This volume has the ambition to present a vision of reality, a worldview, different from the prevailing cosmology in the dominant culture. It deals with the universal vision of Man as microcosm and image of the Whole; a vision that recognizes Man's dignity in relation to God and the Cosmos. The first part is devoted to a general study of the Divine and to a more particular one about their faces. The Second part reproduces in the First section a commentary on the Christian Trinity, which has seen many reworkings, since the argument represents the fulcrum of the Christian vision of the author: the living God is the Trinitarian God, which is not rigid monotheism nor polytheism, just as Christianity is not its simple doctrine; In the second section, Man is presented as a Trinitarian being in the anthropological, Hellenic and cosmic vision and his responsibility towards the cosmos. As a su...read more