About
Gnossia Institute is a structured body of work dedicated to the development, interpretation, and preservation of a coherent body of work on constitutional form, civic order, and political continuity. It exists as the formal locus of the Res Publica corpus, a long-term project concerned with the conditions under which a republic can exist, endure, and renew itself.
The Institute does not operate as a think tank, advocacy platform, or policy body. It does not produce commentary on current events, nor does it engage in programmatic intervention. Its function is narrower and more demanding: to establish a structured body of thought, to clarify its internal logic, and to make it publicly accessible in a disciplined and coherent form.
The work is organised across three distinct layers. The Corpus defines the formal principles of republican order. The Agora serves as a curated journal in which these principles are interpreted and examined. Krisis gathers diagnostic essays that describe the condition of the present without prescribing immediate solutions. Together, these layers form a closed but extensible intellectual architecture.
Gnossia operates with a commitment to clarity, structural rigour, and continuity. It does not seek breadth, visibility, or rapid output. Its purpose is to develop work that can sustain long-term relevance and withstand systematic scrutiny.
All publications are released digitally and, where appropriate, in printed form. The Institute functions as both archive and point of dissemination, ensuring that the corpus remains stable, accessible, and properly situated within the broader field of political thought.
People
Founder
Vladimir J. Puhalac is the founder of the Gnossia Institute and the author of the Corpus.
His work focuses on the structural conditions of republican order, including formation, time, labour, value, and institutional continuity. The Corpus constitutes a long-term project in political theory and system design.
Associate
Mihailo Petrović contributes to the development and editorial structuring of the Corpus.

