The document provides information about the seven wonders of the ancient world and the seven wonders of the modern world. It includes visual activity tasks to match each wonder with its name and location on maps. There are also function files to fill in details about each wonder such as date of construction, notable features, and cause of destruction. Reading passages provide more in-depth background on individual wonders like the Taj Mahal.
The document discusses definitions of art, functions of art, and the context surrounding art. It provides a strict, modern definition that art is something made for contemplation and appreciated for its sensuous qualities. It then discusses some functions of art including decoration, statements of power to impress and intimidate, stockpiling wealth, community participation, and showcasing artistic skill. Finally, it notes that the context surrounding art can influence how we connect with it, and that art was made by humans to communicate with other humans.
1) The document provides an overview of ancient Greek and Roman history from 3000 BCE to 500 CE. It covers major civilizations like Minoans, Mycenaeans, and describes Greek art, architecture, philosophy and the rise and fall of the Roman Empire.
2) Key aspects highlighted include the rise of Athenian democracy and Greek drama/theatre, the influence of philosophers like Socrates and Plato, and famous artworks from periods like Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic.
3) Roman contributions discussed include engineering feats, the rise of the Roman Republic and Empire under figures like Julius Caesar and Augustus, as well as architectural styles like Doric, Ionic and Corinthian orders
This document provides information from a quiz containing multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions. It discusses topics like the invention of the transistor, Marie Curie's radioactive research papers, and a fatwa issued in Saudi Arabia banning images of humans or animals. The document is testing knowledge across science, history, and current events.
Apart from inventing the radio, in 1896 Nikola Tesla also wrote Niruddesher Kahini, the first major work in Bengali science fiction. He supposedly was the first science fiction writer in the Bengali language.
1) A town in Kerala derived its name from a stone structure where headloaders transporting goods could rest. The town is known today for its multicultural nature due to North Indian manual laborers and another reason.
2) Star Wars uses earth-like terminology like "galactic reaches" to help audiences relate to settings, though characters use accurate terms for specific planets and moons.
3) Kashmir's centuries-old willow wood industry saw huge growth this year due to an event related to Pulwama and Anantnag districts, where willow trees grow in nearby wet highlands.
The document summarizes the competition held in 1401-1402 for the commission to design the bronze East Doors of the Baptistery of Florence Cathedral. Brunelleschi and Ghiberti submitted entries, with Ghiberti's winning design showing a more advanced use of linear perspective and a greater sense of emotional complexity. Though he lost, Brunelleschi's studies of classical architecture and development of linear perspective led to his later success as a renowned architect, including his dome for Florence Cathedral. Ghiberti went on to complete the doors and later received another commission to design the Gates of Paradise doors for the Baptistery.
This document provides an overview of prehistoric art and architecture from the Paleolithic to Neolithic periods. It discusses cave paintings found at Chauvet Cave and Lascaux Cave in France dating back 30,000-10,000 years which depicted animals and handprints. Female figurines from this era, often referred to as "Venus" figures, are also summarized. Finally, some of the earliest structures built by prehistoric humans are outlined, including Jericho with its stone walls from 9,400 BC and megalithic sites like Stonehenge, Newgrange and Bryn Celli Ddu from 3,000-3,150 BC.
The document provides information about the seven wonders of the ancient world and the seven wonders of the modern world. It includes visual activity tasks to match each wonder with its name and location on maps. There are also function files to fill in details about each wonder such as date of construction, notable features, and cause of destruction. Reading passages provide more in-depth background on individual wonders like the Taj Mahal.
The document discusses definitions of art, functions of art, and the context surrounding art. It provides a strict, modern definition that art is something made for contemplation and appreciated for its sensuous qualities. It then discusses some functions of art including decoration, statements of power to impress and intimidate, stockpiling wealth, community participation, and showcasing artistic skill. Finally, it notes that the context surrounding art can influence how we connect with it, and that art was made by humans to communicate with other humans.
