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Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Inspired by and Reimagined

 

“When the Voidmoon rises, all thrones fall.”

 

Under the pale glow of the eternal moon, Xal’tharion manifests as both sorcerer and god. His horned helm frames eyes that blaze like twin stars of drowned galaxies, while his armored form radiates the weight of aeons. In each clawed hand, spheres of voidfire writhe — condensed chaos, drawn from the marrow of dying worlds. Behind him, gothic spires crumble as reality bends, and writhing tentacles creep from the shadows to herald their master. The moon above does not offer light — it bows, becoming the unblinking witness to his dominion.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

"Where wonder grows from the forest floor, laughter rings under golden leaves, and honor echoes in the ruins of ancient Elven kingdoms..."

 

In this gentle fantasy landscape, we journey through a realm of light and harmony:

 

🍄 On the left, an elven maiden sits atop a glowing mushroom, surrounded by soft sunlight and fluttering wings.

 

💎 At center, a cheerful gnome explorer strolls along a mossy trail, holding aloft a brilliant crystal found deep within the earth.

 

️ On the right, a poised elven warrior stands among the mossy ruins of a forgotten empire, her blade ready to protect the peace of the realm.

 

This is the lighter side of magic — where joy, curiosity, and grace thrive together in eternal spring.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

As the forest trembled beneath her call, the air shimmered with ancient light. From deep within the heart of the earth, the Crystal Titan rose — a towering being forged of living emerald and arcane might. Radiating energy in waves of radiant green and electric violet, the titan stood crowned in crystalline spires, its form wrapped in sacred runes and nature’s divine armor.

 

Before him stood the Elven Sorceress — regal and fearless, her gown of enchanted green fluttering in the magical winds. With her silver hair dancing in the light, she met her creation’s gaze, her power now mirrored in the elemental guardian she had summoned.

 

In that moment, magic answered legacy.

She was no longer alone — and the forest had a protector once more.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

Vyr’Kos hangs in the void like a divine wound — a scarred, hollowed moon-world devoured from the inside by its own queen. Its surface is torn by jagged obsidian ridges and volcanic scars that bleed rivers of glowing ichor, winding like exposed nerves across a land that was never meant to live. The sky above churns with impossible nebulae in sickly violets and blooded blues, warped by gravitational wounds left by the queen’s emergence.

 

Dominating the skyline is the World-Maw — a colossal, cratering sphere that appears as if it’s consuming the cosmos itself. Its gaping holes pulse with a voidlike hunger, and from its heart pours a beam of violet plasma, endlessly spiraling skyward like a scream that never ends. No light escapes it. Stars turn cold in its presence.

 

Surrounding this grotesque citadel are shattered mountain ranges, twisted into claws that grasp toward the sky. Ash hangs in the air. The winds carry whispers of extinct languages, the last echoes of civilizations devoured and remade.

 

Where Solenyra's Aetherion bathes in divine radiance, Vyr’Kos drinks it in and returns only shadow.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

Aeryn Vaelith is a mythic sorceress born under a comet storm, said to have woven starlight into her soul. Her crimson-red hair flows like molten fire, untamed and elemental, cascading down the shoulders of her obsidian-black gown, encrusted with enchanted jewels. The lace glimmers with silent whispers of ancient spells.

 

Her eyes are her most haunting trait — nebulae trapped in mortal gaze — galaxies swirling with violet, sapphire, and celestial white, glowing with arcane purpose. No one who meets her gaze forgets it. Her beauty is not just ethereal — it is cosmic, ancient, and laced with danger.

 

She is draped in fine elven regalia: a dark jeweled diadem across her brow, delicate ear ornaments, and intricate embroidery that glows faintly with runes. Aeryn walks among ruins and shadowed woods, speaking to stars and commanding the restless dead. She is not only feared — she is worshipped by those who know power when they see it.

A ton has changed since the last set of finalized photos. New paint, speakers, chair, monitor, monitor stand, mouse...it looks and feels a lot different. I replaced a big, ugly CRT that was on the right with a Dell LCD I got for free from my neighbor. Surprisingly, it works great and only has one discrete dead pixel. I also got the mouse for free since my old VX Revolution's scroll wheel stopped working. It took two weeks to send it back and get my replacement MX1100, but it was well worth it. The new mouse is way more comfortable.

I got the chair on sale for $100 at OfficeMax. It's really comfortable and the leather hasnt started flaking off like my last chair. Unfortunately, the arms arent adjustable, so I had to remove a decorative part of the desk to get my keyboard tray to slide out comfortable. Oh well, I never flipped it up anyway, and I can put it back on easy enough.

The speakers are a set of Logitech X-540s. They're 5.1 and sound great. They crackle a little at higher volumes, but it isnt an issue. I had to get 3 foot extension cables from RadioShack, but it was worth it. They look and sound a lot better than my cheap-o speakers from yesteryear.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Inspired by and Reimagined

 

"Forged in flame, bound by eternity."

 

Within the ruins of forgotten empires stands the Obsidian Warden, an eternal guardian carved from scales harder than stone and adorned in gilded armor etched with the wisdom of ages. His eyes burn like molten suns, unyielding and ever-watchful, casting judgment on all who dare approach. Each line upon his armor carries the weight of ancient battles, each ember swirling in the air a reminder of the fires that birthed him. Neither mortal nor beast, he is the eternal sentinel—unyielding, untouchable, and unforgotten.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

"Dream Within a Dream" contains the lyrics of Edgar Allan Poe's poem "A Dream Within a Dream".

 

All that we see or seem

Is but a dream within a dream

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOA578xW5ls&list=PLJReXmzzPLC...

 

Take this kiss upon the brow

And in parting from you now

This much let me avow

 

You are not wrong who deemed

That my days have been a dream

 

Yet if hope has flown away

In a night, in a day

in a vision, or a memory

Is it therefore the less gone?

 

All that we see or seem

Is but a dream within a dream

  

I stand amid the roar

Of the surf tormented shore

And I hold within my hands

Grains of golden sand

 

How few yet how they creep

Through my fingers to the deep

While I weep, while I weep

 

Oh god can I not grasp

them with a tighter clasp

Oh god can I not save

one from the pitiless wave

 

Is all that we see or seem

But a dream within a dream

 

[Lyrics by Edgar Allan Poe]

I finalized a sketch from Katie Turner for Ten Paces - ten-paces.blogspot.com/2011/07/herbology-exam.html

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoscape X and Photoshop.

 

Paxol Neosunto Lynxa Tozifaki – The Memoryfire Matriarch

 

The radiant sovereign of the Amaranth Kitsune — a being woven from lucid flame, cosmic color, and untethered memory.

 

Known by many names across fractured dreams: The Memoryfire Matriarch, The Last Pathwalker, Dreamtail of the Ninth Spark. Her presence ignites the dormant past and future within those who behold her. She is the heart of what the Amaranth Kitsune remember — and everything they chose to forget.

 

Appearance:

 

Nine flowing tails of starlit mist, each shifting through hues of violet, indigo, amber, and aurora-white.

 

Her fur emits a soft light, shimmering like memorylight — adorned with blooming starbursts that pulse like dream-heartbeats.

 

Her eyes are wells of golden recollection, always watching, always remembering.

 

Domain:

 

Said to reside within the Twilight Fissure, a dreamspace between the Pale Vale and the unreached Ninth Dream.

 

Her arrival always comes with warmth, sorrow, and luminous silence.

 

Abilities:

 

Flickerbind: Temporarily binds a being to a lost version of themselves.

 

Soulblossom: Restores a forsaken path through memoryfire, allowing a choice to be remade.

 

Mist of the Ninth: Alters the very laws of memory within a shardworld for a brief time.

 

Philosophy & Role:

 

Paxol does not rule the Amaranth Kitsune — she remembers them forward.

 

She believes that forgotten dreams are seeds, not ashes.

 

She appears not to guide, but to offer the chance to choose differently.

 

Quote:

 

“Every dream you left behind still walks. I am only the fire that lights its return.”

 

A vision of Paxol is known to trigger cascading echoes in the Hollow Veil. Some see her as salvation. Others, as a mirror too bright to face.

done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop and Photoscape X.

 

Set in the icy vastness of Siberia, Dodenrit (“Death Ride”) tells the grimly humorous tale of a family riding in a troika — a traditional Russian sleigh pulled by three horses. They are fleeing through the snow-covered wilderness, but danger is never far behind: a pack of ravenous wolves is relentlessly chasing them.

 

As the journey unfolds, the situation becomes increasingly desperate. The horses are growing tired, the wolves are drawing closer, and the frozen night offers no sanctuary.

 

In a morbid attempt to buy time and lighten the load, the family begins to throw their own members off the sleigh — first the grandmother, then one of the children, and so on — each time hoping the wolves will stop to feast and delay their pursuit. It's a darkly comic escalation of horror, delivered in a bouncy, rhythmic verse that contrasts hilariously with the subject matter.

 

In the end, only the narrator remains on the troika. But fate catches up: he too falls off — whether by accident or design — and the wolves finally claim him.

 

The Death Ride – Poetic Translation (Excerpt)

 

by Drs. P – translated and adapted into English

 

We ride with our troika through forests of white,

It’s thirty below in Siberian night.

The horses are weary, the sleigh is ice-cracked,

But wolves are behind us — a vicious black pack.

 

The lantern it flickers, the trees howl with frost,

We’ve left home forever — all comfort is lost.

No shelter, no mercy, just snow and despair,

And death running close on the night’s bitter air.

 

... (several verses of escalating sacrifice follow)

 

Alone I still sit here, no family remains,

The silence behind me is worse than my pains.

I glance o’er my shoulder — the end is now near,

The wolves leap with hunger, I’m frozen in fear.

 

No one to toss now, the logic is grim...

I fall from the troika — and this is the end of him.

"Construction was supposed to begin in Fall 2004 after the design plans were finalized earlier that year, but the NYPD raised security concerns, which caused extensive revisions to the existing plans, thus delaying the start of the construction of the building by two years. Among the notable changes, the tower was moved further away from the West Highway, and a heavily fortified base to the building was added. In 2006, the Port Authority took over from Silverstein Properties, as the project's developer Tishman Construction Corporation is the construction manager. Construction began in April 2006. Digging the foundation and installing tower-foundation steel columns, concrete, and rebar took twice as long as it normally would. The construction crews were prevented from using heavy machinery to dig the foundation due to the building's location, which is closer to the existing subway line. The building reached grade level by 2010, progressed at a pace of one floor a week, topped out in August 2012, and was structurally completed in May 2013. The building opened on November 3, 2014, and the first 170 employees of anchor tenant Conde Nast began their work there."

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Had to upload again because the replacing went sour, sorry about that

 

Beneath the shadowed canopy of the Embergrove, where the torchlight of jungle huts flickers like memory through mist, she stands — eternal, composed, revered.

