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The Ascendancy of the Scientific Dictatorship: An Examination of Epistemic Autocracy, From the 19th to the 21st Century

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Here is the story of how the criminal elite hijacked science and transformed it into a weapon against the masses. This examination includes: (1.) The occult Origins of Darwinism. (2.) Nominalism and radical empiricism as instruments of epistemological manipulation. (3.) Eugenics and population control. (4.) Scientistic cults and religious engineering. (5.) Echelon, PROMIS software, and other technologies of the Panopticon Singularity. (6.) Neoconservativism as a continuation of Technocracy and Jacobinism. (7.) Transhumanism, Singularitarianism, and other futurist variants of the elite's occult religion. (8.) The unfolding endgame between scientific dictatorships.

474 pages, Paperback

First published February 12, 2004

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Phillip Darrell Collins

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Count-daniel Fogarty.
71 reviews12 followers
October 2, 2015
Bravo, one of the best books I have read on the occult connections to science and how science developed from precursors systems such as magick. The information about the denial of a universal creator was just fascinating and of course the authors have done their homework...
Profile Image for Nahum.
3 reviews
April 23, 2022
This is the updated 2006 version with about 200+ pages more than the original 2004 version. Definitely the best version to read

Probably the most captivating book that I have written. The Collins brothers writing style really is unique. Written to quite a high intellectual level, I would recommend looking up certain words ( epistemic, apotheosis, technocracy etc) used to ensure sentences are fully understood.

A deep examination of the occult connections & roots of Darwinism, the rise of (almost) blind faith in institutional science with many connections in between. I read the book in 2014 and had many pages underlined and highlighted

I will be re-reading the book cover to cover in due course as the information is more relevant now than ever.

My only real critcism is the lack of a contents page at the beginning. The book had 3 parts with many sub chapters.

Other than this, the Collins brothers created an outstanding book which is more than worthy of 5 stars
Profile Image for Jay D.
165 reviews
August 9, 2011
The best overall critique of Darwinism. A must-read.
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