1) The document provides an overview of ancient Greek and Roman history from 3000 BCE to 500 CE. It covers major civilizations like Minoans, Mycenaeans, and describes Greek art, architecture, philosophy and the rise and fall of the Roman Empire.
2) Key aspects highlighted include the rise of Athenian democracy and Greek drama/theatre, the influence of philosophers like Socrates and Plato, and famous artworks from periods like Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic.
3) Roman contributions discussed include engineering feats, the rise of the Roman Republic and Empire under figures like Julius Caesar and Augustus, as well as architectural styles like Doric, Ionic and Corinthian orders
This document provides information from a quiz containing multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank questions. It discusses topics like the invention of the transistor, Marie Curie's radioactive research papers, and a fatwa issued in Saudi Arabia banning images of humans or animals. The document is testing knowledge across science, history, and current events.
Apart from inventing the radio, in 1896 Nikola Tesla also wrote Niruddesher Kahini, the first major work in Bengali science fiction. He supposedly was the first science fiction writer in the Bengali language.
1) A town in Kerala derived its name from a stone structure where headloaders transporting goods could rest. The town is known today for its multicultural nature due to North Indian manual laborers and another reason.
2) Star Wars uses earth-like terminology like "galactic reaches" to help audiences relate to settings, though characters use accurate terms for specific planets and moons.
3) Kashmir's centuries-old willow wood industry saw huge growth this year due to an event related to Pulwama and Anantnag districts, where willow trees grow in nearby wet highlands.
The document summarizes the competition held in 1401-1402 for the commission to design the bronze East Doors of the Baptistery of Florence Cathedral. Brunelleschi and Ghiberti submitted entries, with Ghiberti's winning design showing a more advanced use of linear perspective and a greater sense of emotional complexity. Though he lost, Brunelleschi's studies of classical architecture and development of linear perspective led to his later success as a renowned architect, including his dome for Florence Cathedral. Ghiberti went on to complete the doors and later received another commission to design the Gates of Paradise doors for the Baptistery.
This document provides an overview of prehistoric art and architecture from the Paleolithic to Neolithic periods. It discusses cave paintings found at Chauvet Cave and Lascaux Cave in France dating back 30,000-10,000 years which depicted animals and handprints. Female figurines from this era, often referred to as "Venus" figures, are also summarized. Finally, some of the earliest structures built by prehistoric humans are outlined, including Jericho with its stone walls from 9,400 BC and megalithic sites like Stonehenge, Newgrange and Bryn Celli Ddu from 3,000-3,150 BC.
The document provides an overview of the functions and origins of art in early human societies. It discusses how the earliest art from places like Blombos Cave in South Africa dated to 77,000 years ago served decorative purposes like shell beads. Ritual and ceremonial art is seen in the cave paintings of Altamira Cave from 35,000 years ago. The document then focuses on the art of Mesopotamian cultures like the Sumerians starting around 8500 BCE as agriculture arose, enabling larger populations and surplus food leading to stratified societies, trade, writing, and large building projects by elites like the Ziggurat of Ur to demonstrate power and prestige.
Art began as ritualistic expressions used in communities to prepare for hunts and understand the natural world. It later served decorative purposes to embellish people, dwellings and objects. Art was also used to demonstrate power and status through displays of wealth and skill. While originally focused on ritual, decoration and power, art has evolved over time to include individual expressions and appreciation for form, color and other sensuous qualities. Context remains important for understanding art's original intent to communicate meaning.
The document provides an introduction and notes on works featured in the exhibition "Utopia Ltd." held at the Highlanes Gallery. It summarizes each artist's work, how they explore utopian ideas through various mediums, and comments on how the works represent modernist architecture and design within a commodified 20th century society. The exhibition brings together seven artists who open up a debate on the utopian through painting, sculpture, architecture, design and video.
Importance Of Homework Essay In English KcawebLaura Johnson
The document discusses different forms of love presented in speeches by characters in Plato's Symposium. Phaedrus views love as the primordial god. Pausanias distinguishes between good and bad love based on virtue. Eryximachus sees love as governing fields like medicine through moderation. Aristophanes discusses the origin and purpose of love as humans seeking their other halves. Socrates presents love as seeking immortality through procreation of ideas rather than children.