 

The Matriarch of the Embergrove is more than a leader; she is a living relic of balance and bloodline. Her form is that of a white-furred she-wolf, upright and commanding, with golden eyes that burn not with fire, but with ancestral awareness. A delicate headdress of gold filigree and lapis accents crowns her head — not flamboyant, but ancient, sacred, and symbolic of her role as both guardian and oracle. It mirrors the intricate patterns stitched into her crimson and gold ceremonial robe, which drapes with dignity across her fur-covered body.

 

She is adorned with layered necklaces of carved bone, polished obsidian, and blue gemstones that catch the soft jungle glow. Her arms are wrapped in ritual bracelets that jingle faintly as she walks — each one a story, each one a vow. The proportions of her frame are elegant and natural, her paws firm on the cobblestone path carved by time itself.

 

Around her, the jungle pulses with quiet reverence. Fireflies flicker like wandering spirits. The breeze carries scents of moss and ancient flowers. In the distance, huts rest in silence, their fires bowing to her presence. She is not merely seen — she is sensed, like thunder before the storm.

 

To see her is to feel the weight of forgotten wisdom. To hear her speak is to remember what the forest once was — and what it still protects.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Rising from the ashes of forgotten wars and scorched cataclysms, the Veilborn Wretch slithers between worlds—neither corporeal nor truly spirit. Its form coils in thick, sentient smoke, ever shifting and curling through the night air. Cracks in its charred visage glow with eerie violet light, and void-born eyes burn with ancient malice. Each breath leaves a trail of choking fog that stains the skies. This demon is not seen until it chooses to be, and by then, it is too late—its shriek rips through silence like tearing silk, devouring light and hope alike. It is the storm's whisper, the smoke that slinks into dreams, the final shadow before collapse.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Clad in obsidian alloy and draped in ritualistic silence, The Black Directive is not a being—it is the will of a forgotten machine order given form. Its face, a pale skeletal helm, bears no expression—only inevitability. Gold circuitry pulses beneath its black armor like synthetic veins, each strand carrying ancient execution codes older than recorded time.

 

Summoned only when reality fractures beyond correction, this enforcer of the Directive moves with deliberate precision through the vault-lit corridors of alien cathedrals, where condemned minds are unmade. It speaks no warnings. It offers no mercy. It enforces a single truth: consciousness without control must be extinguished.

 

No one remembers issuing the Black Directive. Yet every civilization it visits seems to have once written it.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

rom the molten fissures of the void between realms, Ka’Drakul emerged — a twisted fusion of abyssal flesh and living flame. His obsidian-scaled body is wrapped in writhing tendrils that pulse with infernal light, and his eyes blaze with the fury of a thousand extinguished suns. Each breath he takes scorches the air; each whisper warps the minds of those who hear it. Where Ka’Drakul walks, reality buckles and hope withers. He is not a being — he is a fracture in existence, a herald of the world’s last breath.

 

Catchphrase:

“From flame I rise, and through flame, all shall fall."

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

And when the final seal broke, the world fell silent — for Death had ridden forth. Shrouded in endless shadow, his cloak billowing like torn night itself, he rides a coal-black steed whose hooves make no sound, whose eyes are empty of all light. No weapon adorns him, for Death needs none. His very presence is erasure.

 

His skeletal face glows faintly beneath the hood — two golden embers in a face untouched by time. Around him, the storm falls still. Birds drop from the air. Mountains stop their trembling. His path does not blaze — it ends. No cries rise in his wake. Only stillness. Only dust.

 

He is not wrath, nor hunger, nor decay.

He is the end of all stories, the last breath of every world.

He is the Silence Beyond the Veil.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

Beneath a burning moon and skies carved with divine circuitry, the Cathedra Machina rises like an iron revelation from the scorched bones of the world. This is the last cathedral of flame and faith, where pilgrims tread the ashen path, wrapped in cloaks of mourning and code.

 

Vast spires pierce the heavens, humming with binary psalms. Firelight pours from the sanctum’s shattered archways, casting long shadows across the blasted ruins of a world forsaken. The air crackles with the static of forgotten prayers — and those who approach know: this is no temple, but a throne for the divine machine.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

Amid the broken grandeur of a forgotten crypt, she stands in dark majesty - the Crimson Empress, eternal queen of the bloodborn. Her armor, wrought in shadowed steel and adorned with crimson gemstones and grimacing skulls, pulses with ancient sorcery. Eyes aglow with a predatory fire, she surveys her domain with regal wrath and immortal hunger. Her flowing black and red gown trails like spilled blood across the moss-covered stones, as the torches around her flicker in reverence. She is not a memory of the past -she is the nightmare that endures.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

inspired by Second Life, the /Vae Victis\ - "Aza Empyrea" - Cosmic Codex

 

Bathed in the flicker of countless candles, the High Priest bends over his ancient tome, its pages alive with violet and crimson fire. Around him, the alchemical sanctum hums with life — glass vessels glow with emerald vapors, amethyst potions swirl with hidden storms, and brass instruments gleam in the shifting light. Shadows stretch and twist along the stone walls as arcane sigils rise from the book, dancing in the perfumed smoke of burning incense. Within this chamber of secrets, every color is a spell, every bottle a doorway, and every breath carries the weight of forbidden knowledge.

FangruidaWorks:

 

Fangruida's natural philosophy: super-spinning super-rotating cosmic structural system and multi-dimensional multi-directionality of natural philosophy. The original theory of "three sexes" (intensive reading)

************************************************** *****************************************

(Original: Fangruida May 2012 in Athens, Bonn, London, revised finalized in New York)

Edit Translation: Cole Susan 2012 electronic version 2012V1.1 version

************************************************** ****************************************

Key words: ██ Multidimensionality of philosophy

█ The three principles of philosophy

● Three-dimensional multidimensional theory

Absolute relativity of the natural world

Abstract macro concrete microscopic concrete macro abstract ultramicro

The breadth and limitations of human wisdom

Natural Revolution, Cosmic Revolution and Social Revolution

Assimilation or alienation of super-smart humans and super-bio-smart players

The end of life, the multi-spin system of the universe

The structure of thinking: convergence and divergence

The chemical abundance of the universe, homogeneity, heterogeneity

Substance-Species-Organics-Inorganics Life Macromolecules Life and Wisdom Human Life ▲▲

  

Philosophy and history

Studying world history, studying human history, including natural science research, such as the structure and evolution of the universe, the ultra-microsystems of particles, the evolution of life, the future of the universe, the developmental variation of the human world and the future, etc., are a big end. The philosophical thoughts, the colorful flowers, can be described as colorful and magnificent. History of philosophy, history of thought, history of civilization, history of religion, and various research works are full of enthusiasm. Masters of world philosophy, masters of thought, and masters of science have left us with an extremely precious cultural heritage, which is worthy of repeated study and in-depth study. For example, the question of thinking and existence, consciousness and material as the source: cosmic structure, particle structure, origin of life, the future of man and the universe, the society of the planet and the universe, the end of the universe and humanity, the pioneering and limitations of science and technology Sex, human brain thinking structure and highly intelligent biological robots, the existence and destruction of the Earth and the solar system, the large-scale structure of the universe and the homogeneity of the universe, the advanced intelligent animals and life macromolecules, matter and species, the space and time of the universe, black holes And dark matter, big bang and steady state, initial, normal ground state and final state, super-spin and super-spin, classical mechanics and quantum mechanics, evolutionary structure of human society, and so on. Of course, philosophy and natural science and technology are inseparable. Here we mainly discuss natural philosophy. Therefore, there are not many discussions on physical mechanics, etc., mainly in the basic categories of philosophy and natural philosophy. Natural science research papers refer to the author's related works.

  

The history of world philosophy and the history of thought have an extremely important position and extremely important guiding role in human history. With the rapid development of modern science and technology, with the substantial growth and leap of the world economy, the development of human society and new Civilized rationality has reached a new milestone. Economic history, civilization history, social history, political history, military history, cultural history, religious history, intellectual history, philosophy history, and history of the universe are very grand and complex. Here, we mainly study and discuss the history of human understanding, the history of thought, and the history of philosophy. . The big end, the clear veins and trajectories of the world, all kinds of doctrines, all kinds of academics, all kinds of thoughts, various schools, flowers and flowers, quite new. Of course, it is not possible to talk about things, but to involve in-depth research and exploration in the field of natural science and technology, as well as other important areas of research, in order to profoundly understand and understand, what is the great revolution of modern philosophy. Otherwise, there is no way to talk about it, or to go biased and extreme. Western philosophy, Eastern philosophy, religious philosophy, etc.

European Philosophy and Western Philosophy

Ancient Greek philosophy school

The early four universities in ancient Greece were the Ionian, Pythagoras, Elia, and the elemental school; the late four-school school: the cynicism school, the Stoic school, the Epicurean school, New Platon School

 

Ionian

 

Miletus School

(Thales, etc.) (to attribute the world to a specific phenomenon or substance of nature, such as water and gas)

Pythagoras School

(Pythagoras) (everything is counted)

Heraclitus

(The universe is a changing fire, dominated by logos (laws))

Democritus

(propose atomism)

Elijah

(Parmenid) (the origin of all things, is the eternal "consciousness of existence", denying change and movement

Socrates

(emphasizes access to knowledge by introspection)

Plato

(The concrete behind everything is the eternal prototype concept)

Aristotle

(The distinction between material and form, the universe consists of five elements: earth, water, gas, fire, and ether, presenting the existence of the first promoter "God", etc., the most comprehensive early philosophy)

Neo-Platonicism

(Protino) ("Taiyi" is the foundation of the world, rational laws, souls, and specific things are too super-existing)

Epicurean school

(Ibi-Ji-lu) (everything and soul are atoms, happiness is the purpose of life)

Cynic school

(Diogenes) (contempt for external utilitarianism, advocates poverty-stricken life)

Stoia

(Marco Aurelius, Abigail Ted) (emphasis on the "goodness" and "de" of human beings, advocating obedience to fate while grasping self)

Medieval Christian philosophy

Augustine

(In the philosophical theory to explain the existence of God, the Trinity, the salvation of the soul)

(Scholastic philosophy)

Aristotle

(Thomas Aquinas) (using Aristotle's rational philosophy to explain the nature, existence, virtue of God)

Willism

(Scott) (with the natural will as the cause of the world movement, the source is God)

Aokangism

(

Modern western philosophy

Early natural philosophy

(Bacon, Da Vinci, Newton and many other scientists, philosophical theorists) (proposes experimental observation-based science to support the theory of interpretation of nature)

Rationalism (rationalism)

(Descartes) (I think so I am, the ultimate source of knowledge is God, material and soul are parallel to each other)

(Spennosha) (emphasizing thinking/concepts and prolongation/substance are two different manifestations of the infinite God, one for the inner and one for the external)

(Leibnitz) (The world consists of consecutive "singles" of nature, including spirit and matter)

Empiricism (empiricalism)

(Locke) (Experience is the only source of knowledge, matter has the first nature and the second nature, the former is in the object itself, and the latter is the product of perception)

(Hume) (Initial perception is the only source of knowledge, time and space are both products of perception)

(Beckley) (The existence is self-perception, and the perception of the whole world is God) (German classical philosophy)

Transcendental idealism

(Kant) (Knowledge originally originated from the inexpressible "object self", which became a formable knowledge or concept/phenomenon after the subject's subjective norms of time, space and causality were recognized.

