Russia launches NASA astronaut Anil Menon and 2 cosmonauts to the International Space Station

News

By Mike Wall

Last updated yesterday (Space.com)

Liftoff occurred at 10:47 a.m. ET, and the spaceflyers reached the ISS three hours later.

The International Space Station has three new residents.

NASA’s Anil Menon and cosmonauts Pyotr Dubrov and Anna Kikina lifted off atop a Russian Soyuz rocket from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 10:47 a.m. EDT (1447 GMT; 7:47 p.m. local time in Baikonur), heading toward the orbiting lab.

Their Soyuz executed nominal side booster separation about two minutes after launch, followed by second stage separation about 2.5 minutes later, as the rocket flew at 105 miles (169 kilometers) in altitude. Third stage orbital insertion and separation was completed at about 8 minutes and 46 seconds, putting Russia’s Soyuz MS-29 spacecraft and crew on course to chase down the International Space Station (ISS).

A rocket launches against a chartreuse-colored sky
A Soyuz rocket launches NASA astronaut Anil Menon and cosmonauts Pyotr Dubrov and Anna Kikina toward the International Space Station from Baikonur Cosmodrome on July 14, 2026. (Image credit: Roscosmos/NASA)

The trio caught up to the ISS after just two orbits, docking with the outpost at 1:52 p.m. EDT (1752 GMT). The two spacecraft were flying 260 miles (418 kilometers) above the Mediterranean Sea at the time, NASA officials said during the agency’s docking webcast.

That webcast will resume at 3:30 p.m. EDT (1930 GMT) ahead of the opening of the hatches between the Soyuz and the ISS, which is expected around 3:55 p.m. EDT (1955 GMT).You may like

The MS-29 trio will join the seven astronauts already living aboard the ISS — NASA’s Jessica Meir, Jack Hathaway, and Chris Williams, the European Space Agency‘s Sophie Adenot, and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov, Sergei Mikaev, and Andrey Fedyaev of the Russian space agency Roscosmos.

two male astronauts and a female astronauts, all of them wearing white spacesuits, sit for an official portrait
NASA astronaut Anil Menon (left) and Roscosmos cosmonauts Pyotr Dubrov and Anna Kikina, Soyuz MS-29 prime crew members, pose for a portrait at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Russia. (Image credit: GCTC)

This is the first spaceflight for Menon, who was selected as a NASA astronaut candidate in December 2021, in the agency’s Group 23. He’s married to Anna Menon, who was picked in the next astronaut candidate class, Group 24, in September 2025.

Anna Menon has already been to space, though not with NASA. In September 2024, while an employee of SpaceX, she flew on the company’s Polaris Dawn mission to Earth orbit. That five-day flight, which was funded and commanded by current NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, featured the first-ever commercial spacewalk and reached a maximum altitude of 870 miles (1,400.7 kilometers) — higher than any previous crewed Earth-orbiting mission had gotten.

Anil Menon is a former SpaceX-er as well; he was the company’s first-ever flight surgeon.

MS-29’s flight is the second-ever space mission for both Dubrov and Kikina. Dubrov lived aboard the ISS from April 2021 to March 2022, and Kikina spent five months on the outpost, from October 2022 to March 2023.What to read next

Kikina, the only female member of Russia’s active astronaut corps, flew to and from the ISS back then on SpaceX’s Crew-5 mission. That was a big deal: She was the first Russian ever to fly on a private U.S. spacecraft, and the first cosmonaut to fly on any American space vehicle since December 2002, when cosmonauts Valery Korzun and Sergey Treshchov came back to Earth from the ISS aboard the space shuttle Endeavour.

The MS-29 trio will spend about eight months living and working on the orbiting lab. Menon will help conduct a wide variety of scientific experiments during that stretch.

“He will continue research to refine in-space production of semiconductor crystals to enable the large-scale manufacturing of components needed for high-performance computers, artificial intelligence, and improved medical devices,” NASA officials wrote in a July 9 media advisory.

“Menon also will perform ultrasound using augmented reality and artificial intelligence methods that could eliminate the need for medical support from Earth on future space missions,” they added.

Editor’s note: This story was updated at 1:55 p.m. ET with news of successful docking.