The document discusses various rituals and superstitions associated with Shakespeare's play Macbeth. It mentions turning three times, spitting over one's shoulder, or reciting lines from the play as ways to ward off the supposed evil of uttering the play's name. A more elaborate ritual involves leaving and re-entering a place while performing actions like spinning and brushing oneself off. The document notes that these rituals stem from the belief that saying "Macbeth" in a theater will cause disaster, known as the Macbeth curse or Scottish curse.
This document provides an overview of prehistoric art in Europe from the Paleolithic to Neolithic periods. It discusses the Venus of Willendorf sculpture and cave paintings found at sites like Altamira and Lascaux that depict animals. While the exact purpose is unknown, some theories suggest the art was used for fertility rituals, hunting magic, or religious ceremonies. Settlements like Catalhoyuk emerged in the Neolithic, along with megalithic structures like menhirs, dolmens, and henges such as Stonehenge, which may have functioned as astronomical calendars. The document analyzes prehistoric art through the lens of sympathetic magic and its role in early human representation and civilization.
Erik von-daniken-chariots-of-the-gods (was god an astronaut?)Rael Ontimare
This book tells a lot about human history. It directs us to a different way of understanding about ancient culture. You can visit the video documentary on this link below;
https://uii.io/erikvondaniken
Information Technology - The First Two Million Years (2019 Edition)Jamie Stantonian
This the story of how we've have transmitted, stored and processed information since before we were human. Beginning with embodied knowledge, body decoration, language, myth, writing, print and eventually electronic media it explores how each era has dramatically altered the fabric of human society, the nature of consciousness, and ultimately the physical world itself. It spans the period of about 2 million years BC (roughly the discovery of fire) and goes to the late 19th century. The 20th and 21st centuries and the implications for the future will be tackled in an expanded presentation in the near future.
HUMAN EVOLUTION WHAT MAKES HUMANS HUMAN. OCT. 18 2012 909 AM.docxadampcarr67227
HUMAN EVOLUTION WHAT MAKES HUMANS HUMAN. OCT. 18 2012 9:09 AM
Lascaux’s Picassos
What prehistoric art tells us about the evolution of the human brain.
By Katy Waldman
Everyone answers the question “What makes humans
human?” in her own way, but if you were ever a liberal arts
student, you might have to resist the urge to roll your eyes and
reply, “The humanities.” Maybe you’d get more speci!c, quoting
the critic Haldane McFall: "That man who is without the arts is
little above the beasts of the !eld."
OK, so you’d be pretty pretentious, but would you be wrong?
Not really. Paleontologists tend to link the development of
modern human cognition to the rise of our ability to express
ourselves as artists and historians through cave painting,
sculptures, and other prehistoric art. Representing the world in
symbols may have heralded the beginnings of language.
Creating paint from charcoal, iron-rich ochre, crumbled animal
bones, and urine meant understanding how materials could
combine to form substances with new properties. Storing the paint—perhaps in an abalone shell that would be discovered 100,000 years later in a
cavern on the South African coast—required innovation and planning ahead.
Since at least the 1970s, the question of when we !rst acquired our humanness has been tangled up in discoveries about when we began making art.
Richard Klein at Stanford used carvings such as the 30,000-year-old Lion Man of Hohlenstein Stadel to substantiate his theory that a genetic mutation
caused a sudden mental "owering in our ancestors 40,000 years ago. (Homo sapiens have been around for 200,000 years, but apparently they spent
much of that time twiddling their opposable thumbs.) Yet in 1991, the excavation of 77,000-year-old beads and engraved shards of red ochre in South
Africa upended Klein’s hypothesis. It suggested that symbolic thinking had emerged much earlier than anyone had thought—maybe even at the same
time that our modern bodies evolved. The notion of a game-changing genetic mutation fell out of fashion as older and older artifacts were uncovered.