Absolute idealism

(Ficht) (Experience knowledge is the absolute self in the depths of consciousness, produced by constantly setting non-I, grasping non-I)

(Xie Lin) (Nature gradually self-awake, develops into a self-consciousness that opposes objective nature, and then returns self-consciousness to nature, and will eventually reach the absolute same with objective nature, that is, it can sense its absolute reality)

(Hegel) (ideal dialectics, objective idealism, the world is on the one hand, the evolution of objective existential history, and on the other hand, the continuous leap of subjective consciousness from sensibility to rationality, when realizing the development of self-awareness When the development of objective existence, you reach the absolute truth of God)

Young Hegelian

(Feuerbach) (materialism, pointing out that God is the externalization of the essence of human pursuit, admiring "love") (practical materialism, emphasizing the decisive role of practical labor, so that nature presents objective laws in front of human beings.

Modern western philosophy

Early irrationalism

(Kerkegaard) (denying that people have the essence of fixed unity, emphasizing the contingency and freedom of individual existence, this is the road to God, the pioneer of existentialism)

Voluntarism

(Schopenhauer) (The ontology of the world is the natural will without cause and effect, time and space, causality is the result of rational understanding of the will, and life is endless because of the endless desire and hindrance of desire)

(Nietzsche) (Destiny is controlled by oneself, not the norm of God, so it advocates the "power will" of the weak meat)

Philosophy of life

(Borgsen, Dilthey) (The world is the "stretching" and evolution of "the stream of life" in time)

New hegelism

(Bradley) (Development of Absolute Ideal Dialectics)

Neo-Kantianism

(Cohen, Cassirer) (a product of the combination of transcendental idealism and scientific philosophy, but denying the existence of self-physical independence from consciousness)

utilitarianism

(Bentham, Mill) (Social behavior is actually pursuing the maximization of personal happiness)

pragmatism

(James, Dewey) (The premise that things become the object of knowledge is its practicality. Only through human pursuit and experimentation can the truth be obtained)

Early analytic philosophy

(Freig, Russell, Wittgenstein) (Proposing logical ontology, the ontology of the world is not a separate entity, but an interrelated logical relationship)

Post-analytic philosophy

(Wittgenstein, Strawson, Rorty, etc.) (I believe that the emergence of philosophical problems is the result of misunderstanding of everyday language, and advocates the analysis of semantics to achieve the essential relationship between language and reality)

Falsificationist philosophy of science

(Popper) (Rejecting science can reach absolute truth, proposing three worlds - the material world, the spiritual world, the conceptual world)

Historic philosophy of science

(Kun, Feyerabend) (opposing the pure logic of separation from practice as a way of expressing the world, while emphasizing the accumulation of scientific experience in history)

Freudianism

(Floyd) (emphasizing the decisive role of subconsciousness and sexual desire on individual behavior, dreams, civilized activities, etc. are the result of subconsciousness being suppressed by external morality and disguised at the level of consciousness)

Western Marxism

The Frankfurt School (Marcuse, Habermas) (in Marx's dialectics, Freud's instinct, focuses on the enslavement and alienation of material civilization, advocates changing the social interaction model, and alleviates capitalism Social crisis)

Phenomenology / European Philosophy

(Husser) (Proposed a phenomenological approach, advocating returning to the matter itself, and studying the constructive role of consciousness in knowledge)

Existentialism

(Heidegger, Sartre, Coronation, etc.) (emphasizing the existence of the individual's pre-reflective consciousness in the world is the source of all knowledge. The existence of human beings is different from the existence of objects. The existence of human beings is free, not being Fully prescribed - existence precedes essence

Hermeneutics

(Gadamer, Derrida) (Thinking that the study of history cannot be reduced to historical facts, but the dialogue between modern perspectives and historical relics)

Structuralism

(Sausul, Artusai, Strauss, Lacan) (proposes the study of the overall structure of the various knowledge systems, and emphasizes the a priori and permanence of this structure, it is the correct research system Premise of each element)

Deconstruction

(Derrida, Foucault, Deleuze) (denying the existence of a unified knowledge structure, critical reason loses the richness of the world while unilaterally pursuing the essence, and believes that the relationship between man and the world, author and reader is not the relationship between subject and object. , but the dialogue between the subjects, affirming the diversity of ideas)

Essentials of philosophy science

The history of world philosophy, the history of world science and technology, the history of world social development, and the history of European and American philosophy all have brilliant historical memories.

Thales (about 585 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, was honored as the ancestor of Western philosophy from Aristotle.

 

Heracletitos (about 504-501 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, one of the founders of dialectics.

 

Parmenides (in the year 504-501 BC), the founder of the ancient Greek philosopher, ontology (ontology).

Demokritos (about 420 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, founder of atomism.

 

Socrates (468-399 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher.

 

Platon (427-347 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, a student of Socrates, with dialogues such as "Socratic Defence", "Ideology", "Barmenid", "The Wise", etc. Works.

 

Aristotles, Plato's students, Greek philosophers, encyclopedic philosophers, founders of many disciplines, masterpieces "Tools", "Physics", "metaphysics", "Nico Marco's Ethics, Political Science.

  

Lucretius (b.c.99-55) Ancient Roman materialist philosopher. I believe that everything is made up of atoms. The atom is infinitely moving in the universe and is infinite. It advocates atheism. The main work: "The Theory of Physical Property."

 

Aurelius Augustinus (354-430 AD), the greatest representative of the medieval godfather philosophy, is entitled "Confessions" and "City of God."

 

Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274), the greatest representative of the philosophy of the medieval scholasticism, with the book "Anti-Beast Encyclopedia" and "Theological Encyclopedia"

(Thomas Aquinas) (using Aristotle's rational philosophy to explain the nature, existence, virtue of God)

Willism

(Scott) (with the natural will as the cause of the world movement, the source is God)

Aokangism

(

Modern western philosophy

Early natural philosophy

(Bacon, Da Vinci, Newton and many other scientists, philosophical theorists) (proposes experimental observation-based science to support the theory of interpretation of nature)

Rationalism (rationalism)

(Descartes) (I think so I am, the ultimate source of knowledge is God, material and soul are parallel to each other)

(Spennosha) (emphasizing thinking/concepts and prolongation/substance are two different manifestations of the infinite God, one for the inner and one for the external)

(Leibnitz) (The world consists of consecutive "singles" of nature, including spirit and matter)

Empiricism (empiricalism)

(Locke) (Experience is the only source of knowledge, matter has the first nature and the second nature, the former is in the object itself, and the latter is the product of perception)

(Hume) (Initial perception is the only source of knowledge, time and space are both products of perception)

(Beckley) (The existence is self-perception, and the perception of the whole world is God) (German classical philosophy)

Transcendental idealism

(Kant) (Knowledge originally originated from the inexpressible "object self", which became a formable knowledge or concept/phenomenon after the subject's subjective norms of time, space and causality were recognized.

Absolute idealism

(Ficht) (Experience knowledge is the absolute self in the depths of consciousness, produced by constantly setting non-I, grasping non-I)

(Xie Lin) (Nature gradually self-awake, develops into a self-consciousness that opposes objective nature, and then returns self-consciousness to nature, and will eventually reach the absolute same with objective nature, that is, it can sense its absolute reality)

(Hegel) (ideal dialectics, objective idealism, the world is on the one hand, the evolution of objective existential history, and on the other hand, the continuous leap of subjective consciousness from sensibility to rationality, when realizing the development of self-awareness When the development of objective existence, you reach the absolute truth of God)

Young Hegelian

(Feuerbach) (materialism, pointing out that God is the externalization of the essence of human pursuit, admiring "love") (practical materialism, emphasizing the decisive role of practical labor, so that nature presents objective laws in front of human beings.

Modern western philosophy

Early irrationalism

(Kerkegaard) (denying that people have the essence of fixed unity, emphasizing the contingency and freedom of individual existence, this is the road to God, the pioneer of existentialism)

Voluntarism

(Schopenhauer) (The ontology of the world is the natural will without cause and effect, time and space, causality is the result of rational understanding of the will, and life is endless because of the endless desire and hindrance of desire)

(Nietzsche) (Destiny is controlled by oneself, not the norm of God, so it advocates the "power will" of the weak meat)

Philosophy of life

(Borgsen, Dilthey) (The world is the "stretching" and evolution of "the stream of life" in time)

New hegelism

(Bradley) (Development of Absolute Ideal Dialectics)

Neo-Kantianism

(Cohen, Cassirer) (a product of the combination of transcendental idealism and scientific philosophy, but denying the existence of self-physical independence from consciousness)

utilitarianism

(Bentham, Mill) (Social behavior is actually pursuing the maximization of personal happiness)

pragmatism

(James, Dewey) (The premise that things become the object of knowledge is its practicality. Only through human pursuit and experimentation can the truth be obtained)

Early analytic philosophy

(Freig, Russell, Wittgenstein) (Proposing logical ontology, the ontology of the world is not a separate entity, but an interrelated logical relationship)

Post-analytic philosophy

(Wittgenstein, Strawson, Rorty, etc.) (I believe that the emergence of philosophical problems is the result of misunderstanding of everyday language, and advocates the analysis of semantics to achieve the essential relationship between language and reality)

Falsificationist philosophy of science

(Popper) (Rejecting science can reach absolute truth, proposing three worlds - the material world, the spiritual world, the conceptual world)

Historic philosophy of science

(Kun, Feyerabend) (opposing the pure logic of separation from practice as a way of expressing the world, while emphasizing the accumulation of scientific experience in history)

Freudianism

(Floyd) (emphasizing the decisive role of subconsciousness and sexual desire on individual behavior, dreams, civilized activities, etc. are the result of subconsciousness being suppressed by external morality and disguised at the level of consciousness)

Western Marxism

The Frankfurt School (Marcuse, Habermas) (in Marx's dialectics, Freud's instinct, focuses on the enslavement and alienation of material civilization, advocates changing the social interaction model, and alleviates capitalism Social crisis)

Phenomenology / European Philosophy

(Husser) (Proposed a phenomenological approach, advocating returning to the matter itself, and studying the constructive role of consciousness in knowledge)

Existentialism

(Heidegger, Sartre, Coronation, etc.) (emphasizing the existence of the individual's pre-reflective consciousness in the world is the source of all knowledge. The existence of human beings is different from the existence of objects. The existence of human beings is free, not being Fully prescribed - existence precedes essence

Hermeneutics

(Gadamer, Derrida) (Thinking that the study of history cannot be reduced to historical facts, but the dialogue between modern perspectives and historical relics)

Structuralism

(Sausul, Artusai, Strauss, Lacan) (proposes the study of the overall structure of the various knowledge systems, and emphasizes the a priori and permanence of this structure, it is the correct research system Premise of each element)

Deconstruction

(Derrida, Foucault, Deleuze) (denying the existence of a unified knowledge structure, critical reason loses the richness of the world while unilaterally pursuing the essence, and believes that the relationship between man and the world, author and reader is not the relationship between subject and object. , but the dialogue between the subjects, affirming the diversity of ideas)

Essentials of philosophy science

The history of world philosophy, the history of world science and technology, the history of world social development, and the history of European and American philosophy all have brilliant historical memories.

