
Editorial
We are pleased to announce the launch of Editoriale Ipertesuale , a new online section dedicated to environmental awareness and scientific dissemination. This space is designed to become a reference point for those who wish to better understand the importance of nature and its delicate balance.
Editoriale Ipertesuale stands out for its ability to directly connect readers to sources, thanks to a hypertext system that enriches every piece of content. Like an explorable map, each keyword becomes a gateway to knowledge, opening windows to carefully selected articles, studies, and research.
Our editorial team works diligently to provide content that not only informs but inspires concrete action. From in-depth explorations of the crucial role of trees in cities—as in this deliberately pared-down issue—to the importance of bees for ecosystem balance, Editoriale Ipertesuale offers a holistic perspective on globally relevant environmental issues.
We invite you to explore it whenever it's updated to learn, reflect, and connect with a community that shares a passion for our planet.
Hypertextual Editorial – Knowledge that grows like a tree



La tolleranza estrema: libertà di pensiero e dignità intellettuale

La comunità: un sogno irrealizzabile?

L’arte come strumento di denuncia e provocazione

Workation: la nuova frontiera del lavoro da remoto

L’abbraccio protettivo della quercia: una sinfonia di crescita e resilienza come metafora della vita

Hypertextual Editorial: Explore, Connect, Dig Deeper

Verde respira: alberi e api nella danza urbana della vita
Every human being is born immersed in a sea of perceptions. Consciousness is the first shore we touch: a fragile landing place that allows us to say "I" to the world. But consciousness is not a fixed point: it is a movement, a flow that renews itself every moment. It is the ability to recognize that we are alive and that...
"Artificial intelligence is not humanity's enemy, nor its replacement. It is a mirror that shows us who we are and who we could become. It will not do worse than us, it will not do better than us: it will do differently. And in this difference, if we know how to inhabit it, we will find a new form of humanity."
Not all artists seek to arrest the flow of time : some chase it like a wild animal, others pass through it like a raging river. Thomas Dhellemmes belongs to this second lineage: his photography is not an act of fixation, but of movement. He doesn't freeze the moment, he sends it fleeing. He doesn't preserve it, he...



