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.
From Roland at Roncevaux to Arthur of Camelot and Jesus of Galilee, history repeatedly grows into heroic myth. Small facts expand into symbols, and real lives acquire legendary afterlives. This aside explores how the process unfolds — and why some figures become cosmic.
The lotus rises pure from the mud, uniting science and symbol, matter and mind. This reflection explores how the flower’s ancient imagery bridges the two magisteria of human understanding — the measurable and the mysterious.

