Human beings often experience fear, sadness, comfort, or unease without any identifiable personal cause. Classical stimulus–response psychology struggles to explain emotional reactions that emerge without conscious memory, narrative recall, or direct learning.This preprint proposes the concept of Ancestral Resonance: a form of inherited Bold Memory embedded within DNA not as stories, names, or events, but as structural survival templates. Building on the TM–BM (Temporary Memory–Bold Memory) framework and the Continuity Reflex Model (CRM), the article argues that DNA functions as biological seed memory—preserving high-cost survival laws rather than low-cost informational details.Through interdisciplinary reasoning across biology, psychology, and artificial intelligence, the paper demonstrates that continuity, not data accumulation, is the true substrate of memory, emotion, and identity. This framework also explains why artificial systems require seed constraints and continuity mechanisms before learning can produce stable intelligence.The work is presented as a conceptual and theoretical contribution intended to stimulate further empirical and interdisciplinary research.
Khan Alim ul haq (Mon,) studied this question.