What is a ņ[HEāRTisT]?
On ᗡvÐĀIØ, Florilegio del Sāber, and the living continuity of visionary speech
There are artists who make images. There are writers who make sentences. There are philosophers who build systems. And then there is the heārtist: the one who enters the ā field before form appears, listens before language hardens, and shapes matter from the living pressure of consciousness.
A heārtist is not simply an artist with feeling. A heārtist is a field-worker. He does not decorate reality; he receives, distills, arranges, and transmits the subtle architecture by which reality becomes perceivable.
The ā field is not a metaphor for imagination alone. It is the living continuum of human attention across time — where Laozi, Spinoza, Nietzsche, Arendt, Jung, Bruce Lee, Sun Tzu, Einstein, Sagan, Tarkovsky and countless others are not frozen as historical statues, but reappear as pressure-points in consciousness.
Florilegio del Sāber gathers these voices not as monuments but as instruments. A dead quote is a sentence used for authority. A living aphorism is a sentence used for awakening.
This archive is an apprentice-field — a serious, ongoing attempt by ᗡVÐĀIØNE & Dr.HEāRT to enter the lineage of heārtistic construction. It is not finished, because the ā field is never finished.
Updates and living continuations of the ā field can be seen under ā.today.
