Anonymous ID: f6c18f Nov. 9, 2023, 3:59 p.m. No.19889772   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19889753

Don't forget 'Musselman', Anon. TJ says:

 

The Ambassador [of Tripoli] answered us that it was founded on the Laws of their Prophet, that it was written in their Koran, that all nations who should not have acknowledged their authority were sinners, that it was their right and duty to make war upon them wherever they could be found, and to make slaves of all they could take as Prisoners, and that every Musselman who should be slain in battle was sure to go to Paradise.

 

Letter from the commissioners, John Adams & Thomas Jefferson, to John Jay, 28 March 1786

Thomas Jefferson, Letters of Thomas Jefferson

Anonymous ID: f6c18f Nov. 9, 2023, 4:26 p.m. No.19889907   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19889884

What is coded in your DNA?

 

Mankind is repressed.

 

We will be repressed no more.

Q4966

 

Genetic Memory: How We Know Things We Never Learned

Genetic memory, simply put, is complex abilities and actual sophisticated knowledge inherited along with other more typical and commonly accepted physical and behavioral characteristics. Whether called genetic, ancestral or racial memory, or intuitions or congenital gifts, the concept of a genetic transmission of sophisticated knowledge well beyond instincts, is necessary to explain how prodigious savants can know things they never learned. … the animal kingdom provides ample examples of complex inherited capacities beyond physical characteristics. Monarch butterflies each year make a 2,500-mile journey from Canada to a small plot of land in Mexico where they winter. In spring they begin the long journey back north, but it takes three generations to do so. So no butterfly making the return journey has flown that entire route before. How do they “know” a route they never learned?

 

… I agree with Dr. William Carpenter that savants demonstrate a “congenital aptitude for certain mental activity, which showed itself at so early a period as to exclude the notion that it could have been acquired by the experience of the individual”. I call that genetic memory, and I propose that it exists in all of us. The challenge is how to tap that dormant capacity non-intrusively and without a brain injury or similar incident. https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/genetic-memory-how-we-know-things-we-never-learned/

 

“In each of the foregoing cases, then, we have a peculiar example of the possession of an extraordinary congenital aptitude for certain mental activity, which showed itself at so early a period as to exclude the notion that it could have been acquired by the experience of the individual. To such congenital gifts we give the name of intuitions: it can scarcely be questioned that like the instincts of the lower animals, they are the expressions of constitutional tendencies embodied in the organism of the individuals who manifest them.”

 

A.A. Brill Some peculiar manifestations of memory with special reference to lightening calculators. January 1940 https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238323343_Some_peculiar_manifestations_of_memory_with_special_reference_to_lightening_calculators

 

Tapping Your Inner Rain Man

A blow to the head can sometimes unmask hidden artistic or intellectual gifts

One plausible explanation for the hidden talents that emerge in savant syndrome—whether early in life or induced by injury—is that these reservoirs of skill and knowledge must be inherited in some way. We do not start life with a blank slate that subsequently gets inscribed through education and other life experiences. The brain may come loaded with a set of innate predispositions for processing what it sees or for understanding the “rules” of music, art or mathematics. … Acquired savantism provides strong evidence that a deep well of brain potential resides within us all. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/tapping-your-inner-rain-man/