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📈 Análisis del canal de Telegram 0/0

El canal 0/0 (@error0error) en el segmento lingüístico de Árabe es un actor destacado. Actualmente la comunidad reúne a 10 609 suscriptores, ocupando la posición 8 703 en la categoría Religión y espiritualidad y el puesto 7 218 en la región Arabia Saudí.

📊 Métricas de audiencia y dinámica

Desde su creación el невідомо, el proyecto ha mostrado un crecimiento acelerado, reuniendo a 10 609 suscriptores.

Según los últimos datos del 03 julio, 2026, el canal mantiene una actividad estable. En los últimos 30 días la variación de miembros fue de 250, y en las últimas 24 horas de 5, conservando un alto alcance.

  • Estado de verificación: No verificado
  • Tasa de interacción (ER): El promedio de interacción de la audiencia es 13.49%. Durante las primeras 24 horas tras publicar, el contenido suele obtener 7.09% de reacciones respecto al total de suscriptores.
  • Alcance de las publicaciones: Cada publicación recibe en promedio 1 431 visualizaciones. En el primer día suele acumular 752 visualizaciones.
  • Reacciones e interacción: La audiencia responde de forma activa: el promedio de reacciones por publicación es 0.
  • Intereses temáticos: El contenido se centra en temas clave como مُشَاعَرَة, رَجُل, ظِلّ, نِسَاءَة, اِبن.

📝 Descripción y política de contenido

El autor describe el recurso como un espacio para expresar opiniones subjetivas:
0/0 = undefined A labyrinth of ideas, A diary of curiosities Bot: @contactzero_bot

Gracias a la alta frecuencia de actualizaciones (últimos datos recibidos el 04 julio, 2026), el canal mantiene la vigencia y un amplio alcance. La analítica demuestra que la audiencia interactúa activamente con el contenido, lo que lo convierte en un punto de referencia dentro de la categoría Religión y espiritualidad.

10 609
Suscriptores
+524 horas
+577 días
+25030 días
Archivo de publicaciones
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حقيقةُ المحبةِ قيامُك مع مَحبوبِك، بِخَلعِ أوصافك والإتصافِ بأوصافه - الحسين بن منصور الحلاج

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— The Agony of Eros

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Eros, in contrast, [...] leads the One out of a narcissistic inferno. It sets into motion freely willed self-renunciation, freely willed self-evacuation. A singular process of weakening lays hold of the subject of love — which, however, is accompanied by a feeling of strength. This feeling is not the achievement of the One, but the gift of the Other.

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Eros and depression are opposites. Eros pulls the subject out of itself, toward the Other. Depression, in contrast, plunges the subject into itself. Today’s narcissistic “achievement-subject” seeks out success above all. Finding success validates the One through the Other. Thereby, the Other is robbed of otherness and degrades into a mirror of the One — a mirror affirming the latter’s image. This logic of recognition ensnares the narcissistic achievement-subject more deeply in the ego. The corollary is success-induced depression: the depressive achievement-subject sinks into, and suffocates in, itself.

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So every once in a while, try to sit quietly and get bored for some minutes. It'll make your day feel longer.

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A new, boring, theory of relativity Time is relative. Our mood, state of mind, and what we do in the moment, all affect our perception of time: boredom lengthens it, while activity shortens it. It follows, boredom serves a very important role; it engrosses us in time and allows us to savor and feel every second. In boredom one feels the full weight of the moment. To feel bored, in the short term, is unpleasant. But on the long term, boredom is like the clock chime that helps you tell the time. It punctuates time and "lengthens it." Boredom is the metronome for our perception of time.

