Bruce Jenner, Transhumanism & The Disappearing Male [Audio]

humanSofia Smallstorm is one of the most prolific researchers in the alternative news media. She joins the SGT Reporter and contributor Mark S. Mann for a one hour discussion about transhumanism, synthetic biology, the attack on humanity on a genetic level, and the disappearing male as publicly showcased by Bruce Jenner. Humanity is under attack from a multitude of angles and vector points and Sofia Smallstorm’s work has helped to expose it like no other researcher.

[youtube=https://youtu.be/ZBlZNpPn2hM]

Sofia’s sites: http://aboutthesky.com/ and http://avatarproducts.com/

SF Source SGTreport.com  May 2015


Transhumanism

WIKIPEDIA – Transhumanism (abbreviated as H+ or h+) is an international cultural and intellectual movement with an eventual goal of fundamentally transforming the human condition by developing and making widely available technologies to greatly enhance human intellectual, physical, and psychological capacities.[1] Transhumanist thinkers study the potential benefits and dangers of emerging technologies that could overcome fundamental human limitations, as well as the ethics of developing and using such technologies.[2] The most common thesis put forward is that human beings may eventually be able to transform themselves into beings with such greatly expanded abilities as to merit the label posthuman.[1]

Although some transhumanists[who?] report having religious or spiritual views, they are for the most part atheists, agnostics or secular humanists.[30] Despite the prevailing secular attitude, some transhumanists pursue hopes traditionally espoused by religions, such as immortality,[70] while several controversial new religious movements from the late 20th century have explicitly embraced transhumanist goals of transforming the human condition by applying technology to the alteration of the mind and body, such as Raëlism.[72] However, most thinkers associated with the transhumanist movement focus on the practical goals of using technology to help achieve longer and healthier lives, while speculating that future understanding of neurotheology and the application of neurotechnology will enable humans to gain greater control of altered states of consciousness, which were commonly interpreted as spiritual experiences, and thus achieve more profound self-knowledge.[73] Transhumanist Buddhists have sought to explore areas of agreement between various types of Buddhism and Buddhist-derived meditation and mind expanding “neurotechnologies”.[74] “Cyborg Buddhists” have been criticised[75] for appropriating mindfulness as a tool for transcending humanness.

Many transhumanists believe in the compatibility between the human mind and computer hardware, with the theoretical implication that human consciousness may someday be transferred to alternative media (a speculative technique commonly known as mind uploading).[76] One extreme formulation of this idea, which some transhumanists are interested in, is the proposal of the Omega Point by Christian cosmologist Frank Tipler. Drawing upon ideas in digitalism, Tipler has advanced the notion that the collapse of the Universe billions of years hence could create the conditions for the perpetuation of humanity in a simulated reality within a megacomputer and thus achieve a form of “posthuman godhood“. Tipler’s thought was inspired by the writings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, a paleontologist and Jesuit theologian who saw an evolutionary telos in the development of an encompassing noosphere, a global consciousness.[77][78][79]

Viewed from the perspective of some Christian thinkers, the idea of mind uploading is asserted to represent a denigration of the human body, characteristic of gnostic manichaean belief.[80] Transhumanism and its presumed intellectual progenitors have also been described as neo-gnostic by non-Christian and secular commentators.[81][82]

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