The Unemployed Philosophers Guild Passport to Wonderland Notebook - Literary Themed Fantasy Passport Sized Mini Pocket Notebook, 3.5" x 5"
R 575
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The Unemployed Philosophers Guild Passport to Wonderland Notebook - Literary Themed Fantasy Passport Sized Mini Pocket Notebook, 3.5" x 5"
The Passport to Wonderland Pocket Notebooks is a place to organize your curiouser and curiouser thoughts and keep you from falling down the rabbit hole.
A handy travelogue for your inward journeys, this blank notebook serves as your official passport to lands fanciful, fictional, and otherwise
Looks and feels like an actual passport and includes a place for personal information, a passport photo, and useful travel tips. Measures 5" x 3.5" with 48 pages to write on.
Makes the perfect little present or stocking stuffer for your wonderful friends, family, and coworkers.
Click the store link near the product title for more smart and funny gifts from The Unemployed Philosophers Guild.
Brought to You by The Unemployed Philosophers Guild
The origins of the Unemployed Philosophers Guild are shrouded in mystery. Some accounts trace the Guild's birth to Athens in the latter half of the 4th century BCE. Allegedly, several lesser philosophers grew weary of the endless Socratic dialogue endemic in their trade and turned to crafting household implements and playthings. (Hence the assertions that Socrates quaffed his hemlock poison from a Guild-designed chalice, though vigorous debate surrounds the question of whether it was a "disappearing" chalice.)
Others argue that the UPG dates from the High Middle Ages, when the Philosophers Guild entered the world of commerce by selling bawdy pamphlets to pilgrims facing long lines for the restroom. Business boomed until 1211 when Pope Innocent III condemned the publications. Not surprisingly, this led to increased sales, even as half our membership was burned at the stake.
More recently, revisionist historians have pinpointed the birth of the Guild to the time it was still cool to live in New York City's Lower East Side. Two brothers turned their inner creativity and love of paying rent towards fulfilling the people's needs for finger puppets, warm slippers, coffee cups, and cracking up at stuff.