Mike Wall

Mike Wall

Spaceflight and Tech Editor

Michael Wall is the Spaceflight and Tech Editor for Space.com and joined the team in 2010. He primarily covers human and robotic spaceflight, military space, and exoplanets, but has been known to dabble in the space art beat. His book about the search for alien life, “Out There,” was published on Nov. 13, 2018. Before becoming a science writer, Michael worked as a herpetologist and wildlife biologist. He has a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology from the University of Sydney, Australia, a bachelor’s degree from the University of Arizona, and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University of California, Santa Cruz. To find out what his latest project is, you can follow Michael on Twitter.

Thane’s Birthday: July 15

Dean and Founder of The Prosperos

(from TheProsperos.org/Thane)

thane_pub.jpg

Thane’s approach to teaching was revolutionary, his method the oldest kind of therapy in the world — agape. Agape is a very special kind of love: the unselfish, unconditional giving of love.

Nowhere in the world today is the idea of agape more clearly demonstrated or espoused than in the teachings of Thane of Hawaii. In his classes, in open lectures, on recorded lessons, and in his writing, Thane demonstrated a unique ability to draw the truest meaning of agape from his students.

Thane was the Founder and first Dean of The Prosperos. He was also a well-known figure in the fields of psychology, philosophy, education, consciousness, religion, and cosmology. His many years of research in such diverse areas as occultism, mysticism and Freudian and Jungian psychology enabled him to be among the first to bridge the gap between old and new, between modern scientific knowledge and ancient spirituality. Throughout more than 60 years of teaching, Thane found exciting new methods for communicating both timeless secrets and current insights from the fields of Mind study and physics to an immensely diverse following.

If one were to ask, “What did Thane teach?”, any answer that included philosophy, spirituality, ontology, thought-power, religion, psychology, or consciousness would be correct, but his aim could not be captured by categorical titles. The Teaching is not confined to intellectuality or what is called “metaphysics.” The goal is to reach each individual at his or her point of confusion and frustration and lead them to insight. The subject matter is not chosen to be charming social talk, or clever intellectual repartee, but rather to be meaningful guidance for those seeking a more wholistic view of themselves and of their world. Thus, Thane taught in either the oral tradition or through constantly up-dated letter-lessons to his students. (Prosperos Mentors continue this tradition of the “ear-whispered word.”)

Of all the topics and perspectives Thane addressed, none gained him more notice than his advanced positions (for the time) on sexuality.

Like Socrates, Thane knew that imparting information is not enough. Each student enters his search for Self at a unique state of mind and affairs. He realized that the task of a true teacher is to draw knowledge out of each student rather than to add information to misconception. Each student must, therefore, be taught as individually as possible.

Every person coming in contact with Thane’s teachings is connecting to a great legacy of knowledge. Thane’s extensive background ranged from some of the most noted thinkers in the fields of psychology to some of the most obscure groups studying metaphysics and occultism. He was a student of Mr. Gurdjieff (the Sufi master from Russia). He studied zen in Japan, yoga in India, occultism in Europe and America. Lillian DeWaters, Emmet Fox, J. Krishnamurti, C.G. Jung, Kurt Lewin , and Lewis Mumford are among the many famous thinkers with whom he associated. As a lecturer he traveled several times around the world, addressing groups ranging from a mere handful to thousands, teaching the common and the famous alike. Ernest Holmes, the founder of Religious Science, titled Thane, “the teacher of teachers.”

In addition, he served with the military during World War II; he was in the “underground” in Germany prior to World War II and spent months in Nuremberg prison. He authored many books (presently published by The Prosperos, by reprint permission are such titles as: I Saw Hitler Make Black Magic, Not So Secret Doctrine, Old Wine in New Bottles, Leap Into Sanity) and articles on a wide array of topics. Thane had an unusual association with the entire panorama of the world of entertainment. He appeared in plays, light opera, and motion pictures and counted many stars from the entertainment field, as well as from academia, among his students, clients and friends.

To some of his students, perhaps the most important factor of all was his sense of humor, coupled with precise timing and his judgment of when humor could be the best therapy of all. This is clear in the recorded classes where he could sometimes move from an atmosphere of thoughtful exploration to complete hilarity and then to profound insight in a matter of minutes.

“What did Thane teach?” . . . any answer that includes philosophy, spirituality, ontology, thought-power, religion, psychology, or consciousness would be correct.