By 2012, Curtis Marean, a paleoanthropologist at Arizona State University, was voicing conventional wisdom when he told Smithsonian’s Erin Wayman:
“It always made sense that the origins of modern human behavior, the full assembly of modern uniqueness, had to occur at the origin point of the
lineage.”
It seems likely that our brains have been equipped for abstraction for as long as we have been human. But how does prehistoric art help us understand
this capacity—which today asserts itself everywhere from the walls of MoMA to the icons on our smartphones? The images in the Lascaux, Nerja, and
Chauvet caverns look far from hyperrealistic. One simple explanation holds that our ancestors didn’t have the time or skill to render horses and cattle
exactly as they appeared. Yet researchers in neuroaesthetics are beginning to wonder whether the abstraction in Paleolithic art actual.
Art has evolved from serving ritual purposes within communities to becoming a commodity. Originally, art was used for rituals like preparing for hunts, as seen in the cave paintings at Lascaux. It also served to decorate dwellings and people to demonstrate beauty, status, and power. Over time, art became expressions of artistic skill and representations of wealth and status through materials like gold and gems. Now, art is often viewed and displayed in museums as cultural objects and commodities.
How To Write A Review Tips And Tricks GrammarlyMary Calkins
The document provides instructions for writing a paper review on HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process:
1. Create an account and provide login details.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, deadline, and sample work.
3. Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications and reviews. Place a deposit to start work.
4. Review the completed paper and authorize final payment if pleased with the work. Revisions are allowed.
5. Multiple revisions are allowed to ensure satisfaction. Work is original and refunds are provided for plagiarism.
Artfully money was invoked over 35000 years ago an archaeological lesson economics refuses to understand. Reality is not economics and finance game so much as producing fiction.
The document provides an overview of the functions and origins of art in early human societies. It discusses how the earliest art from places like Blombos Cave in South Africa dated to 77,000 years ago served decorative purposes like shell beads. Ritual and ceremonial art is seen in the cave paintings of Altamira Cave from 35,000 years ago. The document then focuses on the art of Mesopotamian cultures like the Sumerians starting around 8500 BCE as agriculture arose, enabling larger populations and surplus food leading to stratified societies, trade, writing, and large building projects by elites like the Ziggurat of Ur to demonstrate power and prestige.
Art began as ritualistic expressions used in communities to prepare for hunts and understand the natural world. It later served decorative purposes to embellish people, dwellings and objects. Art was also used to demonstrate power and status through displays of wealth and skill. While originally focused on ritual, decoration and power, art has evolved over time to include individual expressions and appreciation for form, color and other sensuous qualities. Context remains important for understanding art's original intent to communicate meaning.
The document provides an introduction and notes on works featured in the exhibition "Utopia Ltd." held at the Highlanes Gallery. It summarizes each artist's work, how they explore utopian ideas through various mediums, and comments on how the works represent modernist architecture and design within a commodified 20th century society. The exhibition brings together seven artists who open up a debate on the utopian through painting, sculpture, architecture, design and video.
Importance Of Homework Essay In English KcawebLaura Johnson
The document discusses different forms of love presented in speeches by characters in Plato's Symposium. Phaedrus views love as the primordial god. Pausanias distinguishes between good and bad love based on virtue. Eryximachus sees love as governing fields like medicine through moderation. Aristophanes discusses the origin and purpose of love as humans seeking their other halves. Socrates presents love as seeking immortality through procreation of ideas rather than children.
The document discusses various rituals and superstitions associated with Shakespeare's play Macbeth. It mentions turning three times, spitting over one's shoulder, or reciting lines from the play as ways to ward off the supposed evil of uttering the play's name. A more elaborate ritual involves leaving and re-entering a place while performing actions like spinning and brushing oneself off. The document notes that these rituals stem from the belief that saying "Macbeth" in a theater will cause disaster, known as the Macbeth curse or Scottish curse.
