staff psychologist place of work, the Pentagon search and distribution of personnel writing works on in-depth analysis in the field of psychology of modern man
Интересы
versatile! girls, drugs, rock and roll, books, fishing, hunting, interesting communication
Любимые фильмы
12 angry men - in fact, a lot
Любимая музыка
jazz, classical
Любимые телешоу
no such
Любимые книги
The ramayana, Hermes Trismegistus, Asclepius (lat. Asclepius) is a Latin treatise attributed to Hermes Trismegistus, previously mistakenly Apuleius. It is a dialogue between Hermes Trismegistus and Asclepius and describes the creation of the world and the hierarchy of the gods. For magic, of particular importance is the fragment where Trismegistus indicates that people can make gods out of statues (idols) in which you can enter into the souls of demons through ceremonies. The Greek text is not preserved, but is quoted by Lactantius, who conveys the title of the treatise as "the Perfect word" (lat. Sermo Perfectus). The extant Latin text was written before the IV century ad, as it is quoted by Augustine in the treatise "On the city of God". In 1945, near Nag Hammadi among Gnostic manuscripts was found a text in Coptic language, which in some sense can be considered a translation of a large collection from the middle of "Asclepius". This text is significantly different from the Latin, but similar in content and method of arrangement. a lot actually
Любимые цитаты
"A hundred times to fight and a hundred times to win is not the best of the best; the best of the best is to conquer another's army without fighting." "The best fight - that which didn't take place»