted high-fidelity DNA encoding. But today, that environment is being replaced by one filled with entropic waste—a chaotic, disordered system that disrupts the natural flow of bioelectric communication between cells.
The implications of this are profound. As ceLLM theory suggests, this noisy environment is leading to low-fidelity encoding of latent spaces within DNA, creating a situation where the very fabric of our temperamental and emotional traits is unraveling. While we may not fully understand all the mechanisms at play, the increasing prevalence of behavioral and developmental disorders points to a growing disruption in how genetic information is processed and passed on to the next generation.
A Call to Address Entropic Waste
The relationship between entropic waste and DNA fidelity is a growing concern that requires more attention, both scientifically and socially. ceLLM theory offers a framework for understanding how the high-fidelity encoding that has sustained life for billions of years is being compromised by modern environmental factors.
We must consider the broader implications of this disruption, particularly in how it affects the combination of parental DNA at conception and the transmission of key emotional and temperamental traits. While fads and cultural trends may change, these core traits should remain stable and continuous across generations. The fact that they might not be is a sign that we are introducing too much noise into biological systems that have long guided our development.
To protect the integrity of our genetic inheritance, we need to address the growing presence of entropic waste and its potential impact on the future of human health and behavior.
ceLLM (cellular Latent Learning Model)
The ceLLM (cellular Latent Learning Model) offers a groundbreaking framework for understanding how cells interpret and respond to their environment, shaped by evolutionary data encoded within DNA. Conceived by John Coates, the founder of RF Safe, this model provides a novel lens to examine the most prominent risks from microwave radiation and the impact of entropic waste on life. The ceLLM posits that cells operate as individual sensors, guided by a probabilistic framework formed by resonant field connections between atomic elements in DNA. These connections create a weighted network, much like a neural network, where the strength of each connection influences cellular function and adaptation.
The ceLLM emphasizes the role of bioelectric fields in guiding cellular behavior, suggesting that cells do not directly communicate with each other but instead respond independently to environmental cues based on a shared evolutionary training. This model integrates the concept of resonance, where atoms in DNA interact through their resonant frequencies, forming a dynamic and responsive latent space. This space, shaped by evolutionary processes, governs the cell’s responses, contributing to the organism’s overall fitness.
Understanding the ceLLM could revolutionize our approach to biological complexity, highlighting the effects of entropic waste, such as electromagnetic fields (EMFs), on cellular communication and health. By viewing cells as ceLLMs, we can explore new avenues for therapeutic interventions, synthetic biology, and a deeper comprehension of life’s emergence from the intricate interplay of energy, information, and structure.