It's been this way since the 19th c. with Darwin, Freud, Galton, Malthus, T.H. Huxley and later Einstein. It's an institution created by the Royal Society for indoctrination purposes and for revolutionizing society ushering the NWO. It's an ideology steeped in occultism, transhumanism, naturalism and ancient thought and has little to do with the scientific method. Their main goal was to destroy the traditional Christian society and civilization and its notion of absolute truth and morality, and to erect a technocratic utopia based on relativism and scientism and I'd say they succeeded.
Their model has been the subject of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (he was part of it of course). Bertrand Russel wrote about it in his The Impact of Science on Society, H.G. Wells in his Open Conspiracy and The NWO and Julian Huxley in On living in a Revolution to name a few.
As if it was ever safe to "trust the experts"...
The knowledge filter alive, and well.
Appalachians and black people: First time?
EX (out of; from) PER (through, by means of), hence ex (life) per (inception towards death).
Suggested TRUST (want to hold onto) inverts perceivable THRUST (need to let go)...
Aka suggested progressivism tempting "play to reach".
Each ones perception within all perceivable implies ledge within known.
To publish implies making publicly known. Knowledge implies privately (ones perception) known (all perceivable).
Science/scio - "to know" aka ones perception or scientism aka as suggested by another.
It's been this way since the 19th c. with Darwin, Freud, Galton, Malthus, T.H. Huxley and later Einstein. It's an institution created by the Royal Society for indoctrination purposes and for revolutionizing society ushering the NWO. It's an ideology steeped in occultism, transhumanism, naturalism and ancient thought and has little to do with the scientific method. Their main goal was to destroy the traditional Christian society and civilization and its notion of absolute truth and morality, and to erect a technocratic utopia based on relativism and scientism and I'd say they succeeded.
Their model has been the subject of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (he was part of it of course). Bertrand Russel wrote about it in his The Impact of Science on Society, H.G. Wells in his Open Conspiracy and The NWO and Julian Huxley in On living in a Revolution to name a few.