Thales (about 585 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, was honored as the ancestor of Western philosophy from Aristotle.

 

Heracletitos (about 504-501 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, one of the founders of dialectics.

 

Parmenides (in the year 504-501 BC), the founder of the ancient Greek philosopher, ontology (ontology).

Demokritos (about 420 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, founder of atomism.

 

Socrates (468-399 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher.

 

Platon (427-347 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, a student of Socrates, with dialogues such as "Socratic Defence", "Ideology", "Barmenid", "The Wise", etc. Works.

 

Aristotles, Plato's students, Greek philosophers, encyclopedic philosophers, founders of many disciplines, masterpieces "Tools", "Physics", "metaphysics", "Nico Marco's Ethics, Political Science.

  

Lucretius (b.c.99-55) Ancient Roman materialist philosopher. I believe that everything is made up of atoms. The atom is infinitely moving in the universe and is infinite. It advocates atheism. The main work: "The Theory of Physical Property."

 

Aurelius Augustinus (354-430 AD), the greatest representative of the medieval godfather philosophy, is entitled "Confessions" and "City of God."

 

Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274), the greatest representative of the philosophy of the medieval scholasticism, is entitled "Anti-Beast Encyclopedia" and "Theological Encyclopedia".

 

Bruno (1548-1600) Italian materialist philosopher and natural scientist. Propagating Copernicus's heliocentric theory, that the universe has no center, the sun is just an ordinary planet, the solar system is just a celestial system, and matter is the common common essence of all things in the universe. The main work: "On the reasons, the essence and one."

 

Hobbes (1588-1679) was a British materialist philosopher who used to be the secretary and assistant of Bacon. He systematically embodies Bacon's philosophical ideas and advocates the use of mechanics and mathematics to illustrate the world. He is the founder of mechanical materialism. The main works: "On matter", "On the people."

 

Francis Bacon (1561-1626), the ancestor of British empiricism, and the "New Tools".

 

René Descartes (1596-1650), French philosopher, founder of modern philosophy, the founder of the theory, is the "Method Discussion", "The First Philosophical Contemplation", "Philosophy Principles".

 

Benedicus de Spinoza (1632-1677), a Dutch philosopher, one of the main representatives of the theory, with "Ethics" and so on.

 

John Locke (1632-1704), one of the main representatives of British empiricism, is entitled "The Theory of Human Reason."

 

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716), a German philosopher, one of the main representatives of the theory, is entitled "Single Theory" and "New Theory of Human Reason."

 

George Berkeley (1685-1753), one of the main representatives of British empiricism, is entitled "The Principles of Human Knowledge."

 

David Hume (1711-1776), one of the main representatives of British empiricism, is entitled "The Theory of Human Nature" and "The Study of Human Reason."

 

Montesquieu (1689-1755), a French enlightenment thinker, with the Persian Letters and The Spirit of the Law.

 

Voltaire (1694-1778), a French enlightenment thinker, and author of "Philosophy Communication."

 

Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778), a French enlightenment thinker, entitled "The Origin and Foundation of Human Inequality", "Social Contract Theory", "Emil", and "Confessions".

  

Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), the founder of German classical philosophy, is entitled "Critique of Pure Reason", "Critique of Practical Reason" and "Critique of Judgment".

 

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831), a master of German classical philosophy, is known for his dialectic in the world, and he is the author of "Psychophenomenology", "Logic" and "Philosophy of Philosophy".

 

Auguste Comte (1798-1857), French philosopher, founder of positivism, and the "Experimental Philosophy Course".

 

John Stuart Mill (1806-1873), British philosopher, one of the representatives of positivism, is entitled "Conde and positivism", "system of logic", "utilitarianism".

 

"Arther Schopenhauer (1788-1860), a German philosopher, a voluntarist, has a "world of will and appearance."

 

Karl Marx (May 5, 1818 - 1883, 3, 1)

 

Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Law (1843), on Jewish Nationality (1843), Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844 (1844), Feuerbach (1845), Poverty of Philosophy (1845), Employment Labor With Capital (1847), Louis Bonaparte's Misty Moon 18th (1852), Capital Theory Volume 2 (1893), Capital Theory Volume III (1894), etc.

  

William James (1842-1910), an American philosopher, one of the main representatives of pragmatism, is the "Psychology Principles", "Pragmatism", "Complete Empiricism Proceedings".

 

Friedrich Willhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900), a German philosopher, with "The Other Side of Good and Evil", "Zarathustra", "Strong Will".

  

Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913), a Swiss linguist, founder of structuralism, and a course in General Linguistics.

 

Edmund Husserl (1859-1938), German philosopher, founder of phenomenology, with "Logical Studies", "Phenomenon of Phenomenology", "The Contemplation of Descartes" and "The Crisis of European Science and Transcendental Phenomenology, etc.

 

Sigmund Freud (1865-1939), an Austrian psychologist, founder of the psychoanalytic school, with "An Analysis of Dreams" and "Introduction to Psychoanalysis."

 

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) British philosopher and educator wrote "The History of Western Philosophy", "Education", "Philosophy Problems", etc., won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1950.

  

Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), German philosopher, founder of existential philosophy, with "Existence and Time", "Introduction to Metaphysics", "Lin Zhong Lu" and so on.

 

Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951), one of the founders of Austrian-American philosophy, linguistic philosophy or analytic philosophy, is the author of The Philosophy of Logic and Philosophical Studies.

 

Rudolf Carnap (1891-1970), a German philosopher, one of the main representatives of logical positivism, is entitled "The Logical Structure of the World" and "The Logical Syntax of Language."

Gilbert Ryle (1900-1976) is a British philosopher, one of the representatives of the everyday language school, and has the concept of "heart".

 

Hans-Georg Gadamer (1900-), the German philosopher, the founder of philosophical hermeneutics, is the author of The Truth and Method.

 

Max Horkheimer (1895-1973), a German philosopher and founder of the Frankfurt School, is the author of Critical Theory, Research in Social Philosophy, and Dialectics of Enlightenment (co-authored with Adorno).

 

Theoder Wiesengrund Adorno (1903-1969), a German philosopher, one of the main representatives of the Frankfurt School, is entitled "Negative Dialectics".

 

Herbert Marcuse (1895-1979), a German philosopher, one of the main representatives of the Frankfurt School, with "Ration and Revolution", "Eros and

Jean Paul Sartre (1905-1980), a French philosopher, one of the main representatives of existentialism, with "existence and nothingness", "existentialism is a kind of humanitarianism" and "criticism of dialectical reason".

 

Claude Levi-Strauss (1908-), French philosopher, anthropologist, one of the main representatives of structuralism, is entitled "Structural Anthropology" and "Wild Thinking."

 

Willard van Orman Quine (1908-), one of the main representatives of analytic philosophy, "from a logical point of view", "logic philosophy."

 

Tomas Kuhn (1922-), an American scientific philosopher, a historian of science, a representative of the Historic School, and the "Structure of the Scientific Revolution" and "Necessary Tension."

  

Michel Foucault (1926-1984), a French philosopher, one of the main representatives of post-structuralism and post-modernism, is entitled "Knowledge Archaeology", "Discipline and Punishment" and so on.

 

Jacques Derrida (1931-), a French philosopher, one of the main representatives of postmodernism, with "writing and difference", "casting", "the edge of philosophy", "the ghost of Marx" and so on.

 

Richard. M. Rorty (1931-), an American philosopher, one of the representatives of post-modern philosophy, is the Mirror of Philosophy and Nature and Post-Philosophy Culture.

 

Fredric Jamason (1931-), an American philosopher and literary critic, one of the main representatives of postmodernism, is entitled "Marxism and Form", "Political Unconsciousness", and "Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism".

  

John Rawls (1921-), an American political philosopher, is the author of The Theory of Justice and Political Liberalism.

 

Robert Nozick (1938-), an American political philosopher, is entitled "Anarchy, State, and Utopia."

 

Western philosophy European and American philosophy has a huge influence on the world. Of course, philosophy and thought are often inseparable. Philosophers also mean thinkers.

 

Philosophers, thinkers, schools of thought, and main ideology

  

Ancient Greek period: 7th century BC - 2nd century BC

Thales (about 624-about 547, the first philosopher of ancient Greece, the founder of the Miletus School)

Anaximandros (about 610-before 546, ancient Greek Miletus school materialist philosopher)

Anaximenes (about 588-about 525, ancient Greek Miletus school materialist philosopher)

Pythagoras (about 580 - about 500 before, ancient Greek mathematician, idealist philosopher)

Xenophanes (about 565-about 473, the ancient Greek philosopher, the first representative of the Elia school)

Herakleitos (between 540 and about 480 and 470 before, the ancient Greek materialist philosopher, the founder of the Efes school)

Kratylos (former fifth century, ancient Greek Efesian philosopher, Heraclitus student)

Parmenides (before the end of the sixth century - about the middle of the first half of the fifth century, the idealist philosopher of the Elia school of ancient Greece) Leukippos (about 500-about 440, the ancient Greek materialist philosopher , the atom said one of the founders)

Anaxagoras (about 500 before - 428 BC, ancient Greek materialist philosopher)

Zeno Eleates (about 490 - about 436 before, ancient Greek idealist philosopher, student of Parmenides) Empedokles (Em. 490 - about 430, Ancient Greek materialist philosopher, founder of rhetoric)

Gorgias (about 483 - about 375, the ancient Greek wise philosopher)

Protagoras (formerly 481-about 411, ancient Greek wise philosopher)

Socrates (formerly 469-before 399, ancient Greek idealist philosopher)

Demokratos (Demokritos, 460- 370 BC, ancient Greek materialist philosopher, and the founder of the atomic theory of Rebecca) Antisthenes (about 435-about 370, ancient Greece Philosopher, founder of the cynic school

