Our minds, and our ability to perceive, determine who we are.

Are we small or are we expansive? Are we weak or are we powerful? Are we slaves or are we free? Do we allow others to tell us who we are? Is govern-ment the control of the mind, there to direct the way our minds think so we can reflect back their answers? Do they establish a norm to which we conform? Is it time to reclaim what you know to be your own mind?

United States official signing an official document

Today, the expert opinion, the one considered the “official,”” the one with authority, is defined as a Specialist. These specialist-experts go through years of rote memory training (and large financial loans) to focus in on one aspect of one subject. We know these people by their titles: The thoracic heart surgeon, the patent attorney, the child psychologist. In some ways, this concept can be likened to crafting a sentence and focusing solely on where the period should be placed.

As a species, we didn’t always restrict focus so narrowly. A few short centuries ago, it was considered scholarly for a person to span a significant number of different subjects. Such people where known to draw on complex bodies of knowledge to solve specific problems. The term first used in the seventeenth century to describe this phenomenon was polymath.

knight in shining armor

If you were a Polymath, you were a “Renaissance man,” a great thinker of the Renaissance and Enlightenment ages, who excelled at several fields in science and the arts. Italian Leon Battista Alberti (1404–1472), described a polymath as “a man can do all things if he will.”

This definition of what today might be called a “Metaphysical man/woman” is limitless in his or her capacity for development, embraces all knowledge and develops his/her capacities as fully as possible. Past gifted thinkers sought to develop and express their abilities in all areas of accomplishment: intellectual, artistic, social and physical. They were highly respected for their acquisition of all available important knowledge and ability to syncretize it (Synchretism is the fusion of cultures, politics, philosophy, religion, etc.).

Image by www_slon_pics from Pixabay

Nicola Tesla (10 July 1856 – 7 January 1943) was an inventor, draftsman, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, physicist, and futurist known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current (AC) electricity supply system. Incidentally, Tesla had dropped out of school.

Since Tesla’s time, the polymath is now relegated to the status of endangered species. In the Age of Specialization, we see an expert in one field unable to network with experts in other fields. We’ve gone from “no man is an island” to every man for himself. In the transition, we have been herded together for “safety and security” to become a monoculture of captive thinkers. To think freely would be to separate yourself from the herd and be branded with Oppositional Deficit Disorder.

Unlike the polymaths of yesteryear, today experts draw on one specialized area of knowledge to solve complex problems that have only grown more complex (i.e., housing shortages, job shortages, water shortages, dollar depreciation and inflation, manipulated markets, unending war, social, economic, and cultural inequity, rise in police violence, rise in healthcare costs and a rise in disease rates in all age groups).

The Age of Specialization is a One World Globalist structure ruled by the few where everyone else is “les autres” – the others. It is the one-size-fits-all treatment model of the medical pharmaceutical system. It is teaching to the test of the educational system. It is the fallacy of choice in a two-party political system. It is the creation of the hive ego mind that keeps people working as drones, obedient and compliant.

milk bottle eggs cheese and banana

Like raw cream from grass-fed cows, concentrated power has risen to the few at the top at the expense of the many. We have been misled to believe we are impotent when the truth is that the experts are the ones without power. And they don’t want anyone else to know it.

As the noose tightens on human rights, is it time to know your own mind? As federal mandates usurp State autonomy to govern, is it time to think for yourself?

As new false-flag drills by militarized police serve to incite violence in order to close the curtain on individual freedoms, is it finally time to draw open the Age of Awakening?

 

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