Well I was going to ignore this post but I'm here to learn and I realize that some also must be taught.
My investigation led me to Ed rosenthal and he clearly states that a herm does pass on its tendency to herm.
I have not read that and it is not incorrect.
The problem is you still do not understand what a hermaphrodite is.
When you make feminized seeds`, you do not use a hermaphrodite.
You take a female plant, that means it has two X chromosomes. If you grew this plant out it would be a normal, female plant.
That is not a hermaphrodite, right?
Instead of growing that female plant out, you spray it with colloidal silver. The colloidal silver activates hormones that make the female plant produce male flowers. Using colloidal silver does not really stress the plant, it just makes it do what it is supposed to do when stressed.
That plant is still the same genetically as it was before it was sprayed.
It is not a hermaphrodite.
You can not alter dna or add genetics to a plant with colloidal silver or anything I know of.
You can say that the definition of a hermaphrodite is a plant that has both male and female flowers, but that would be an incomplete definition. A hermaphrodite has both an X and a Y chromosome. It is capable of producing male, female and mostly hermaphrodite plants.
Look up "Ask Ed" and you will find why I see it this way. I'm definitely going to listen to Ed on this topic. He states that plants herm for one of 2 reasons;1 is stress and 2 is hereditary trait passed down. To the OP, when there is an arguement on a topic don't follow either persons advice. Find a reputable source, like Ed, and make your own call.
I'll stick with the facts.
A female cannabis plant that "herms" due to stress is most likely not a real hermaphrodite.
Properly made feminized seeds are not made with hermaphrodites.