We have faith in human perception and intelligence rather than in mechanisms, no matter how sophisticated. We write under the banner of Humane Socialism. We are respectful of dialogue and community and believe in a generous spirit of co-operation and collaboration: build it and they will come. We aim for constant improvement, experimentation, and ever-greater freedom and social responsibility. We are open, but not to subversion or misuse. We are no-one’s Trojan Horse.
Ars Notoria Sodality

philosophy & POETRY
HOMERO CARVALHO OLIVA: Philosophy and Poetry
Nota de Fabula

FICTION & SCIENCE
ARJUN RAINA: extracts from The Eye of Childhood
Nota de Horizonte

POETRY
RENEE GOOD R.I.P. | 1988-2026
by Sudeep Sen
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Photo Essay: Celebrating Holi in the Streets of Mumbai
Photograph Andy Hall by Andy Hall The principle practice in street photography, and why I love it, is the immersive experience. That’s the only way you’re going to snatch those serendipitous, split-second moments you long for, as you wade through the river of human activity around you; all the time not asking, not showing, just…
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KIRITI SENGUPTA: I will bequeath my assets to my son
Photograph Bitan Chakraborty Kiriti Sengupta is a practising dentist and a poet, and the two roles inform each other: clinical precision meets a meditative attention to everyday life. He divides his time between New Delhi and Santiniketan, the university town Rabindranath Tagore founded as a centre for learning and the arts, and this dual…
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DIMITRIS P. KRANIOTIS: Small Arc
Mount Kissavos viewed from Pineios bridge in Larissa. Photograph Konstantinos Agiannis Dimitris P. Kraniotis was born in 1966 and grew up in Stomio, Larissa, Greece where Hippocrates himself spent his later years living and practicing medicine. Dimitris followed in the footsteps of Hippocrates. After studying Medicine at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, he established his medical practice…
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GHOST Girl
Photograph Tina Bexson by Tina Bexson I decided to run extra early. Just rats and foxes to eye me from the sidelines, penetrating the air with their activities of the night. And like a cat burglar at his most productive I prowled the streets with omnipotence. My darkly clothed lithe frame, and wide stride,…
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Stasis and the Infantilisation of Humanity to the Benefit of the Predator Class
Photograph Renan Lima, Pexels by Richard Steinhardt Stasis is a state of stability, equilibrium, or inactivity, with meanings that vary across contexts. The word comes from the Greek stasis, meaning standing or stoppage. In medical and pathological contexts, it refers to the slowing or stoppage of bodily fluids, as in venous stasis. In biology, stasis…
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J. L. Borges: Berkeleianism versus Buckleianism
The Philosophy of Tlön, Uqbar, & Orbis Tertius By Peter Cowlam Berkeley, who was Bishop of Cloyne in 1734, denied the existence of matter in a reply to Locke (1632–1704), whose conception of the universe was Newtonian and mechanistic, a place where material bodies conformed to a clockwork modus operandi – that is to…
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Hanging out with Muhammad Ali
Andy Hall with Muhammad Ali, photo by Don King Andy Hall Meets the Greatest Of All Time by Andy Hall In my wildest dreams, I never thought I would be hanging out spending time with my hero Muhammad Ali, let alone have the opportunity to get to see him; but I did just that…
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SMOOTH OPERATOR: taking on the biggest poker game in the world
Grand Lisboa and Wynn buildings in Macau. Photograph Da Na Pexels Macau ‘whales’ are the biggest fish in high stakes poker by Thomas Levene This article is, in part, my personal poker journey and, partly, an insight into the mysterious and secretive world of nose-bleed cash games that just get bigger and bigger. The…
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Sonnet Mondal: Poems From the Heart
Ever since I stumbled on Sonnet Mondal’s poems, I have been captivated by their stunning simplicity and words evoking a magical experience. That he achieves this consistently is breath-taking. In this occasional series, our aim is to connect you with some of these exceptional beauties I come across. These are rare, as they don’t…
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Roadkill: Eat it, you are not guilty of its death
Stag in Richmond Park. Photograph Phil Hall Trillions of creatures die yearly, a massive cull which goes virtually unnoticed by Pete Field In the mid-sixties driving in the countryside meant squashed insects on the windscreen, sometimes hundreds of them. You had to get the wipers going, smear them off with water. Now our insect…




















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