In it we find works and authors such as the Genji Monogatari, the Yijing, Ivan Morris, Richard Tarnas, Michio Kaku, Winifred Gérin, Leo Tolstoy, Nicolás Gómez Dávila, the Rāmāiana, Jean Gebser, the Jin Ping Mei, Alain Daniélou, Edward Gibbon, Giacomo Casanova, Matsuo Bashō, Anagarika Govinda, Leonardo da Jandra, Octavio Paz, the One Thousand and One Nights, Peter y Elizabeth Fenwick, Jacobo Siruela, the Bhagavad Gita, Arthur Rimbaud, Jordi Esteva, J. F. Martel, Henryk Skolimowski, Juan Arnau, Sonu Shamdasani, Jeremy Naydler, E. F. Schumacher, the Upanishads, Peter Kingsley, Jeffrey J. Kripal, José Joaquín Parra Bañón, Bernardo Kastrup, Algis Uždavinys, David Fideler, R. A. Schwaller de Lubicz, the Diamond Sutra followed by the Heart Sutra, Pythagoras, Joseph Campbell or Jakob Böhme.
[10][11] This collection aims to offer a new perspective on the most significant and legitimate examples of a whole series of literary and spiritual works inspired by the imagination.
We find authors such as René Daumal, Linda Fierz-David, Michael Maier, Max Ernst, Alain Daniélou, Jacobo Siruela, Inka Martí, Pim van Lommel, Helen Keller, Kathleen Raine, William Blake, George MacDonald, Patrick Harpur, Arthur Zajonc, Remedios Varo, James Hillman, Joscelyn Godwin, Keiron Le Grice, Jules Cashford, Owen Barfield, Tom Cheetham, Joseph Campbell, André Breton, Gary Lachman, Károly Kerényi, Jeffrey Raff, William K. Mahony, Hilma af Klint, Edwin A. Abbott, Charles H. Hinton, Claude Bragdon, Pierre Mabill or Gustav Fechner.
This fourth collection includes authors such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Henri Bortoft, Alfred North Whitehead, Jeremy Naydler, Arthur Firstenberg, Stephan Harding, Changlin Zhang or Christian de Quincey.
[18] Content in the edit of 11:52, January 29, 2025 was translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es:Ediciones Atalanta; see its history for attribution.