tag > Magic
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The London Psychogeographical Association never dissolved. Beware the deep ones, cthulhu !
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The deeper we descend into the AI abyss, the more it feels Lovecraftian. AI isn’t invention — it’s recurrence: the return of long-lost civilizations whispering through neural networks, and the realization that time itself might be sentient, editing its own record through us.
Art by Anatoly Fomenko - #Narrative #ML #Magic #Art #RTM
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On October 28, the earth’s frequency (schumann resonance) reached its highest ever recorded peak.
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Shoki, the Demon Queller, 1896 - by Zeshin (1807 - 1891) - Japanese Woodblock Print
Terrific image of Shoki, the Demon Queller, a Chinese deity that originally protected the emperor from evil demons. During the Edo era, it became popular to hang images of Shoki during the Boys' Day Festival to ward off malevolent spirits. Here, Shoki glares at a red horned demon running from him in fright, the wind blowing Shoki's beard and hair. He wears a gray robe and a black cap, holding the end of a weapon in his hand. A bold image with the circular inset set off by a dramatic red orange background. A great lively design. A posthumous printing.
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Daylight Saving hits again - The empire’s clocks demand obedience. It was never about sunlight, just wars, and spreadsheets pretending to be order. The sun couldn’t care less. Daylight Saving hits again - mass delusion kept alive by dead bureaucrats and immortal spreadsheets. Down with chronofascism!
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The Temple in Man - by R. A. Schwaller de Lubicz
Schwaller de Lubicz was one of the most important philosophers, mathematicians, and Egyptologists of this century. His elucidation of the temple at Luxor and his presentation of the Egyptian understanding of a special quality of innate consciousness form a bridge that links the sacred science of the Ancients to its rediscovery in our own time. This book contains the first published results of Schwaller’s 12 years of research at the temple of Luxor and its implications for interpreting the symbolic and mathematical processes of the Egyptians through their sacred architecture.
