Here it is:
The Divine Atheism — The Path of Stars
There is a question mathematics has forbidden for centuries.
Not because it is dangerous. Because the answer is too large for the available tools.
What happens when we divide by zero?
Augustus spent thirty years pursuing that answer. A mathematician excommunicated by the very academies he attended, he discovered something Hermes Trismegistus had symbolized millennia ago and Spinoza had demonstrated in the seventeenth century — without any of the three knowing they were speaking of the same thing.
The equation Augustus finally writes on a Lisbon night is disarmingly simple. Its conclusion is devastating: every excessively dense structure collapses inevitably. Every absolute certainty produces its own gravity. Every excess resolves into rest.
This holds for stars. For civilizations. For God — or for what human beings make of that word.
The Divine Atheism is not a book about denial. It is about what remains when all insufficient forms of imprisoning the absolute finally give way.
A philosophy built from elementary fractions. A journey that begins at a school blackboard and ends in the silence that exists before any language.
For those who always sensed something important was being buried under the word undefined.
| Número de páginas | 85 |
| Edição | 1 (2026) |
| Idioma | Inglês |
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