Ultimately, Thane’s work has been for his students. Beyond the background and training which were his tools he brought a compassion for the world that was his alone. He exemplified the principle that the relationship between student and teacher is more than a professional liaison — it is a sacred trust. It was no less than life to him. Whatever the problem, the obstacle, the confusion or the hurt, it was there that he tried to touch and to heal.

Of all the topics and perspectives Thane addressed, none gained him more notice than his advanced positions (for the time) on sexuality. This may seem odd today, but it is nonetheless true. His approach was basic openness and frankness without dogma. In all of his teachings he proved the limitlessness of every person’s individuality and disproved the barriers placed on love — barriers arising from materialistic constructs which generate frustration and contribute to the agonized condition of the world today.

Because his concern was for all people —their hopes, their dreams, their fears — Thane was known as a social innovator. Throughout his life he advocated for every individual’s freedom and personal rights. He was among the first to stand against racial, social, and sexual hypocrisies. Compassion of this sort was unusual for a teacher so well known in fields relating to spirituality or religion. But it follows; Thane was never a man to draw lines but rather was a zealot at erasing them.

Thane’s concepts of the universe and of man are not new; his concepts of teacher and student are ageless, and yet his practice of timeless Truth was distinct. As Thane learned from his teachers, so his students learned from him. Thane went beyond his teachers in his understanding, and his hope was that his students would surpass him.

This is the tradition of Thane. Every class and all training of Mentors incorporates these principles. The ultimate goal is the student’s liberation from hypnagogic enslavement to materialistic theories.

Victor Frankl on love

Frankl in 1965

“Love goes very far beyond the physical person of the beloved. It finds its deepest meaning in his spiritual being, his inner self. Whether or not he is actually present, whether or not he is still alive at all, ceases somehow to be of importance.”

~ Viktor Frankl

Viktor Emil Frankl was an Austrian neurologist, psychiatrist, philosopher, and Holocaust survivor, who founded logotherapy, a school of psychotherapy that describes a search for a life’s meaning as the central human motivational force. Logotherapy is part of existential and humanistic psychology theories. Wikipedia

Born March 26, 1905, Leopoldstadt, Vienna, Austria

Died September 2, 1997 (age 92 years), Vienna, Austria

The Huckster Shaman Who Founded a Cult

In “American Trickster,” Ru Marshall takes on the epic story of Carlos Castaneda.

The image shows a close-up of a man’s face, mostly obscured by his hand.
In order to burnish his mysterious image, Carlos Castaneda lived the reclusive life of a nonpublic intellectual. Credit…Eddie Adams/Eddie Adams Photographic Archives, The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin

By Kurt Andersen

Kurt Andersen is the author of nine books, including “The Breakup,” a forthcoming novel.

Published July 4, 2026 Updated July 7, 2026

When you purchase an independently reviewed book through our site, we earn an affiliate commission. 

AMERICAN TRICKSTER: The Hidden Lives of Carlos Castaneda, by Ru Marshall


Does anyone under 50 know who Carlos Castaneda was? Around 1970, this anthropologist’s books of psychedelic adventures in Mexico with an Indigenous sorcerer named Don Juan turned him into one of the world’s most widely read writers. Today, he’s a little-remembered artifact. So why a serious biography by the writer and artist Ru Marshall?

Castaneda had a wide-ranging cultural influence. And he was a dark, fascinating character, a Peruvian transplant to California who rebranded himself in the 1980s as a wizard, distilling his respectable mass popularity into a small, lucrative cult. In Marshall’s hands, “American Trickster” is smart, thoughtful — and all too timely.

AMERICAN TRICKSTER: The Hidden Lives of Carlos Castaneda

“Let me unequivocally get this out of the way,” Marshall stipulates early on. “It was all a hoax, a trick.” The books were fiction, Don Juan an invention. And with them Castaneda godfathered a facts-don’t-matter alternate-reality paradigm shift still transforming our culture.

Castaneda was 42 and on hiatus from a Ph.D. program in 1968 when “The Teachings of Don Juan” was published. In a foreword, his mentor, the chair of the anthropology department at U.C.L.A, praised his protégé for leading readers into “an entirely different order of reality.”