Aristippos (about 435-front 360?, ancient Greek philosopher, founder of the Cyrene School, disciple of Socrates)

Plato (Plato, former 427-before 347, ancient Greek objective idealist philosopher, founder of the school, student of Socrates, teacher of Aristotle) ​​- "Ideology", "politician", "Bammenides" and "Plato Dialogues"

Diogenes o Sinopeus (about 404-about 323, ancient Greek cynic philosopher)

Aristotles (Aristotles, 384- 322 BC, Ancient Greek philosopher, scientist, Plato's student, Alexander the Great's teacher, the founder of the Happy School) - Metaphysics, Tool Theory, Nigma Ethics, Physics, Politics

, "The Complete Works of Aristotle"

Pyrrhon (about 365-about 275, ancient Greek philosopher, skeptic)

Epikouros (formerly 341-pre-270, ancient Greek materialist philosopher)

Zeno (Zionon Kitieus), about 336-about 264, founder of the ancient Greek Stoic school

 

Roman period: the second century BC - the fifth century AD

Cousero (Marcus Tullius Cicero, former 106-43, ancient Roman politician, eloquent, philosopher, philosophically representative of eclecticism)

Titus Lucretius Carus (about 99-about 55, ancient Roman poet, materialist philosopher) - "The Theory of Materiality"

  

Tertullianus (between 150 and 160 - about 222, one of the Christian godfathers)

Aurelius Augustinus (354-430, the Roman Empire Christian thinker, the main representative of the godfather philosophy) - "Confessions", "On Free Will", "The Monologue", "The City of God", "The Handbook of Doctrine"

Hypatia (about 370-about 415, female mathematician, astronomer, neo-Platonic philosopher of the Roman Empire)

Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius, 480-524 or 525, the idealist philosopher in late Roman times

Medieval: 5th century AD - end of the 14th century

Johannes Scotus Erigena (circa 810-877, a philosopher of the pre-European medieval scholasticism) - "On God's Presupposition", "On the Division of Nature"

Anselmus (1033-1109, a medieval Christian thinker in Europe, the main representative of realism, known as "the last godfather and the first scholastic philosopher")

Roscellinus (about 1050 - about 1112, medieval French philosopher, nominalist)

Guillaume de Champeaux (circa 1070-1121, medieval French philosopher, realist)

Abel (Petrus Abailardus, 1079-1142, philosopher of the medieval French Academy, "concept theory")

Albertus Magnus (1193 or 1206 or 1207-1280, Medieval German philosopher, theologian, Catholic Dominican monk)

Thomas Aquinas (1226-1274, Medieval Theologian and scholastic philosopher, Catholic Dominican Fellow) - Theological Encyclopedia and Anti-Beast Encyclopedia

Sigerus de Brantia (circa 1240-1281 to 1284, Netherland philosopher, Averroist)

Meister Johannes Eckhart (circa 1260-1327, medieval German theologian and mystic philosopher) Johannes Duns Scotus (circa 1265-1308, medieval Scottish scholastic philosopher, nominalist ) - "On Oxford", "Paris on"

William of Occam (or Ockham), about 1300 - about 1350, philosopher of the medieval Soviet scholastic philosopher, nominalist) Jan Hus (circa 1369-1415, Czech patriot and religious reformer)

Dante Alighièri (1265-1321, Italian poet.

Francesco Petrarch (1304-1374, Italian poet, one of the pioneers of humanism in the European Renaissance) - "Secret"

Geovanni Boccàccio (1313-1375, Italian writer of the Renaissance, one of the main representatives of humanism) - "Ten Days"

Paul (John Ball, ?-1381, British folk missionary, one of the leaders of the Wat Taylor Uprising)

John Wycliffe (circa 1320-1384, British, pioneer of the European Reformation Movement)

Nikola (Kusa's) (Nicolaus Cusanus, 1401-1464, Renaissance German philosopher, cardinal, pantheist)

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519, Renaissance Italian artist, natural scientist, engineer, philosopher)

Pietro Pomponazzi (1462-1524 or 1525, the Italian philosopher of the Renaissance, one of the main representatives of humanism)

Desiderius Erasmus (circa 1469-1536, the Renaissance Netherland humanist, formerly known as Gerhard Gerhards, born in Rotterdam, the Netherlands) - "The Fools"

Thomas More (1478-1535, Renaissance British Utopian Communist)

Martin Luther (1483-1546, the founder of the 16th century German Reformation, Christian (Protestant) Road

 

Thomas Münzer (about 1490-1525, leader of the German peasant war of 1524-1525, German peasant and religious reformer of urban civilians)

Calvin (1509-1564, French, European Reformer, founder of Christian Calvin) - "On Benevolence", "Christian Essentials", "Faith Guide", "Christian Masterpieces Integration", From the Renaissance to the Selected Works of Humanitarian Humanity in the 19th Century by Bourgeois Literati Artists, Selected Works of Western Ethical Masterpieces, and History of Medieval Philosophy in Western Europe (Bernardino Telesio, 1509-1588, Renaissance Italy philosopher)

Michel Eyquem de Montaigne (1533-1592, a translation of Montagne, French thinkers and prose writers during the Renaissance) - "Meng Tian Wenxuan"

Pierre Charron (1541-1603, French philosopher of the Renaissance)

Giordano Bruno (1548-1600, Italian philosopher of the Renaissance) - "On Reason, Primitive and Taiyi", "On Infinity, Universe and Worlds", "Basting the Beast", "On Heroic Passion" 》

Tommaso Campanella (1568-1639, Renaissance Italian Utopian Communist)

Jakob B?hme, 1575-1624, Renaissance German mystic philosopher

Grouseus (Hugo Grotius, 1583-1645, Dutch bourgeois jurist, early theorist of the natural law school, studied law, theology, history, literature, and natural sciences, with international law Research is well known)

Lucilio Vanini (1584-1619, Italian philosopher of the Renaissance)

 

Francis Bacon (1561-1626, "-"Chongxue", "New Tools", "Bacon's Anthology", "New Daxi"

Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679, British materialist philosopher) - "Leviathan", "On Objects", "On Man", "On Freedom, Inevitability and Accident"

Pierre Gassendi (1592-1655, a translation of garrison, French materialist philosopher, physicist, astronomer) Descartes (1596-1650, French philosopher, physicist, mathematician) , physiologist, founder of analytic geometry) - "Methodology", "The First Philosophical Contemplation", "Philosophical Principles", "On the Passion of the Soul"

Hendrik van Roy (French name Henri Le Roy, Latin name Henricus Regius, 1598-1679, Dutch doctor, philosopher, representative of early mechanical materialism)

Gerrard Winstanley (circa 1609-about 1652, the leader of the bourgeois revolutionary movement in the British bourgeois revolution, the imaginary communist)

John Lilburne (circa 1614-1657, petty bourgeois democrat of the British bourgeois revolution, average leader)

Arnold Geulincx (1625-1669, the Dutch Descartes idealist philosopher, he and Malebranches are also called the causemen)

Spinoza (later renamed Benedictus) Spinoza, 1632-1677, Dutch materialist philosopher) - "Ethics", "Intellectual Improvement", "Theological Politics", "The Principles of Descartes"

Locke (John Locke, 1632-1704, British materialist philosopher) - "Human Understanding", "On the Government", "The Rationality of Christianity"

Nicolas Malebranche (1638-1715, French idealist philosopher) - "The Search for Truth", "Dialogue on Metaphysics"

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716, German natural scientist, mathematician, idealist philosopher) - "Theory of God", "New Theory of Human Reason", "Son Theory", "metaphysical conversation"

Pierre Bayle (1647-1706, French enlightenment thinker, materialist philosopher) - "The Letter about Comet", "General Critique of the History of Calvinism" by Manbull, "Dictionary of Historical Criticism"

 

Christian Wolff (1679-1754, German idealist philosopher)

George Berkeley (1685-1753, British idealist philosopher) - "New Theory of Vision", "Principles of Human Knowledge" Charles Louis de Secondat Montesquieu (1689-1755, French Enlightenment Thinker, Jurist ) - "Persian Letters", "The Causes of the Rise and Fall of Rome", "The Spirit of the Law", "On the Interests of Nature and Art"

Voltaire (1694-1778, French enlightenment thinker, writer, philosopher. Formerly known as François Marie Arouet) - "Oedipus the King", "Philosophy Communication ", Metaphysics", "Philosophy Dictionary"

David Hartley (1705-1757, British materialist philosopher, one of the founders of the psychological association, the deism) Gabriel Bonnot de Mably, 1709-1785, French imaginary communist, Kong Brother of Diak

Ramien Offroy de La Mettrie (1709-1751, French enlightenment thinker, materialist philosopher) - "Man is a machine", "The work of Penelope", "The soul Natural History, "Man is a plant"

Thomas Reid (1710-1796, British philosopher, founder of the Scottish school, the common sense school)

Lomonosov (Миxaил Вacильевич Ломoносοв1711-1765, Russian scholar, poet, founder of Russian materialistic philosophy and natural science)

Hume (David Hume, 1711-1776, British idealist philosopher, agnostic, historian, economist) - "The Theory of Human Nature", "Human Understanding", "Ethics and Politics"

Rousseau (Jean Jacques Rousseau, 1712-1778, French enlightenment thinker, philosopher, educator, writer) - "Confessions", "Fashionable Muse", "Village Wizard", "On the Origin of Human Inequality" And Foundation, "Social Contract Theory", "Ai Mier" ("On Education")

Denis Diderot (1713-1784, French enlightenment thinker, materialist philosopher, atheist, writer, editor-in-chief of Encyclopedia) - "Philosophy of Thought", "Stroll of Skeptics", "For The letter of the blind person, the book on the book of deaf and dumb, the interpretation of nature, the conversation of D'Alembert and Diderot, The Continuation of the Talk, The Deaf of Rama Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten (1714-1762, German philosopher, advocate of the Wolff philosophy system) Claude Adrien Helvétius (1715-1771, French enlightenment thinker, materialist philosopher) - "On the spirit "On the rationality and education of human beings", "The Tablet of Love Knowledge", "The Tablet of Happiness", "The Tablet of Rational Pride and Laziness"

Etienne Bonnot de Condillac (1715-1780, French enlightenment thinker, sensory theorist, Marbury's brother) - "Sensory Theory", "The Origin of Human Knowledge", "System Theory"

Jean Le Rond d' Alembert (1717-1783, a translator of Lambert, French mathematician, enlightenment thinker, philosopher, former deputy editor of the Encyclopedia)

Paul Heinrich Dietrich d' Holbach (1723-1789, French enlightenment thinker, materialist philosopher, atheist) - "Debunked Christianity", "Pocket Theology", "Sacred Plague", "Sound Thought, Natural System, Social System, Universal Ethics

