He was a writer, philosopher, diplomat and lawyer, also known as "El Brujo de Otraparte". The original literary styles he used in his works led him to elaborate treatises on sociology, history, art, morals, economics, epistemology and ...See moreHe was a writer, philosopher, diplomat and lawyer, also known as "El Brujo de Otraparte". The original literary styles he used in his works led him to elaborate treatises on sociology, history, art, morals, economics, epistemology and theology, among other topics. He has been considered "one of the most vital, controversial and controversial writers of the twentieth century and his work was decisive for the birth of the Nadaist movement founded by one of his disciples, the Antiochian writer Gonzalo Arango.
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