This document provides an overview of prehistoric art in Europe from the Paleolithic to Neolithic periods. It discusses the Venus of Willendorf sculpture and cave paintings found at sites like Altamira and Lascaux that depict animals. While the exact purpose is unknown, some theories suggest the art was used for fertility rituals, hunting magic, or religious ceremonies. Settlements like Catalhoyuk emerged in the Neolithic, along with megalithic structures like menhirs, dolmens, and henges such as Stonehenge, which may have functioned as astronomical calendars. The document analyzes prehistoric art through the lens of sympathetic magic and its role in early human representation and civilization.
Erik von-daniken-chariots-of-the-gods (was god an astronaut?)Rael Ontimare
This book tells a lot about human history. It directs us to a different way of understanding about ancient culture. You can visit the video documentary on this link below;
https://uii.io/erikvondaniken
Information Technology - The First Two Million Years (2019 Edition)Jamie Stantonian
This the story of how we've have transmitted, stored and processed information since before we were human. Beginning with embodied knowledge, body decoration, language, myth, writing, print and eventually electronic media it explores how each era has dramatically altered the fabric of human society, the nature of consciousness, and ultimately the physical world itself. It spans the period of about 2 million years BC (roughly the discovery of fire) and goes to the late 19th century. The 20th and 21st centuries and the implications for the future will be tackled in an expanded presentation in the near future.
HUMAN EVOLUTION WHAT MAKES HUMANS HUMAN. OCT. 18 2012 909 AM.docxadampcarr67227
HUMAN EVOLUTION WHAT MAKES HUMANS HUMAN. OCT. 18 2012 9:09 AM
Lascaux’s Picassos
What prehistoric art tells us about the evolution of the human brain.
By Katy Waldman
Everyone answers the question “What makes humans
human?” in her own way, but if you were ever a liberal arts
student, you might have to resist the urge to roll your eyes and
reply, “The humanities.” Maybe you’d get more speci!c, quoting
the critic Haldane McFall: "That man who is without the arts is
little above the beasts of the !eld."
OK, so you’d be pretty pretentious, but would you be wrong?
Not really. Paleontologists tend to link the development of
modern human cognition to the rise of our ability to express
ourselves as artists and historians through cave painting,
sculptures, and other prehistoric art. Representing the world in
symbols may have heralded the beginnings of language.
Creating paint from charcoal, iron-rich ochre, crumbled animal
bones, and urine meant understanding how materials could
combine to form substances with new properties. Storing the paint—perhaps in an abalone shell that would be discovered 100,000 years later in a
cavern on the South African coast—required innovation and planning ahead.
Since at least the 1970s, the question of when we !rst acquired our humanness has been tangled up in discoveries about when we began making art.
Richard Klein at Stanford used carvings such as the 30,000-year-old Lion Man of Hohlenstein Stadel to substantiate his theory that a genetic mutation
caused a sudden mental "owering in our ancestors 40,000 years ago. (Homo sapiens have been around for 200,000 years, but apparently they spent
much of that time twiddling their opposable thumbs.) Yet in 1991, the excavation of 77,000-year-old beads and engraved shards of red ochre in South
Africa upended Klein’s hypothesis. It suggested that symbolic thinking had emerged much earlier than anyone had thought—maybe even at the same
time that our modern bodies evolved. The notion of a game-changing genetic mutation fell out of fashion as older and older artifacts were uncovered.
By 2012, Curtis Marean, a paleoanthropologist at Arizona State University, was voicing conventional wisdom when he told Smithsonian’s Erin Wayman:
“It always made sense that the origins of modern human behavior, the full assembly of modern uniqueness, had to occur at the origin point of the
lineage.”
It seems likely that our brains have been equipped for abstraction for as long as we have been human. But how does prehistoric art help us understand
this capacity—which today asserts itself everywhere from the walls of MoMA to the icons on our smartphones? The images in the Lascaux, Nerja, and
Chauvet caverns look far from hyperrealistic. One simple explanation holds that our ancestors didn’t have the time or skill to render horses and cattle
exactly as they appeared. Yet researchers in neuroaesthetics are beginning to wonder whether the abstraction in Paleolithic art actual.
