Doesn't suit? No problem! You can return within 30 days
You won't go wrong with a gift voucher. The gift recipient can choose anything from our offer.
30-day return policy
Through immaterial harmony and science, women offer an ambitious and rigorous reinterpretation of the foundations of life, starting from Africa, the cradle of humanity and the matrix of civilizations.
In Kushite thought, the family is not a private matter: it is the primary institution of the nation. When the Crown-feminine power-guides the meaning, and the Scepter-masculine force-materializes the mission, the continuity of life becomes possible. When this balance is broken, transmission becomes fragile and the family enters into crisis.
Through the study of Kushite matriarchy, this book explores a worldview in which the immaterial precedes the material, and in which science is not opposed to ancestral wisdom, but constitutes one of its contemporary languages. Women appear as a structuring principle of balance, at the crossroads of power and strength, the visible and the invisible, the biological and the spiritual.
Drawing on anthropology, history, the philosophy of life, and the humanities, this book questions the notions of cultural identity, transmission, social organization, and sovereignty. It highlights long-marginalized knowledge-languages, plant- and mineral-based medicines, rites, fractal urbanism, structuring spirituality-as living, structured, codified, and fully operational sciences.
This work is an architecture.
It does not seek to accuse, but to repair.
In Kushite thought, the Crown and the Scepter work in an organic alliance.
The Crown nourishes the Scepter with the fruits of its recognition,
and the Scepter nourishes the Crown with the fruits of its efforts.
From this dynamic alliance springs the completeness of life.