In a key scene, Castaneda smokes peyote in Mexico and apparently turns into a crow. Carlos, Marshall writes, relinquishes “his Western worldview and its limiting rationalism.” The book was rapturously reviewed as brilliant and groundbreaking, and found its way into millions of dorm rooms and backpacks.

Two more books were quickly written. “One can’t exaggerate the significance of what Castaneda has done,” an editor at The New York Times Book Review wrote of the second. For the third, “Journey to Ixtlan,” the same editor allegedly commissioned a review from a specialist in Native religions, but killed it (too negative) and published a young anthropologist’s rave instead. It was on the nonfiction best-seller list for six months.

Castaneda had hit the pocket of the zeitgeist wave, what Marshall calls “a mass desire to stick it to the Man.” Castaneda’s luck was also boosted by the popularity of Latin American magical realism and the factually-casual New Journalism.

Marshall writes that Castaneda, raised in a well-to-do family, was a two-faced fabulist who grew into a seductive con man. He hung with hipster intellectuals, soaking up Nietzsche and Sartre, whose ideas he mixed with local ghost stories — and voilà, the teachings of Don Juan. “He lied because he loved to,” Marshall writes. “Lying was for him an art” for this “wonderful, fantastic, fabulous liar.”

In the 1950s he arrived in California, the global headquarters of the fantasy-industrial complex. Castaneda studied anthropology, a field at the leading edge of a new don’t-judge cultural relativism seeping through the academy.

Unlike his contemporary Timothy Leary, whose fame derived from getting fired from Harvard, Castaneda depended on his university’s imprimatur. In fact, he didn’t really do drugs, hated rock ‘n’ roll, dressed conservatively. He loathed his later books’ psychedelic covers, which he deemed “completely inappropriate for a work of serious anthropology.”

In 1972, Joyce Carol Oates publicly questioned Castaneda’s credibility. “I realize that everyone accepts them as anthropological studies,” she wrote, but she doubted that “these books are nonfiction.”

Like other countercultural literary heroes, Castaneda was a nonpublic figure, reinforcing his aura of mystery and gravitas. But in 1973, he made a large exception, agreeing to an interview for a Time magazine cover story — one that concluded Castaneda was a fantasist and Don Juan very probably imaginary. “I have to change my whole format,” he told the interviewer. “Now I am going to be a sorcerer.”

Soon he was persona non grata in academia and getting negative reviews. His new books stopped selling. The discourse moved on.

The book cover of “American Trickster,” by Ru Marshall.

But thousands of devotees paid handsomely to attend his workshops, which quickly turned cultlike. Castaneda called his closest acolytes, mostly women, “winds,” “witches,” “sorcerers,” “Blue Scouts,” “Orange Scouts,” “cyclic beings.” They legally changed their names to be more “sorceric.” Only he could cut female adherents’ hair, and he told them “his semen’s magic properties” would “transmit shamanic knowledge.” In order to become a true sorcerer, he told two followers, he “had to plunge a dagger into a newborn infant’s heart” and eat it. “I have sold my soul to the Devil,” he explained.

One leading male disciple was, improbably, the satirist Bruce Wagner. In 1998, when he learned Castaneda had died, Wagner phoned a fellow follower and joked, “Is it black Nike time yet?” — a reference to the recent mass suicide at the unrelated Heaven’s Gate cult in Southern California. In fact, after Castaneda’s death, five women from the group went missing and never resurfaced.

Marshall himself was a teenage Castaneda fan, and spent 20 years researching and writing “American Trickster.” It’s definitive, exhaustive — sometimes to a fault. We learn the names and pseudonyms of dozens of minor figures in Castaneda’s life, inconsequential dates, endless details of banal encounters; we go down too many digressive, speculative historical and philosophical rabbit holes.

Still, with an American president’s adherents so cultlike (and even pro-psychedelics!), “American Trickster” is illuminating and relevant: We can all use insight into sociopathic selfishness and the pursuit of power for its own sake.

Great American charlatans tend to be extravagant fabricators who believe some or much of their own creation. “I don’t blame anyone for not believing my history,” Mormonism’s creator Joseph Smith said. “If I had not experienced what I have, I would not have believed it myself.”

In the 1990s, Castaneda “laughingly” told followers that psychologists would consider his insistence he saw dead sorcerers’ ghosts a delusion, paranoid schizophrenia — because shrinks are “the ghosts’ puppets.”