Art has evolved from serving ritual purposes within communities to becoming a commodity. Originally, art was used for rituals like preparing for hunts, as seen in the cave paintings at Lascaux. It also served to decorate dwellings and people to demonstrate beauty, status, and power. Over time, art became expressions of artistic skill and representations of wealth and status through materials like gold and gems. Now, art is often viewed and displayed in museums as cultural objects and commodities.
How To Write A Review Tips And Tricks GrammarlyMary Calkins
The document provides instructions for writing a paper review on HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process:
1. Create an account and provide login details.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, deadline, and sample work.
3. Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications and reviews. Place a deposit to start work.
4. Review the completed paper and authorize final payment if pleased with the work. Revisions are allowed.
5. Multiple revisions are allowed to ensure satisfaction. Work is original and refunds are provided for plagiarism.
Artfully money was invoked over 35000 years ago an archaeological lesson economics refuses to understand. Reality is not economics and finance game so much as producing fiction.
Similar to Alternate reality in Design by akinwale (13)
Architectural and constructions management experience since 2003 including 18 years located in UAE.
Coordinate and oversee all technical activities relating to architectural and construction projects,
including directing the design team, reviewing drafts and computer models, and approving design
changes.
Organize and typically develop, and review building plans, ensuring that a project meets all safety and
environmental standards.
Prepare feasibility studies, construction contracts, and tender documents with specifications and
tender analyses.
Consulting with clients, work on formulating equipment and labor cost estimates, ensuring a project
meets environmental, safety, structural, zoning, and aesthetic standards.
Monitoring the progress of a project to assess whether or not it is in compliance with building plans
and project deadlines.
Attention to detail, exceptional time management, and strong problem-solving and communication
skills are required for this role.
Best Digital Marketing Strategy Build Your Online Presence 2024.pptxpavankumarpayexelsol
This presentation provides a comprehensive guide to the best digital marketing strategies for 2024, focusing on enhancing your online presence. Key topics include understanding and targeting your audience, building a user-friendly and mobile-responsive website, leveraging the power of social media platforms, optimizing content for search engines, and using email marketing to foster direct engagement. By adopting these strategies, you can increase brand visibility, drive traffic, generate leads, and ultimately boost sales, ensuring your business thrives in the competitive digital landscape.
2. Introduction
In the world of creativity, reality is a trap created to lure, dismember, and
enslave possibilities. Infinite possibilities.
It makes sense really. That the easy “things” are much easier to be captured.
Therefore, if reality (the obvious “easy” prey) were to consciously avoid being
captured, she would have to change.
To put this in context;
Reality1.0 = Always Captured!!!
Reality1.01 Always Captured!!!
Since the consideration here is [infinity], (and infinity = x) and (x 0)
Therefore,
Reality 1.0 (+ x) Always Captured!!!
“Alternate Reality” is the umbrella term for the infinite possibilities that
Reality1.0 + x could ever result to. It is what I call, the utopia for creativity.
This utopia is created by using a combination of 2 major thinking methods.
• Convergent Thinking
• Divergent Thinking
Descriptions and Examples in subsequent slides below…
2
3. Convergent thinking
Similar thinking
direction
Little or no emotional content in final outcome/product
• This process produces outcomes with little or no emotional character.
• The outcome/product determines the thought process. This sorts of sets
an imaginary thinking boundary for the thinking individual.
• Suppresses creativity.
• Impedes self awareness & self-discovery.
3
4. Divergent thinking
Unique thinking
directions
Unique & robust emotional content in final outcome/product
• Produces outcomes with robust and unique emotional character.
• There is no thinking boundary. There are infinite possibilities.
• Promotes creativity.
• Facilitates self-awareness & self-discovery.
• Supports a non-judgmental landscape
• Not bounded by standar rules/laws e.g physics, religion,
• Consists of a combination of series of convergent thinking systems. This
implies that “divergent thinking” makes use of “convergent thinking” for
the organization of the complex infinite streams of creative data.
