People are saying very weird things in the comments. To the extent that epigenetics transfers at all, they can't go very far.<p>For past-life memories, uh no.<p>For memories in non-brain tissues, there's a major detail problem there, if any of this pans out at all. For memories transferred from another person, it makes no sense. Your nerves don't transfer universal (between human) data files around, and your brain is a tangled mess. Memories won't transfer beyond, maybe, possibly, some stuff around personality, mood, and various neurotransmitter things.<p>And I don't think it would be common, if it happens at all, without intentional development and use of new tech.<p>For example it should theoretically be possible to recover the basic personality of a cryogenically vitrified brain, based quite a bit on genetics and some on brain structure, but beyond that I can't say. Unless you know many things I don't, and have carefully checked that you truly know them, you should not expect memory recovery, at least above the low double digits percentage.<p>And that's assuming "full technology", I for sure don't know to even get started.