Thursday, May 25, 2006

Does a Person With Royal Bloodlines Perceive the World Differently?

Let us say you put people side by side, one with royal ancestry and one without. Do they perceive the world differently as their DNA is accentuated slightly differently? Interesting question and one many Americans do not wish to address because we all have agreed to live under a doctrine which says; “All Men Are Created Equal” and yet the question remains does a royal lineage change the way you perceive events and experiences? Wow, good questions.

Now then this question came up in an online think tank when one guest member Princess Kristine asked; “What I’m trying to say is would it have some baring on the manner in which you think and how you perceive things??”

Well since I happen to have some royal bloodlines and ancestry I would like to take a crack at this question. And I would say that; Yes of course. For instance if one’s brain is formed a certain way, either thru an adaptation of genetics or certain repetition of use or it was re-formatted by its owner to “think” a certain way (my case), just the fact that it was able to do this would in fact be some Genetics and some nurture. Thus your ancestry and those traits do in fact apply to some degree. The question is to what degree you see?

So indeed the answer would be yes, but partially and perhaps pragmatically. Unfortunately and not politically correct to say in this present period this also dispels a myth; That we are all created equal? Well that simply is not so.

For instance; If a family bloodline carried a genetic flaw, which allowed them to think on a particular subject for long periods of time, rather than jumping around more then it might in this case perhaps allow for greater discovery, innovation and thus propel one further or if in a closer knit group one’s family, corporation, nation, people or self.

Yet by the same token that person caught thinking might have been eaten by a Saber Tooth Tiger for not paying attention to the immediate details of a situation and thus the “superior genes” would be the latter not the former of the genetic flaw. So whether your bloodlines carry genetic flaws or gifts do indeed affect how your brain works and how you think you see? Consider this in 2006.

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