4
5. Example 1
My Approach: I take a framed moment from Reality 1.0 (TBS)
And I recreate a similar framed moment
Reality 1.01 (The Arena)
I create a story (Just because I care)
So, basically the possibilities are endless
The Arena
5
6. Photo credit: here
Example 1 : TBS Reality 1.0
About Reality 1.0 Wikipedia
Lagos Race Course now TBS, was a sports field that hosted horse racing, but
included a section for football and ground to play cricket.
TBS was constructed in 1972 over the site of a defunct rack for horse racing.
The entrance to the square has gigantic sculptures of four white horses
hovering above the gate and seven red eagles, which are symbols from the
national emblem signifying Strength and Dignity respectively.
6
7. Reality 1.0.1
The Arena
About Reality 1.0.1
The Arena is the battleground for gladiators. Every constellation, thousands of
citizens flock into the Arena to witness various gladiators battle to the death.
The contest involves series of death matches among single representatives
from each genus/clan.
The last gladiator standing is usually anointed on behalf of the clan a medal
made from the ashes of a burning star.`
The Mohaki Eagles have held on to the champion star for many
constellations. Their acute foresight ability and speed give them the
capabilities of predicting and avoiding upcoming attacks, as well as delivering
counter strikes.
Example 1 :
7
8. Reality 1.0.1
The Arena
About Reality 1.0.1
Statues of The Mohaki Eagle is placed along the top edges of the Arena.
These statues show their dedication and commitment towards holding onto
the championship for many constellations.
Next to the Mohaki Eagles on the leader-board chart for most
championships, are the Zabuza Stallions genus/clan. Known for their 1000
horsepower strength which give them a major advantage during critical
stages of battle.
Another notable genus are the Voltas. They are water mammals that have
slippery bodies difficult to grasp and emit large streaks of electromagnetic
pulses.
Blah blah blah
Example 1 :
8
10. Photo credit: here
Example 2 : CCC Reality 1.0
About Reality 1.0 Wikipedia
“The foundation stone for the first cathedral building was laid on 29 March
1867 and the cathedral was established in 1869.
Construction of the current building to designs by architect Bagan Benjamin
started on 1 November 1924. The foundation stone was laid by the Prince of
Wales (later King Edward VIII) on 21 April 1925. It was completed in 1946”
79 years to construction period?
10
11. Reality 1.0.1
Quasithedral
About Reality 1.0.1
The Quasithedral is a sacred fortress of the Hunched back Time Travelers.
These special species are usually hunted for their blood due to their unique
qualities of spawning time vortexes. A time vortex is a temporary portal used
to teleport to any nano-time slot.
Most hunchbacks hated time travel. The hunch on their backs gets bigger the
more they travel through time. A very uncomfortable living experience when
considering cursed with a constantly growing physical defect.
Due to their sacred blood, the hunched backs were extremely scarce. The last
known of their race was called Quasi. A humble kindhearted hunchback with
a distinct giant-like stature.
Example 2 :
11
12. Reality 1.0.1
About Reality 1.0.1
Quasi was known to have a very huge hunched back due to her many travels
through time vortexes. Folktales say that she traveled through time countless
amounts of time to experience the scent of a lost lover.
She spent her last 500 years making renovations to the cathedral which she
grew up in. 1000 years after her death, the locals renamed the monumental
building to Quasithedral to enshrine the “Aroma canister”. A canister that
contains fragments of the scents of Quasi’s lover.
Quasi, while hiding from the time-hungry world, kept busy by sculpting and
making ornamental renovations to the fortress…………..
Blah blah blah
Example 2 :
12
Quasithedral
13. This article is simply a documented personal approach outlined with the aim
to spur creativity. Irrespective of the individual, field of study, industry,
location, ethnicity, e.tc, the natural application of divergent and convergent
thinking can be used to extend the boundary walls of creative endeavors.
For example, the idea of a proposed piece of furniture intended for Reality
1.0 can be gotten from information obtained from reality 1.0.1. The name of
an object in reality 1.0 can be gotten from information obtained from any
alternate reality. Physical qualities, textures, timing, perceptions, beliefs, et.c
all these pieces of data can be mined for use to create.
The possibilities are endless.
13
Conclusion