Sort of. Her theory is that brains evolved per the usual Darwinian theory of the need for an on-board computer to make executive decisions in real time while pursuing the genes' ultimate goal of reproduction. But, according to Blackmore, something weird happened when an early hominid developed an uncanny knack for imitating behavior: a second replicator, the meme, was born. Blackmore suggests that from that point, memes played a role in driving biological evolution in directions best suited for the reproduction of memes, and speculates that the rapid expansion of the human brain is due largely to the memes' influence. She further suggests that what we experience as consciousness is in fact nothing more than the interaction of a multitude of memes running around in the hardware of our brains. So, in one sense the memes hijacked the existing hardware, but then they further modified it for their own use.