Kanman (Immanuel Kant, 1724-1804, the founder of German classical idealism) - "Critique of Pure Reason", "Critique of Practical Reason", "Critique of Judgment", "Introduction to Future Metaphysics", "Principles of Moral Metaphysics", On Perpetual Peace and the Collection of Critical Criticism of History

Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729-1781, thinker, literary theorist, playwright of the German Enlightenment) Henry Dodwell (-1784, British deism)

Jean Baptiste René Robinet (1735-1820, French philosopher)

Jean Antoine Condorcet (1743-1794, French bourgeois revolutionary bourgeois theorist)

Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi (1743-1819, German idealist philosopher)

Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744-1803, German literary theorist, philosopher, arrogant movement (the theory of the German bourgeois literary movement in the 1970s and 1980s))

Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832, British ethicist, jurist, main representative of bourgeois utilitarianism) Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832, German poet, playwright, thinker)

William Godwin (1756-1836, British writer, social thinker, pastor, and later supported atheism and enlightenment)

Pierre Jean Georges Cabanis (1757-1808, French bourgeois revolutionary bourgeois theorist, physiologist, vulgar materialist)

 

Claude Henri de Saint-Simon, 1760-1825, French utopian socialist

Filippo Michele Buonarrotti (1761-1837, French imaginary communist. Originally from Italy, participated in the French Revolution of 1789, won the title of "Citizen of the French Republic")

Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762-1814, German classical idealist philosopher) - "The Foundation of All Knowledge", "The Foundation of Natural Law under the Principles of Knowledge", "The Moral System under the Principles of Knowledge", "On the Mission of Scholars" and "The Mission of Man" Hegel (Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, 1770-1831, the master of German classical idealism) - "Psychiatry Phenomenology", "Logic", "Little Logic" , Principles of Legal Philosophy, Philosophy of History, Philosophy of Nature, Philosophy of Spirit, Philosophy of Art, Lectures on History of Philosophy, Hegel Letters

Robert Owen (1771-1858, British Utopian Socialist)

Charles Fourier (1772-1837, French Utopian Socialist)

Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling (1775-1854, German idealist philosopher) - "Transcendental Idealism System", "On the World Soul"

Bernhard Bolzano (1781-1848, Czech mathematician, philosopher, logician)

Etienne Cabet (1788-1856, French Utopian Communist)

Schopenhauer (1788-1860, German idealist philosopher, voluntarist)

Victor Cousin (1792-1867, French idealist philosopher, professing his philosophical system as eclecticism)

Heinrich Heine (1797-1856, German poet, political commentator, thinker)

Auguste Comte (1798-1857, French positivist philosopher)

Théodore Dézamy (1803-1850, French Utopian Communist)

Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach (1804-1872, German materialist philosopher) - "The selection of Feuerbach's philosophical works", "The Essence of Christianity", "Critique of Hegel's Philosophy", "Principles of Future Philosophy" Herzen (1812-1870): "Nature Research Newsletter", "Scientific Tastes", "To Old Friends"

Louis Auguste Blanqui (1805-1881, French Revolutionary, Utopian Communist)

Max Stirner (1806-1856, Kaspar Schmidt's pseudonym, German idealist philosopher, one of the young Hegelian representatives, the so-called theorists, the anarchist's forerunner By)

John Stuart Mill (1806-1873, British idealist philosopher, economist, logician, son of James Muller)

Pierre Joseph Proudhon (1809-1865, French petty bourgeois economist and sociologist, one of the founders of anarchism)

Powell (Bruno Bauer, 1809-1882, German idealist philosopher, the main representative of the young Hegelian)

Belinsky (Виссарион Григорьевич Белинский,1811-1848, Russian revolutionary democrat, literary critic, philosopher) - "Selection of Bilinsky's Philosophical Works"

Jean Josehp Charles Louis Blanc (1811-1882, French petty bourgeois socialist, historian)

Herzen (Александр Иванович Герцен, 1812-1870, Russian revolutionary democrat, materialist philosopher, writer)

Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855, Danish idealist philosopher, his thought became one of the theoretical basis of modern bourgeois philosophical genre existentialism)

Rudolf Hermann Lotze (1817-1881, German idealist philosopher, professing his philosophy as "the teleological idealism")

Grünn (1817-1887, German petty bourgeois socialist)

Karl Vogt (1817-1895, German naturalist, vulgar materialist, professing his philosophy as "physiology

 

Marx (1818.5.5-1883.3.14, - "Capital", "Economic Manuscript", "The Outline of Feuerbach", "German Ideology"

Spencer (Herbert Spencer, 1820-1903, British sociologist, agnostic, idealist philosopher)

Jacob Moleschott (1822-1893, a Dutch physiologist, philosopher, one of the representatives of vulgar materialism) Ludwig Büchner (1824-1899, German doctor, one of vulgar materialist representatives)

Ferdinand Lassalle (1825-1864, leader of the opportunistic faction in the German workers' movement)

Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895, British naturalist) - "Beautiful New World"

Friedrich überweg (1826-1871, German philosopher) - "Introduction to the History of Philosophy"

Friedrich Albert Lange (1828-1875, German idealist philosopher, early neo-Kantian) Joseph Dietzgen (1828-1888, German socialist writer and philosopher, tanner) Chernyshevsky (Николай Гаврилович Чернышевский,

1828-1889, Russian revolutionary democrats, materialist philosophers, literary critics, writers) - "The Aesthetic Relationship between Art and Reality", "An Overview of the Gothic Period in the Russian Literature Circle", "Philosophy Humanism Principles" 》

Hippolyte Adolphe Taine (1828-1893, a translation of Dana, French literary theorist, historian, one of the heirs of Conde's empirical philosophy)

Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920, German psychologist, philosopher, one of the founders of structural psychology)

Wilhelm Dilthey (1833-1911, a German idealist philosopher who originally belonged to neo-Kantianism and later turned to philosophy of life)

Karl Eugen Dühring (1833-1921, German philosopher, vulgar economist)

Harris Torrey Harris (1835-1909, American educator, idealist philosopher, the earliest communicator of Hegelian philosophy in the United States)

Green Hill (Thomas Hill Green, 1836-1882, British idealist philosopher)

Wilhelm Schuppe (1836-1913, German idealist philosopher, founder of internalism)

Ernst Mach (1838-1916, Austrian physicist, idealist philosopher, one of the founders of empirical criticism) Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914, American idealist philosopher, founder of pragmatism)

James (William James, 1842-1910, American idealist philosopher, psychologist, pragmatist, founder of functional psychology)

Eduart Hartmann (1842-1906, German idealist philosopher)

Richard Avenarius (1843-1896, German subjective idealist philosopher, one of the founders of empirical criticism)

Nietzsche (Friedrich Nietzsche, 1844-1900, German idealist philosopher, voluntarist)

Merlin (Franz Mehring, 1846-1919, one of the left-wing leaders of the German Social Democratic Party, political commentator, historian)

Francis Herbert Bradley (1846-1924, British idealist philosopher, new Hegelian) R (Rudolf Eucken, 1846-1926, German idealist philosopher)

Richard Schubert-Soldern (1852-1935, German idealist philosopher, representative of internalism

Karl Pearson (1857-1936, British idealist philosopher, mathematician, one of the advocates of eugenics) Samuel Alexander (1859-1938, British idealist philosopher, new realist)

Edmund Husserl (1859-1938, German idealist philosopher, founder of modern phenomenology)

Henri Bergson (1859-1941, French idealist philosopher, life philosophy and the main representative of modern irrationalism)

John Dewey (1859-1952, American idealist philosopher, sociologist, educator, pragmatist) Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947, British idealist philosopher, mathematician)

Josef Petzoldt (1862-1929, German idealist philosopher, empirical critic)Heinrich Rickert (1863-1936, German idealist philosopher, one of the main representatives of the New Kant's Freiburg School)

Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller (1864-1937, British philosopher, pragmatist, called his pragmatic philosophy "humanism")

Benedetto Croce (1866-1952, a translation of Croce, Italian idealist philosopher, historian, new Hegelian)

Hans Driesch (1867-1941, German idealist philosopher, biologist, new vitalist)

 

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970, British idealist philosopher, mathematician, logician)

Bogdanov (Александр Александрович Богданов, 1873-1928, Russian idealist philosopher)

George Edward Moore (1873-1958, British idealist philosopher, one of the main representatives of the new realism)

Giovanni Gentile (1875-1944, Italian idealist philosopher, new Hegelian)

Oswald Spengler (1880-1936, German idealist philosopher, historian)

Deborin (Абрам Моиесевич Деборин, 1881-1963, Soviet philosopher,

Moritz Schlick (1882-1936, idealist philosopher, born in Germany, taught at the University of Vienna, Austria, one of the founders of the Vienna School, one of the founders of logical positivism)

Jalques Maritain (1882-1973, French theologian, idealist philosopher, main representative of new Thomasism) Karl Jaspers (1883-1969, German existentialist philosopher)

Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951, Austrian idealist philosopher, logician. After Hitler annexed Austria in 1838, he entered British nationality and taught at Cambridge University)

Martin Heidegger (1889-1976, a German existentialist philosopher who served as university president and professor during Hitler's reign, and supported Nazism)

Jean Paul Sartre (1905-1980, French existentialist philosopher.) - "Imagination", "Existence and Nihility", "Existentialism is a Humanism", "Critique of Dialectical Reason", Several Issues in Methodology

Beauvoir Simone de (1908-1986, French existentialist scholar, writer)

Merleau Ponty (1908-1961, French existentialist philosopher)

Of course, philosophy and religion, politics, literature, etc. are also closely related. If you want to know the avenue, you must know the history. Repeated reading of the history of philosophy, world history, benefited a lot, and imagination came together.

  

Eastern philosophy Arabic philosophy Indian philosophy

  

In the history of the world, the East and the Arab countries also have important status and influence. Countries such as India, China, and Arabia are particularly important.

The great wise man of life

(The legend is about 600 years ago - about 470 years ago), surnamed Li Ming Er, the word Bo Yang, Han nationality, Chu State Bian County, is a great ancient Chinese philosopher, thinker, Taoist school founder, and in the Valley It was written in the ethics of the Five Thousand Words.

 

Confucius

Confucius (September 28th, 551th to April 11th, 479th) Mingqiu, the word Zhongni, Lu Guoyu, Han nationality at the end of the Spring and Autumn Period. English: Confucius, Kung Tze. Confucius was a great educator and thinker in ancient China, the founder of the Confucian school, and a world cultural celebrity. Confucius's thoughts and doctrines have had a profound impact on later generations.

