Giordano Bruno saw, more than 500 years ago, that human beings project their inner life onto the cosmos. His “infinite universe” was not astronomy but a vision of the human psyche speaking through myth — a truth that echoes across my own work. In an age that has lost its spiritual depth, Bruno’s voice returns with renewed urgency.
A reflective exploration of why humans are both aggressive and endlessly self-questioning. Drawing on evolutionary inheritance, mythic imagination, and the possibility of ancient genetic engineering, this piece asks what it means to be a species that not only acts, but wonders why it acts.