Did the people around Castaneda buy his fantasies? His wife “believed him and didn’t,” writes Marshall. “Did Carlos believe he’d sold his soul? Or was he trying to “terrify” an acolyte, “or both?” With tricksters you never know for sure.


AMERICAN TRICKSTERThe Hidden Lives of Carlos Castaneda | By Ru Marshall | OR Books | 672 pp. | $29.95

A version of this article appears in print on July 5, 2026, Page 16 of the Sunday Book Review with the headline: Fraud Alert

(Contributed by Michael Kelly, H.W.)

Translation® class July 18 & 19

REMINDER —Translation®

—  One of The Prosperos Foundation Classes  —

Saturday & Sunday, July 18-19

This online class will run two full days (10:00 am – 5:00 pm Pacific Time)



Presented by Pam Rodolph, H.W., M.

Live on Zoom — attend from anywhere!

Translation® class provides the instruction required for shedding limitation, disorder, and confusion from your world by using this fundamental resource: Straight Thinking in the Abstract. When we judge by appearances, we judge amiss. “That which is essential is invisible to the eye,” as Antoine de Saint Exupéry wrote. Learn to see through what seems to be —  limitation, anxiety, oppression — to Truth, which lies waiting for your discovery.

Further Information and Registration
Copyright © 2026 The Prosperos, All rights reserved.

Researching Energy Medicine with Dean Radin

New Thinking Allowed with Jeffrey Mishlove Jul 13, 2026 Biological Systems, Health and Healing Dean Radin, PhD, is chief scientist at the Institute of Noetic Sciences in Novato, California. He is author of The Conscious Universe, Entangled Minds, Supernormal, and Real Magic. Here he discusses a series of five research papers, published in conjunction with a group of colleagues, investigating “energy medicine” – a term he acknowledges is a misnomer, as it is neither energy nor medicine. 190 individuals with carpal tunnel pain were each treated by an energy healer during a half-hour laboratory session. Significant pain reduction was reported both immediately after the session and also three weeks later. Numerous other measurements were made to help better understand how this process works. Significant findings included quantum negentropic effects and alterations in the spectrographic analysis of water. Links to the actual research studies – https://www.sciencedirect.com/science…https://www.sciencedirect.com/science…https://www.sciencedirect.com/science…https://www.sciencedirect.com/science…https://www.sciencedirect.com/science… New Thinking Allowed host, Jeffrey Mishlove, PhD, is author of The Roots of Consciousness, Psi Development Systems, and The PK Man. Between 1986 and 2002 he hosted and co-produced the original Thinking Allowed public television series. He is the recipient of the only doctoral diploma in “parapsychology” ever awarded by an accredited university (University of California, Berkeley, 1980). He is also the Grand Prize winner of the 2021 Bigelow Institute essay competition regarding the best evidence for survival of human consciousness after permanent bodily death. He is Co-Director of Parapsychology Education at the California Institute for Human Science. (Recorded on December 16, 2020)

Carl Jung’s Red Book

Intueas In-Depth and Intueas Jul 9, 2026 True Self Discovery: https://intueas.tentary.com/p/tsd . . . Today’s in-depth episode uncovers the true significance of Jung’s Red Book as the hidden source of his entire psychological vision. It traces the period after Jung’s break with Freud, when visions, voices, symbolic figures, and inner dialogues led him into a sixteen-year confrontation with the unconscious. The episode reveals why the book was kept locked away for decades: not simply because it threatened Jung’s scientific reputation, but because it challenged the modern assumption that outer, measurable reality is primary while inner experience is secondary. Jung’s descent showed him the opposite—that the psyche shapes every experience of reality, that the unconscious is populated with autonomous forces, and that meaning can only be found through direct encounter with the depths. What emerges is a portrait of the Red Book not as a curiosity, but as a dangerous invitation: to open the locked room within yourself and face what has been shaping your life from beneath the surface. ???? New in-depth episodes daily. ???? Listen. Reflect. Subscribe. . . Sources & References: The Red Book — for Jung’s visionary descent, symbolic dialogues, illuminated manuscript, confrontation with the unconscious, and the raw material behind his later psychology. Memories, Dreams, Reflections — for Jung’s own account of his break with Freud, waking visions, inner crisis, Philemon, and the development of his later work. Symbols of Transformation — for the break with Freud, Jung’s expanded view of libido, and the shift toward meaning, myth, and symbolic psychic energy. The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious — for autonomous psychic figures, archetypes, the collective unconscious, and the deeper structures of symbolic experience. Psychology and Religion — for Jung’s view of the God-image, the religious function of the psyche, and the need for direct encounter rather than belief alone. The Relations Between the Ego and the Unconscious — for the ego’s confrontation with unconscious contents, inner figures, individuation, and the movement toward the Self.

