Posts

Elias the Artist: The Mystery Adept of Hidden Wisdom

Elias the Artist: The Mystery Adept of Hidden Wisdom Throughout history, people have imagined the arrival of a wise figure who would help humanity rediscover balance, understanding, and deeper knowledge of nature. In the mystical traditions of alchemy and Hermetic philosophy, one such figure became known as Elias the Artist — or Elias Artista. Far from being simply a painter or sculptor, Elias the Artist represented a master of transformation, a spiritual adept connected to what alchemists called the “Great Art.” The legend has fascinated seekers, philosophers, and mystics for centuries. A Prophetic Figure from the World of Alchemy The idea of Elias Artista is often connected to the Renaissance physician and alchemist Paracelsus. Paracelsus believed that many secrets of nature and healing were still hidden from humanity and would only be revealed in the future through the coming of a great enlightened teacher. He referred to this mysterious future figure as Elias Artista. For alchemist...

Daniel Webster Wallace

Daniel Webster Wallace Daniel Webster Wallace (1860 – March 18, 1939), also known as “80 John,” was an American rancher, cattleman, and landowner in West Texas. Born into slavery in Victoria County, Texas, Wallace became one of the wealthiest African American ranchers in the American West during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He was known for his cattle operations, land holdings, and success in the Texas ranching industry after emancipation. Early life Wallace was born enslaved in 1860 near Victoria, Texas, shortly before the outbreak of the American Civil War. Following emancipation after the Civil War, he worked as a laborer and cowboy in the developing cattle industry of Texas. As a young man, Wallace worked on ranches in South and West Texas. He became associated with cattle bearing the “80” brand, which led to his nickname “80 John.” Despite limited formal education during childhood, Wallace later returned to school as an adult and learned to read and write. Ra...

Learning from Honey Bees: What Humanity Can Learn from Philip Emeagwali

Learning from Honey Bees: What Humanity Can Learn from Philip Emeagwali Nature, Cooperation, and Collective Intelligence Throughout history, human beings have often looked to nature for inspiration. Birds inspired flight, rivers inspired transportation systems, and forests inspired ecological thinking. Nigerian computer scientist Philip Emeagwali looked toward another remarkable teacher from nature: the honey bee. Emeagwali became known for exploring how the cooperative behavior of honey bees could inspire new forms of supercomputing and parallel processing. Yet the lessons from his observations go far beyond technology. They also offer insights into human cooperation, ecology, communication, and the future of society itself. The Power of Working Together A honey bee colony does not function because of one dominant bee doing all the work. Instead, thousands of bees cooperate through shared labor and communication. Each bee performs smaller tasks that contribute to the health and surviv...

Philip Emeagwali and the Wisdom of the Honey Bee

Philip Emeagwali and the Wisdom of the Honey Bee Nature, Cooperation, and the Future of Computing One of the most fascinating ideas in modern computing is that some of humanity’s most advanced technologies were inspired by nature itself. Nigerian-born computer scientist Philip Emeagwali became widely known for exploring how the collective behavior of honey bees could help humans rethink the design of supercomputers. Rather than seeing technology as separate from nature, Emeagwali looked closely at how living systems organize themselves. Honey bees especially captured his imagination. A bee colony is not controlled by one bee doing all the work. Instead, thousands of bees cooperate simultaneously, each carrying out small tasks that together create a highly efficient and intelligent system. Emeagwali believed computers could work in a similar way. From One Processor to Many Traditional computers often worked sequentially, meaning one processor handled one task at a time in a step-by-step...

Using Inshot for IPhone Uploads to Wikicommons

Using the Inshot App for IPhone Uploads to Wikicommons: InShot can help prepare iPhone images for upload to Wikimedia Commons, the important part is exporting the image in a file format that Commons accepts. Wikimedia Commons commonly accepts: JPEG / JPG — best for photographs PNG — good for graphics, screenshots, illustrations GIF — simple animations TIFF — high-quality archival images SVG — vector graphics For most iPhone photos, exporting as a high-quality JPG from InShot works fine. Typical steps in InShot: Open the image Edit or crop if needed Tap Save or Export Choose high quality Export as JPG or PNG Then upload the saved file to Wikimedia Commons. A few things to remember for Commons: The image must be your own work, or freely licensed Avoid heavy filters or copyrighted overlays/stickers Keep the highest resolution possible Add good descriptions, dates, and categories during upload You can upload using: Wikimedia Commons Upload Wizard⁠

African Meetings on Environmental Justice 2026: Information and Contact Resources

African Meetings on Environmental Justice 2026: Information and Contact Resources The African Meetings on Environmental Justice, scheduled for November 24–26, 2026 in Dakar, Senegal, is emerging as one of the most important gatherings focused on ecology, climate justice, sustainability, and community knowledge in Africa. Hosted by Université Cheikh Anta Diop, the conference aims to bring together scholars, activists, artists, NGOs, grassroots organizations, and community leaders working on environmental and social justice issues across the continent. The conference places strong emphasis on environmental justice, climate inequality, agricultural sustainability, Indigenous ecological knowledge, and African-centered responses to ecological crises. Organizers hope to create a long-term network connecting researchers and civil society groups working on environmental justice throughout Africa.  Dakar 2026  For those interested in participating, attending, presenting research, or le...

African Meetings on Environmental Justice 2026: Ecology, Justice, and African Knowledge in Dakar

African Meetings on Environmental Justice 2026: Ecology, Justice, and African Knowledge in Dakar From November 24–26, 2026, the Université Cheikh Anta Diop in Dakar will host the African Meetings on Environmental Justice, one of the most important environmental and intellectual gatherings planned in West Africa. The conference represents a growing movement across the African continent that connects ecology with social justice, cultural knowledge, and community survival. The gathering will bring together scholars, artists, civil society organizations, environmental activists, students, NGOs, and grassroots community leaders to discuss some of the most urgent environmental challenges facing Africa today. Rather than treating climate change and environmental destruction as purely scientific or technical issues, the conference emphasizes the human, cultural, and historical dimensions of ecology. Central themes of the conference include environmental justice, climate inequality, agricultura...