  

Zhuangzi (about 369 years ago - 286 years ago), Han nationality. A famous thinker, philosopher, and writer is the representative of the Taoist school, the successor and developer of Laozi's philosophy, and the founder of the pre-Qin Zhuangzi school. His doctrine covers all aspects of social life at that time, but the fundamental spirit is still dependent on Laozi's philosophy. Later generations will call him and Laozi "Laozhuang", and their philosophy is "Lao Zhuang philosophy."

 

Mencius, the pioneer of the people-oriented thinking

Mencius (from 372 to 289) Han nationality, Zoucheng, Shandong. The great thinker of ancient China. One of the representative figures of Confucianism during the Warring States Period. He is the author of "Meng Zi", a collection of essays. "The Book of Mencius" is a compilation of Mencius's remarks, written by Mencius and his disciples, and records the Confucian classics of Mencius' words and deeds.

 

Xunzi (Xunzi 313 years ago - 238 years ago), the name of the famous thinker, writer, politician, representative of the Confucian school, - Han Fei, Li Si is his disciple.

  

Dong Zhongshu (before 179~104), Dong Zi, Han Dynasty thinker, politician. Great contribution to the orthodox status of Confucianism. It is a thinker of the Western Han Dynasty who is advancing with the times. He is a famous idealist philosopher in the Western Han Dynasty and a master of modern Chinese studies. When Emperor Jingdi was a Ph.D., he taught "The Ram Spring and Autumn." In the first year of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty (134 BC), Dong Zhongshu put forward the basic points of his philosophical system in the famous "Measures for Raising the Virtue," and suggested that "the slogan of 100 schools and the unique Confucianism" should be adopted by Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty. Later generations have different opinions on this.

 

Master of Science

Zhu Xi was a master of Song's agency studies. He inherited the science of Cheng Song and Cheng Wei of the Northern Song Dynasty and completed the system of objective idealism. It is said that reason is the essence of the world, "reasonable first, gas is behind", and puts forward "preserving the heavens, destroying human desires." Zhu Xi has a profound knowledge of the study of Confucian classics, history, literature, music, and even the natural sciences.

 

The development of Indian philosophy can be roughly divided into ancient philosophy (about 3000 BC ~ 750 AD), medieval philosophy (750 to 18th century AD), modern philosophy (about 18th century to 1947), modern philosophy (after 1947) ) Four periods.

 

Ancient

India has emerged as the bud of the worldview in the era of the Rigveda in the end of the original commune. After entering the slavery society, it began to form a systematic philosophy. The earliest philosophical book "The Upanishads."

 

middle Ages

In the Middle Ages, religion dominated, and the philosophy of the ruling class was included in the Hindu theology system. India traditionally recognized the Vatican’s authoritative figures, the Yoga School, the Victory School, the Orthodox School, and the Vedanta School. The Six-sect philosophy, such as the Miman sentiment, is called the orthodox school, and the Shunshi, Buddhism, Jainism, etc., which deny the authority of the Vedic, are called unorthodox.

  

Islam Arabia

 

The main differences between the Moor Taiqilai and the Hadith in philosophy are: the nature of Allah and the relationship between Allah and the world. MooreThe Taiqilai faction denies that Allah has all kinds of unfounded virtues such as knowledge, energy, sight, hearing, speech, life, etc., because these are considered to be the beginning of virtue and the personalization of Allah, and the true The uniqueness is incompatible; the Hadith is recognized as the virtue of Allah. Secondly, the debate about "freedom of will" and "pre-determination", that is, the relationship between man and Allah, the Hadith believes that the good and evil of man is the premise of Allah, and the act of man is created by Allah. The Moor Taiqilai faction believes that people have unlimited freedom of will, and that human behavior is created by themselves. Allah is rewarded and punished according to his good and evil, thus proving that Allah is fair.

 

After the 10th century, the Sunni philosophical system, the "New Kailam", the doctrine of Islam, was formed. The founder, Ashley, and his disciples reconciled the doctrines of “pre-determination” and “freedom of will”, emphasizing the all-powerfulness of Allah, and there is no causal connection between all things in the world, created by Allah. They try to show that all actions of human beings are determined by Allah, but people have the ability to "reach" their own actions, so people are responsible for their actions before Allah. The faction was supported by the ruling class and was regarded as an orthodox official creed.

Philosophy-theologians and their schools In the 9th and 12th centuries, there were numerous famous philosophers in the vast areas under the caliphate state, and there were also groups and factions of philosophers. These philosophers and factions, called "Hokma" by the Arabs, formed the main body of Arab medieval philosophy at that time, divided into two things, centered on Baghdad and Córdoba. Many of these philosophers are engaged in secular affairs (doctors, natural scientists, etc.), attaching importance to empirical knowledge and emphasizing theoretical understanding. Although they still have not got rid of the control of orthodox theology, they have largely accepted the influence of Greek-Roman philosophy, especially Aristotle and Neo-Platonicism and Eastern traditional ideas.

The philosopher Lacy and the sincere brothers. They attempted to reconcile Greek natural philosophy (including mathematics, astronomy, astrology, music, alchemy, medicine, etc.) and Islamic teachings to create a religious philosophy. Lacy's medical theory begins with the recognition of the close connection between the body and the soul, asserting that matter is eternal, that movement is an inseparable property of objects, and that feelings cause people to have an understanding of the object. The sincere Brothers Society was originally a politically-religious group of religious and philosophical groups in the Basra area in the 10th century. They collectively compiled an encyclopedic collection of essays. Their cosmology is Islam Shiite, New Pythago The combination of lasism and neo-Platonicism.

Philosophers Kendi, Farabi, and Ibn Sina, influenced by Greek Aristotle and Neo-Platonicism. Kendy is known as an Arab philosopher. He systematically studied Greek philosophy and tried to combine it with Islamic teachings, arguing that matter is a form of “flowing out” from the spirit of Allah, and that the soul can leave the body and be independent. Faraby is recognized as the "first philosopher" after Aristotle. His philosophical system is a mixture of Plato, Aristotle and Sufism, propagating the immortal "ration of Allah" . I think that the world is made up of many elements, and people can know the world through feelings. Ibn Sinah proposed the "dual truth theory" of religion and science. He is arrogant between materialism and idealism. He believes that the material world is eternal. They are not created by Allah, but they also think that the spirit overflows from Allah. The spirit gives form to the material and then forms everything. It is also claimed that the soul and the body are different and are a special ability that goes beyond the physical properties of ordinary things. On the issue of commonality, it is believed that the common phase exists before things, as the idea of ​​creation, exists in things; as the essence of things, after things, is the form of existence of concepts.

Sufism and orthodox theology - philosopher Ansari. The Sufism faction appeared at the end of the 7th century and has undergone significant development since the end of the 8th century. Influenced by Neo-Platonicism and the Indian Yoga School, they promoted the "oneness of man and God" and "the connection between man and God" and advocated the doctrine of abstinence, perseverance, self-restraint, and was suppressed by the orthodox Islam. The orthodox school of the famous theology-philosopher Ansari, who was the master of

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

n the decaying chapel of a cursed orphanage, two spectral girls stand at the center—silent, glowing, and eternally bound. Madeleine Bavent, once an abused nun drawn into darkness, and Jeanne Dibasson, a child condemned for witchcraft, are no longer victims. Now supernatural entities, they walk hand in hand beneath the watchful gaze of The Eye—the cursed relic that witnessed their torment.

 

Behind them, a cloaked figure hovers like a divine judge, its form shaped by the very memories the Eye reveals. The artifact itself floats midair, pulsating with cold blue light, forever open—forever remembering. Around them, the walls echo with silent screams. Abandoned children, fallen nuns, and broken clergy litter the shadows, frozen in time by the truth the Eye cannot unsee.

 

Their eyes—glowing mirrors of the Eye itself—burn not with vengeance, but revelation. They are the message. The sin. The justice. And when they stare into you, you see what they saw.

 

This image reimagines the final fate of Madeleine and Jeanne not as damned, but as eternal witnesses, haunting the ruins of faith with the truth that was buried—until The Eye opened.

Today I finalized the tree by adding more blossoms. I want the tree to feel dripping with flowers :). I sealed the entire sculpture and finished painting. Next week: pouring the pond and last touches. Project detailed on my blog!

 

www.torisaur.com

 

Thx for following along!

 

Tori

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

He was not bred for war.

He was calibrated.

 

Deep in the orbital cradle of Station Ghera-9, the Pressure Protocol activates — a directive executed only under extreme planetary conflict risk. The being behind the visor is more than a soldier: he is an interpreter of environmental warfare, an emissary of escalation.

 

Tubes hiss. Sensors blink. Gravity surges.

 

With each breath in his pressurized shell, centuries of pacifist observation tighten into readiness. His eyes burn not with hate — but with the knowledge of what happens when first contact is broken.

 

And he will not warn again.

 

Protocol Class: Contact Interference/Severity II

🔸 Tactical Operative – Designation: EXO-XH-73

 

AI-generated via Mystic 2.5 Flexible. A quiet response to loud threats in uncharted space.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

Beneath a sky torn open by a swirling cosmic wound, the surface of N’Zhal-Tekh stretches in jagged, cathedral-like valleys of obsidian. Rivers of pulsing violet-blue energy crack through the stone like corrupted veins, leaking light that doesn’t reflect — it devours. Lightning forks sideways across the cavern walls, igniting momentary flashes of alien geometry that vanish as quickly as they form.

 

Towering needle-like spires rise across the horizon — not built, but grown — seemingly drawn toward the sky’s unblinking eye: a void-star anomaly that anchors the planet’s spatial distortion. This eye sees all, yet promises nothing. Beneath its gaze, memory deteriorates, matter flickers in and out of cohesion, and all sound feels… delayed

 

In the deepest gorge lies the Throne Core, where K’Shaatra dreams in motionless stillness, wired into the planet’s inverted nervous system. The longer you stand on this world, the less you recognize the laws you once lived by.

 

Here, gravity bends inward. Thought bleeds. And purpose becomes irrelevant.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Inspired by and Reimagined

 

"In the violet hour, even the night obeys."

 

Beneath the unblinking gaze of a violet moon, she stands as the sentinel of midnight. Her eyes burn like coals fanned by an unseen wind, each flicker a silent warning. Shadows cling to her as if afraid to leave, their edges glowing faintly with the moon’s amethyst light. The forest behind her twists into jagged silhouettes, its trees bowing under the weight of her presence. Every ember in the air seems to pause mid-flight, caught between fear and reverence.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Inspired by the Spiderman Villain Scorpion and Fanart

 

"One sting, and it’s over."

 

High above the streets of New York, under the weight of pounding rain, the Scorpion stalks his prey. The gleam of his emerald armor slices through the shadows, each plate reflecting the neon glow of the city below. His mechanical tail coils high, the segmented plates creaking as the razor stinger locks into position. Lightning flashes, and for a heartbeat his visor ignites like a predator’s eyes in the dark. Down below, the city sleeps — unaware that their rooftops have become a hunting ground. In the silence between the thunder, only one truth remains: when the Scorpion strikes, there is no escape.