Helena Minginowicz Transforms Humble Paper Towel into Ethereal Paintings

a painting of a contorted white dove on two sheets of paper towel
All images courtesy of Helena Minginowicz, shared with permission

July 13, 2026 (thisiscolossal.com)

“Civilizations are remembered through their monuments, but understood through the things they throw away,” says artist Helena Minginowicz, whose sensitive paintings interrogate our understanding of value. Using airbrushed acrylic, which can be built up in lightweight, translucent layers, the artist takes one of the most quotidian household items as a starting point: paper towel.

With its machine-embossed, moisture-wicking patterns, the absorbent paper comprises an instantly recognizable substrate. The precise, textured flourishes are aesthetically pleasing, and yet it’s hard to completely separate them from our associations with mass-produced paper products that are designed for one-time use and disposability. This dichotomy sits at he heart of Minginowicz’s practice, in which she explores “how changing the hierarchy of materials can reshape the way we perceive value, dignity, and the human experience,” she tells Colossal.

a painting of a woman's face, inspired by a Renaissance portrait, on two sheets of paper towel

Minginowicz’s embossed pieces from everyday domestic material are one facet of a broader multimedia approach to materiality in which she creates paintings on canvas and also painstakingly embosses delicate tissues. The paper towel works, in addition to some that are made on supermarket-style plastic bags, are then presented between thick slabs of acrylic, transforming them into objects with substantial heft and dimensionality.

“Every civilization constructs its own hierarchy of values,” the artist says. “It decides what deserves to be preserved, admired, and passed on to future generations. Monuments, works of art, symbols, and myths preserve an image of humanity as we wish to remember it—strong, beautiful, enduring, and heroic. Yet every monument has its reverse.”

Minginowicz’ imagery draws on the style of Renaissance paintings, especially focusing on expressiveness, intimacy, and the idealized female figure. One might think of Sandro Botticelli’s “The Birth of Venus” or aristocratic portraiture of the era. “For centuries, painting monumentalized what civilizations wished to remember: saints, heroes, gods, victories, myths, and ideals. I use that same language to ask a different question: Who deserves to be remembered with dignity? Not only heroes. Not only the victorious. But every human being.”

Minginowicz is currently working toward a solo exhibition at Galerie Prima in Paris, which is slated to open on October 8. Follow updates and see more on Instagram.

a painting of a man's face with a mark in the shape of a rabbit on his cheek, inspired by a Renaissance portrait, on a torn sheet of paper towel
a painting of a man's face with a mark in the shape of a rabbit on his cheek, inspired by a Renaissance portrait, on a sheet of paper towel that is encased between two thick pieces of acrylic
two small painted female figures inspired by classical paintings on two sheets of paper towel
a painting of a hand and breast from a Renaissance painting on on paper towel
a painting of two figures from a Renaissance painting on two sheets of paper towel
a painting of a hand and breast from a Renaissance painting on two sheets of paper towel
a painting of two people kissing, inspired by a Renaissance portrait, on a torn sheet of paper towel

(Contributed by Michael Kelly, H.W.)

Word-built world: coprology

Artist’s Shit No. 014, 1961
Metal, paper, and artist’s shit. Art: Piero Manzoni / MoMA

A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg

coprology

PRONUNCIATION:

(kuh-PROL-uh-jee) 

MEANING:

noun:
1. The scientific study of excrement.
2. Pornographic material.
3. Language, literature, or art dealing with excretory matters in a prurient or humorous manner.

ETYMOLOGY:From Greek kopro- (dung) + -logy (study). Earliest documented use: 1856.

Consciousness, spirituality, biography, sexuality, androgyny, futurism, space, the arts, science, astrology, democracy, humor, books, movies and more