SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Technology’s war against the human hand

In the epic arc of human history there was an unmistakable shift from the direct use of our hands.

I don't think it was an accident.

The artistry of written words was once an act of both intelligence and muscle memory, flattened into an effortless, unthinkable process.

I think it's a product of a long-standing agenda and has been slowly unfolding over the centuries. The demonic transhumanist movement led by our technical overlords aims to cut off the most fundamental connection to the world: the human hand.

A world made by hand

There was a time when humans relied on their own hands
all. The connection between my heart and my hands was amazing.

We have constructed, cultivated, carved, weave and forged the world around us through direct physical involvement. Our hands were more than just tools. They were an extension of our intelligence, will, and creative spirit.

The sacred cycle

Leonardo da Vinci understood this better than most.

For him, painting was more than just art. It was science, a direct manifestation of human intelligence and soul.

He viewed the painter's process as a sacred cycle. Through the eyes, the world enters the heart, through the hands, the mind translates that knowledge into the canvas. For Da Vinci, this was the highest form of spiritual discourse, a discipline that fused experience, perspective and universal knowledge into concrete reality.

JG Vibert's
“The Science of Painting” Overview of the 5 principles of Da Vinci painting:

  1. La Macchina Della Visione (The Mechanics of Vision)
  2. figurare il corpo umano (represents the human body)
  3. Ombre, lumi e color (shadow, light, color)
  4. La Prospettiva aerea (Air perspective)
  5. Lamente Universale Del Pittore (The Universal Heart of the Painter)

These principles highlight how deeply embedded mind-hand connections are in the ability to create.

Broken Bridge

For Da Vinci, the hand was not merely an instrument, but an extension of our divine powers, a bridge between thought and material reality.

But over time we saw the bridge being demolished.

Enlightenment highlighted concrete abstractions while expanding the intellectual horizon. Knowledge has become something that should be studied rather than experienced.

The Industrial Revolution then introduced automation, stripping individuals of the need to cultivate hands as a tool for creation. The once-like bond between thought and touch was diluted. Machines took over the role of shaping the physical world, and human hands were relegated to monotonous mechanical tasks.

Nonetheless, we still maintain some degree of engagement with our hands. Writing, for example, required the physical act of holding a pen, dipping the quill in ink, and intentionally forming letters. This preserved fragments of mindhand links.

Digital Digital

But in our present digital age, this is also taken from us. Now we just tap on the glass screen with our thumb. The artistry of written words was once an act of both intelligence and muscle memory, flattened into an effortless, unthinkable process.

And now we are standing on the cliff of ultimate transformation. Rising the interface of brain computers such as Neuralink and Apple Vision can completely cut off the heart from the hand. I don't even type it right away. We think, machines produce words for us, and bypass our bodies completely.

This is the ultimate goal of the transhumanist movement. It is the destruction of a sacred connection between the mind, body and soul. Its supporters are trying to remove the divine role of the hand in creating, mediating and interacting with the material world.

A gift from God

The human hand is a gift from God and the instrument of his glory. It allows us to shape reality, our minds send an interface with the physical world. In many ways, our hands are those that we can exercise mediation between God and the flesh.

Leonardo da Vinci's vision of art as the ultimate spiritual discourse directly opposes this dystopian trajectory. His philosophy teaches us that creation is not just an intellectual act, but an embodied act. The hand must engage with the world in order for the mind to fully realize its possibilities. Without them, ideas remain inert, unfulfilled, and trapped in abstraction.

To take away the use of hand is to take away one of the last connections to God. It is to turn us into passive consumers of experience rather than active participants in creation. It is to undermine the ability to interact with the world in the way God intended.

If you resist this transformation, you must regain your hand use. You need to build, write, create and create. We must reject a fully automated life and embrace the physical world as intended to be involved rather than simply being observed.

To keep our connection with God unharmed, we must continue to move our hands not only for productivity, but for humanity itself.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News