For Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986), a library was always a universe in whose center he himself lived, equal to a delirious divinity. Because the Borgesian library is an “indefinite, and perhaps infinite” number of galleries covered with books that make up an unalterable labyrinth; a mythological geometry that encompasses all the books in the world and that the Argentine author named The Library of Babel, giving the title to a story in which he located his library universe made up of infinite hexagonal rooms where the “catalog of catalogues” would be found.