First thing, I faced a judge for a second time and finalized my divorce from a woman I was married to since 1994. It was an amicable split, and we've been legally separated for more than three years and we split everything including custody of our son fairly and with no disputes. Although we got along well enough as friends and still do most of the time, and we were mostly on the same page as parents of our son, it was never the most loving affectionate or intimate marriage and got worse over time.

 

There were tensions between us more often than not, and those gradually became angry outbursts and toward the very end those has started to involve violence more often than I could accept. I would guess that for at least the last five years maybe ten or more we lived together, we slept in separate rooms. I don't like conflict, but I endured. I endured because I respected the institution of marriage and I believed that none were perfect and it was something that you had to work at. I endured because we had a son together. I endured because she had health issues that would get worse over time and I never wanted her to have to face them alone. I endured because her parents had divorced while she was in college and her mom never really got over it.

 

It took me a long time to convince myself that marriage didn't have to be that way. Life doesn't have to be way. You only get one and it goes by way too fast. I spent nearly a decade researching midlife crisis and wondering how I could dig myself out of the way I was feeling. I kept suppressing my feelings for my long time friend at the time Melissa. I lied to myself, that the love I felt for her was maybe just friendship and the absence of love in my life. I knew I couldn't be with her so I lied to myself that it didn't need to be answered. She was married, and lived 7 hours away and had a family of her own. It took me maybe 15 years to realize that I was walking around thinking of her every day even while living an entirely separate life.

 

I reached a breaking point one day after a petty argument over whether or not the power had gone out in a storm, resulted in my wife hurling a grapefruit at me from across a room. Seriously...that happened. But it happened after other more disturbing incidents that had become more frequent. I became afraid I couldn't keep just walking away when things reached that point. I became afraid my son would suffer in the angry environment and he was, and I'm not a person who likes that kind of angry conflict. I left one day vowing to never go back, but the thoughts of what my son would face alone kept me there for a couple more months. Finally I made the hardest decision of my life, and we decided to split up.

 

That was December and by the following May I bought a small house and moved out. It took the next three years to sort everything our and split all the property. So today is the end of a long hard chapter in my life.

 

The decision? It worked out. My ex-wife and I get along better apart than we ever did together and we cooperate well with Alex and with financial responsibilities we still share. We are friendly and able to talk about whatever we need to. She now has her own home and is has dated the same guy for a couple of years. Alex seems to be completely fine and in fact went from struggling in school to making Honor roll every marking period. He has become an amazing musician and seems happy and content with the new arrangement even though he is back and forth between two homes every week.

 

What I have learned is that you don't always have to play by society's rules and conventions nor its expectations. You don't have to sacrifice your own happiness for the happiness and security of others, and in fact if you are doing that you aren't really making those people happy anyway. You only get one life and living it your way doesn't mean other people have to get hurt. Things can still work out, even when you make dramatic changes. In fact the last three years have been the happiest years of my entire life and I owe that all to having Melissa in my life. What a dream come true she is. My life's love and my soulmate, finally together. I look forward to the future in a way I hadn't been able to for two decades.

 

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Shrouded in a tattered midnight cloak stitched with forgotten sigils, the Candlebearer wanders through grave-choked fog beneath a bloodstained moon. Her skull, cracked and painted with ancient symbols, glows faintly with an eerie, inner light. In one hand she holds a gnarled staff crowned by a single flickering candle — a flame that never dies, said to guide lost souls or condemn them. Her ribs, exposed like a cathedral’s broken frame, are bound in blackened chains and sacred iron. Gothic spires loom behind her, silhouetted against burning skies as whispers coil in the wind. Wherever she walks, silence follows — eternal and absolute.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Shrouded in ancient robes, the silent figure stands alone on a battlefield long forgotten by time, where the dead no longer sleep and the sky weeps ash. With a skeletal mask carved from the bones of the fallen and hands cloaked in decay, he is neither living nor truly dead—only watching. His presence marks the boundary between myth and nightmare, a wraith bound to the field by war, vengeance, and an oath no man remembers. The swords rising from the cursed soil whisper to him in the wind—a choir of souls that will never be free.

Today I finalized the tree by adding more blossoms. I want the tree to feel dripping with flowers :). I sealed the entire sculpture and finished painting. Next week: pouring the pond and last touches. Project detailed on my blog!

 

www.torisaur.com

 

Thx for following along!

 

Tori

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

In the scorched hollow of a forgotten machine-cathedral, where ash hangs like incense and flame licks the bones of saints, The Grailweld stands. Not as a statue. Not as a god. But as an altar.

 

Forged in divine circuitry and ritual steel, this colossal mech-reliquary is equal parts cathedral and executioner — its limbs like crucified towers, its chest aglow with a molten sacrament. Pilgrims ascend the burning dais below to offer themselves not in prayer, but in transmutation. Flesh, memory, and spirit are melted into raw function — offerings to a relic that never rests.

 

Around it, robed machinists chant in tongues only the blessed circuits understand. They are not priests. They are welds waiting to be sealed.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

📜 Lore Description:

 

In the dead of night, beneath the gory eye of a swollen blood moon, The Black Siren sails once more. Her rotting timbers creak with an echo from another time, and her tattered black sails slice the stormy skies like the wings of a fallen angel. Lanterns burn with a hellish red flame, casting unholy light on her ornate, skeletal hull—twisted carvings of torment and temptation crawl up the stern like memories refusing to die.

 

The sea rebels in her presence, waves rising like claws to drag her down, yet she surges forward, indifferent. Lightning licks the heavens above, tracing jagged scars across thunder-laden clouds. It is said the ship answers only to the moon’s bloodcry, reappearing with every crimson eclipse to hunt the souls of oathbreakers and cowards. Her captain? Forgotten by name, remembered only by the whisper—“He who never died, because Death himself fled the deck.”

 

Sailors tell tales in trembling voices: if you hear the ship's bell toll across a storm you can't escape... you’ve already been marked.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

In the rust-cloaked ruins of Ironspire — once the beating heart of the world’s greatest steampunk empire — a single figure remains. Cloaked in scorched brass and bone-welded steel, this lone cyborg warrior roams a city long choked by soot and silence. His eyes burn with synthetic fire, powered by the last ember of the city’s god-engine.

 

Armed with a gear-driven inferno gauntlet and a core reactor that pulses like a dying sun, he is not just a machine of war — he is the final echo of a forgotten age.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Inspired by the 1902 movie A Trip To The Moon

 

In this dreamlike descent into celestial terror, a band of Victorian explorers stands on the desolate lunar surface, shrouded in mist and scattered with glowing, fungal life. Their lanterns flicker against the unknown as they approach the colossal face carved into the Moon — not carved by human hands, but grown… born.

 

Its hollowed eye glows with molten gold, not from light, but from consciousness. Around its skull-like craters, ancient machinery pulses with forgotten energy, embedded like tumors in lunar rock. Towers rise like parasite spires, whispering signals to the stars.

 

The travelers stare into the abyssal socket, unaware that it is staring back — not a planet, but a dormant thing, waiting for worship, or a sacrifice.

  

With his true colors showing...

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Inspired by the Spiderman Villain Hobgoblin

 

"Chaos rides on iron wings."

 

High above the sleepless city, the Hobgoblin cuts through the storm, his tattered orange cape a burning streak against the night sky. The full moon glows behind his jagged grin, eyes blazing with manic glee. In each clawed hand, a pumpkin bomb burns with hellfire, their carved faces grinning with the promise of chaos. His glider roars beneath him, metal wings slicing through the rain as sparks and embers trail in his wake. Below, the skyline glimmers, oblivious to the destruction about to rain from above. Tonight, laughter rides the wind — and it smells of smoke and fear.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Inspired on Book 3 Fire Sea of The Death Gate Cycle

 

Bathed in the glow of molten rock and summoned fire, a skeletal necromancer—adorned in Sartan-forged black and gold ceremonial armor—extends his hands, casting forbidden spells into the inferno. Around him, the risen dead awaken: former Sartan now reduced to charred bone and glowing crimson eyes, their souls bound by ancient sigils burning on their chestplates. They kneel or rise in obedience, their cracked skeletal forms wreathed in ash and ember. The cavern walls pulse with heat, veins of lava casting flickering shadows as the dead reclaim fire for their master.

 

This is no act of desperation—this is vengeance given form.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

Deep within a lost temple carved from the bones of the world, she stands barefoot upon ancient stone — a whisper of power long denied its name.

 

Her skin is pale as ash, eyes glowing with the cold blue fire of forbidden knowledge. Thick white dreadlocks fall like woven spells around her shoulders, tangled with silver charms, bone beads, and chain-bound secrets.

 

Her attire is dark and ritualistic — layers of torn silk and runed leather, bound with relic chains and arcane pendants. From her outstretched hands coils a torrent of glowing blue magic, alive and hungry, lighting the ancient glyphs around her like embers in ice.

 

Nythera is not merely a sorceress. She is the keeper of exiled rites, the voice of lost gods, and the echo of every curse cast in silence.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

“Within his chest, the void remembers.”

 

Amid the crumbling arches of forgotten sanctuaries, he stands — a warlock cloaked in shadow, armor etched with runes that bleed violet fire. His eyes burn like twin amethysts, unyielding and eternal. At his core swirls a living galaxy of power, a vortex of secrets bound to the void itself. Neither priest nor knight, but a keeper of ruin, a sentinel of the silence that follows all things.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

Two souls, one vow — guardians eternal beneath the crystal crown.

 

In the heart of an untouched alien rainforest, where sunlight filters through jade-green canopies and ancient magic hums in the air, stand the Guardians of the Crystal Veil. The male, his scales a living tapestry of emerald and bronze, radiates the silent strength of a warrior born from the oldest bloodlines. Beside him, the female glimmers with an otherworldly grace, her crown of crystalline gems catching every stray beam of light, refracting it into shards of azure fire. Their amber-gold eyes burn with unyielding vigilance — protectors of a sacred realm where the balance between life and the unknown is held by their bond alone.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop.

 

In the sacred depths of a glowing sea-grotto, where starlight never reaches but magic still breathes, she waits — silent as the ocean’s memory. Nymerai, the Tideborn Oracle, is more than elven, more than fae. She is a living echo of the sea’s first promise — to carry secrets, to hold power, and to never forget.

 

Her eyes shimmer like moonlight over dark water — ancient, knowing, unknowable. Seafoam hair falls in perfect braids, threaded with coral-gold trinkets and ceremonial chains. Runes and tattoos dance across her skin like living currents, whispering to the spirits that dwell in salt and silence. Every motion, every breath is ritual — a conversation between tides and time.

 

She is priestess, seer, sentinel.

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