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Repost from 0/0
An hour with a wise person worth more than one thousand books - Chinese Proverb

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Aghadan_Alqak_sh [d6LOWxVLe54].mp320.42 MB

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ينبغي لمن يكتب كتابًا ألّا يكتبه إلّا على أنّ الناس كلَّهم له أعداء، وكلَّهم عالِمٌ بالأُمور، وكلَّهم متفرِّغٌ له، ثُمّ لا يرضى بذلك حتى يَدَع كتابه غُفلًا، ولا يرضى بالرأي الفطير، فإنّ لابتداءِ الكتابِ فتنةً وعُجبًا، فإذا سَكَنَت الطبيعة وهدأت الحركة وتراجعت الأخلاط وعادت النفسُ وافرةً، أعادَ النظرَ فيه، فيتوقف عند فصولِه، تَوقُّفَ مَن يكونُ وزنُ طَمَعه في السلامة أنقَصَ مِن وَزنِ خَوفِه مِن العَيب. — أبو عثمان الجاحظ.

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3.61 MB

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ينبغي لمن يكتب كتابًا ألّا يكتبه إلّا على أنّ الناس كلَّهم له أعداء، وكلَّهم عالِمٌ بالأُمور، وكلَّهم متفرِّغٌ له، ثُمّ لا يرضى بذلك حتى يَدَع كتابه غُفلًا، ولا يرضى بالرأي الفطير، فإنّ لابتداءِ الكتابِ فتنةً وعُجبًا، فإذا سَكَنَت الطبيعة وهدأت الحركة وتراجعت الأخلاط وعادت النفسُ وافرةً، أعادَ النظرَ فيه، فيتوقف عند فصولِه، تَوقُّفَ مَن يكونُ وزنُ طَمَعه في السلامة أنقَصَ مِن وَزنِ خَوفِه مِن العَيب. — أبو عثمان الجاحظ.

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— Destiny Disrupted, by Tamim Ansary

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The history of Iraq Perhaps the most dynamic petri dish of early human culture was that fertile wedge of land between the Tigris and Euphrates known as Mesopotamia—which means, in fact, “between the rivers.” Incidentally, the narrow strip of land flanked by these two rivers almost exactly bisects the modern-day nation of Iraq. When we speak of “the fertile crescent” as “the cradle of civilization,” we’re talking about Iraq—this is where it all began. One key geographical feature sets Mesopotamia apart from some of the other early hotbeds of culture. Its two defining rivers flow through flat, habitable plains and can be approached from any direction. Geography provides no natural defenses to the people living here—unlike the Nile, for example, which is flanked by marshes on its eastern side, by the uninhabitable Sahara on the west, and by rugged cliffs at its upper end. Geography gave Egypt continuity but also reduced its interactions with other cultures, giving it a certain stasis. Not so, Mesopotamia. Here, early on, a pattern took hold that was repeated many times over the course of a thousand-plus years, a complex struggle between nomads and city dwellers, which kept spawning bigger empires. The pattern went like this: Settled farmers would build irrigation systems supporting prosperous villages and towns. Eventually some tough guy, some well-organized priest, or some alliance of the two would bring a number of these urban centers under the rule of a single power, thereby forging a larger political unit—a confederation, a kingdom, an empire. Then a tribe of hardy nomads would come along, conquer the monarch of the moment, seize all his holdings, and in the process expand their empire. Eventually the hardy nomads would become soft, luxury-loving city dwellers, exactly the sort of people they had conquered, at which point another tribe of hardy nomads would come along, conquer them, and take over their empire. Conquest, consolidation, expansion, degeneration, conquest—this was the pattern. It was codified in the fourteenth century by the great Muslim historian Ibn Khaldun, based on his observations of the world he lived in. Ibn Khaldun felt that in this pattern he had discovered the underlying pulse of history.

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— Black Bird
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— Black Bird

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— Destiny Disrupted, by Tamim Ansary

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We often hear of Alexander the Great conquering the world, but what he really conquered was Persia, which had already conquered “the world.”

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Cuneiform libraries of ancient Mesopotamia [were] so extensive that we know more about daily life in this area three thousand years ago than we know about daily life in western Europe twelve hundred years ago.

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