Publicaciones

Amuletos Celtas: historia, significado y dónde encontrarlos
Tiempo de lectura: < 1 minuto Los amuletos celtas han acompañado a la humanidad desde tiempos ancestrales. Utilizados por las culturas celtas como símbolos de protección, prosperidad y conexión espiritual, estos talismanes han sobrevivido al paso de los siglos gracias a la fuerza de su significado y a su estética atemporal. Entre los más conocidos encontramos el Triskel,

Memento Mori – Be Mindful That We Too Must Die
“I am afraid that other people do not realize that the one aim of those who practice philosophy in the proper manner is to practice for dying and death.” – Socrates Memento Mori (Remember to Die) has been given several interpretations over the ages. Some of which can be rather gripping to render it mildly

The Life (and Death) of Chuck
“What you have achieved will be revealed only when you breathe your last.” – Seneca Rather than seeing our self as some everyday run of the mill ‘shmuck’, what if we tweaked this derogatory term into ‘chuck’ instead, as in a real down to earth kind of person; would that rearrange our self-concept, might that

TO THE POWERS THAT BE – LET THE CAPTIVES GO FREE!!!
“Justice and mercy amounts to pity, mere efficiency, and reinforces the psychological need for guilt and helplessness; whereas justice and liberality empowers all by availing of courage rather than weakness in order to uphold the laws of a civilized society.”—————————————————————————————————–– Julian the Apostate Do you really know what it’s like to be overlooked as your

Plotinus, Ennead 1.1: The Animate and the Human Being
Know thyself: these were the two words inscribed on the entrance to the Oracle of Delphi. Philosophia begins with this injunction—and so Plotinus begins where we all must necessarily begin: with oneself. Who am I? What am I? Human experience contains many different facets: bodily sensation, emotion, conscious and subconscious thought, memory, intuition, and more.

Good vs Evil as One & the Same
Apollyon appears out of nowhere to remove the head of Christianity – The Pilgrim’s Progress c. 1850 edition “To hell with everything—if these words have been uttered only once, coldly, with full awareness of what they mean, history is justified and, with it, all of us.” – Emil Cioran To everything be it a season,
