Beauty with Venus, Goddess Ritual Mini-Playlist

Mini-Playlist

Mini-Album Cover art for E Sylvia & AI "Beauty with Venus, Goddess Ritual"

E Sylvia & AI
"Beauty with Venus, Goddess Ritual"

"Beauty with Venus, Goddess Ritual" is at YouTube as an audio playlist. An official artist collection is also available.

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This curated collection of uplifting spiritual music is designed for self-love, gentle meditation, and connecting with the divine feminine energy of the Goddess.

Featuring the powerful anthem 'Goddess Awakening' and the heart-opening duet 'Love is Everywhere,' this playlist is perfect for moments of reflection, intention setting, or deep relaxation.

This powerful series was created and published at the Equinox of Spring (March 20th, 2026).


1. +The Standard Metaphysical Disclaimer

A celestial choir flows with ambient tones; lyrics gently remind that ritual music is not a substitute for professional advice and results may vary.

2. Casting a Circle of White Light (Chant)

A chant of elemental power; this ritual song moves through East, South, West, and North, weaving the cycles of the moon and season into a protective circle of white light.

3. Goddess Awakening

With love, pure intent, and actions that reflect inner truth, this song invites you to align your soul's depth with your daily choices.

4. Love is Everywhere (duet)

Celebrating beauty in simple moments, remembering that love surrounds us; in nature, in friendship, and in every heartbeat. Gentle, melodic, and uplifting.

5. Dissolving a Circle of White Light (Chant)

A chant of completion, allowing the listener to dissolve the circle of white light, release intentions, and return to daily life with energies grounded and harmonized, completing the ritual.


E Sylvia & AI is a genre-blurring music project that blends human-crafted lyrics with AI-generated soundscapes to create songs that feel both timeless and experimental. From the soul of flamenco to the swing of jazz and the intimacy of indie ballads, their music weaves storytelling, emotion, and myth into boundary-defying sonic experiences.

Rooted in jazz and classical traditions, the project was founded by lyricist and concept creator E Sylvia, a former music conservatory student with a deep love of poetic expression. Drawing on mythology, philosophy, and feeling, she guides the project’s lyrical direction while collaborating with AI tools to push the edge of what's possible in music-making.

Listeners describe the result as “amazing,” “so good,” “fire,” and “songs like I never knew existed.” With new album releases on the horizon, E Sylvia & AI invites you into a sound world where ancient themes meet futuristic textures — and no two songs feel quite the same.

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🎶 Find the Playlist

Playlists, music and videos are at 📺 YouTube.

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Thank you for supporting this collaboration between human lyrics and AI-assisted music.
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Ancient Veganism and Architectural/Design Connection

Veganism and Architecture

Ancient Temples and Vegan Philosophers

If you've followed my YouTube channel for awhile, you'll know that I'm vegan, and have been seeking vegan-friendly resources for drawing tools and construction materials. Some time ago, I found a few ancient Roman recipes that were vegan, or easy to veganize, and discovered they were easy to cook, and actually pretty tasty and nutritious. Which lead me into a discussion today with AI (as Google Gemini) about ancient philosophers who were vegan, and how their vegan stances may be applied to architecture. Here's the answer I received, with graphics by AI (as ChatGPT):

'Pythagoras is your primary "Vegan Architect" of antiquity. While we think of him for a2 + b2 = c2, his dietary laws and his architectural influence were actually part of the same "Universal Harmony" (the Musica Universalis).

The "Vegan" Philosophers of Rome and Greece

In ancient times, "veganism" was mostly called Abstinence from Animal Food or the "Pythagorean Diet." It wasn't just a food choice; it was a structural belief in the "transmigration of souls" (metempsychosis).

Philosopher Dietary Stance The Architectural/Design Connection
Pythagoras (6th c. BC) Strict vegetarian (possibly vegan). Avoided wool and leather; wore linen and papyrus. Established Proportion and Ratio (1:1, 2:3, 3:4) as the basis for temple design. To him, a building was a "frozen" musical chord.
Seneca (1st c. AD)Practiced vegetarianism in his youth under the teacher Sotion. As a Stoic, he argued for Functional Simplicity. He hated luxury and "noisy" architecture, preferring designs that followed natural logic.
Plutarch (1st c. AD) Wrote On Eating Meat. Argued humans aren't biologically "designed" for meat (flat teeth, weak digestion). He was a priest at Delphi and heavily involved in the Construction Boom of the Temple of Apollo, focusing on sacred geometry.
Porphyry (3rd c. AD) Wrote On Abstinence from Animal Food. Suggested killing animals for "pleasure" (food) corrupts the soul's architecture. Believed in Ascetic Aesthetics—that the environment should be a "purification" for the soul, much like a well-proportioned room.

The Influence on Design: The "Music of Numbers"

For these thinkers, how you eat and how you build were both attempts to align with the Logos (Universal Reason).

Pythagorean Triples in Architecture: The discovery of 3-4-5 triangles wasn't just for math; it was used to ensure "Right Angles" in temples like the Athena Temple at Paestum. The "purity" of the diet mirrored the "purity" of the geometry.

The "Vegan" Wardrobe: Pythagoras refused to wear animal skins. This influenced the "materiality" of his schools—using linen and stone rather than leather and wool. This is a direct ancestor to modern Sustainable/Vegan Interior Design.' 

Interesting stuff, and although not necessarily thoroughly fact-checked, I feel it's likely to be pretty accurate.

Ancient Philosophers with Vegan-Friendly Stances