Lyrics by Hermetica

Do you love Hermetica's songs? Here you'll find the lyrics to Hermetica's songs so you can sing them at the top of your lungs, make your own versions, or simply understand them properly.

Here you can find out which songs by Hermetica are the most searched.

  1. Yo No Lo Haré
  2. Tu eres su seguridad
  3. Memoria de Siglos
  4. Atravesando Todo Límite
  5. Olvídalo Y Volverá Por Más
  6. Cuando Duerme La Ciudad
  7. Otro Día Para Ser
  8. Evitando el ablande
  9. Buscando Razón
  10. Soy de La Esquina
  11. En Las Calles de Liniers
  12. Vientos de Poder
  13. Moraleja
  14. Gil Trabajador
  15. Desterrando A Los Oscurantistas
  16. Para Que No Caigas
  17. Víctimas Del Vaciamiento
  18. Del Camionero
  19. Ayer Deseo, Hoy Realidad
  20. Sepulcro Civil
  21. Desde El Oeste
  22. Destruccion
  23. Vida Impersonal
  24. Craneo Candente
  25. Horizonte Perdido
  26. La revancha de América
  27. Predicción
  28. Del Colimba
  29. Masa Anestesiada
  30. Cambalache
  31. Deja de robar
  32. Ideando La Fuga
  33. Hospitalarias Realidades
  34. Porque Hoy Nací
  35. Vencedores Vencidos
  36. Robó Un Auto
  37. Traición
  38. No Class (Motorhead cover)

The Hermetica are texts attributed to the legendary Hellenistic figure Hermes Trismegistus, a syncretic combination of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth. These texts may vary widely in content and purpose, but by modern convention are usually subdivided into two main categories, the "technical" and "religio-philosophical" Hermetica. The category of "technical" Hermetica encompasses a broad variety of treatises dealing with astrology, medicine and pharmacology, alchemy, and magic, the oldest of which were written in Greek and may go back as far as the second or third century BCE. Many of the texts belonging in this category were later translated into Arabic and Latin, often being extensively revised and expanded throughout the centuries. Some of them were also originally written in Arabic, though in many cases their status as an original work or translation remains unclear. These Arabic and Latin Hermetic texts were widely copied throughout the Middle Ages (the most famous example being the Emerald Tablet). The "religio-philosophical" Hermetica are a relatively coherent set of religio-philosophical treatises that were written mostly in the second and third centuries, though the very earliest one of them, the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius, may go back to the first century CE. They are chiefly focused on the relationship between human beings, the cosmos, and God (thus combining philosophical anthropology, cosmology, and theology). Many of them are also moral exhortations calling for a way of life (the "way of Hermes") leading to spiritual rebirth, and eventually to divinization in the form of a heavenly ascent. The treatises in this category were probably all originally written in Greek, although some of them survive only in Coptic, Armenian, or Latin translations. During the Middle Ages, most of them were only accessible to Byzantine scholars (an important exception being the Asclepius, which mainly survives in an early Latin translation), until a compilation of Greek Hermetic treatises known as the Corpus Hermeticum was translated into Latin by the Renaissance scholars Marsilio Ficino (1433–1499) and Lodovico Lazzarelli (1447–1500). Though strongly influenced by Greek and Hellenistic philosophy (especially Platonism and Stoicism), and to a lesser extent also by Jewish ideas, many of the early Greek Hermetic treatises also contain distinctly Egyptian elements, most notably in their affinity with traditional Egyptian wisdom literature. This used to be the subject of much doubt, but it is now generally admitted that the Hermetica as such did in fact originate in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, even if most of the later Hermetic writings (which continued to be composed at least until the twelfth century CE) did not. It may even be the case that the great bulk of the early Greek Hermetica were written by Hellenizing members of the Egyptian priestly class, whose intellectual activity was centred in the environment of Egyptian temples.

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