Kabbalah
Eduard Shyfrin introduces a first-ever systematic theory of Kabbalah for the modern era
In ‘The Relativity of Death,’ Shyfrin transforms centuries of mystical thought into a structured framework – connecting information, consciousness, and reality’s deeper architecture.
The memory that turned into a song
Music, kabbalah, and time: Inside Eduard Shyfrin’s kabbalistic soundscape
Lockdown: Save your time for love
Part 2- Karet and Kabbalah of Information
Analysis of the essence of karet.
Part 1- The punishment of 'Karet' - A punishment from Heaven
What is karet? a detailed analysis.
Part 2 - The Relativity of Death: The informational structure of creation
investigating the problem of life and death - The informational structure of Creation
Relative sanctity - Mystery of Red Heifer
The Commandment of the Red Heifer.
Kabbalah and antisemitism: A condemnation of Lavrov's comment
Eduard Shyfrin condemns the statement by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
World’s largest kabbalah collection to move to Israel's National Library
Leaving the Hebrew University’s Givat Ram campus after 40 years, it will relocate two kilometers to the northeast to its permanent home at the new NLI on Ruppin Boulevard.
Kabbalah meets quantum physics
One of the best-known written introductions to the Kabbalah is that written by Rabbi Yosef Ergas (1685-1730), titled Shomer Emunim, which was recently translated into English.
This Australian couple is bringing Jewish mysticism secrets to English
“While the Zohar has been translated several times into English, the tikunim have never really been translated into any Western language.”
16th-century letter from famed Kabbalist ‘the Arizal’ revealed
The letter, which was sent to the Arizal by someone named David requesting support for a fundraiser, was discovered in the binding of an antique book.
Mantua, Italy, building Jewish museum on burial site of Kabbalist masters
The Jewish cemetery of San Nicolò is located in Mantua, a small northern Italian town in the Po Valley with a Jewish history dating back to the 12th century.