Pages

Artwork Introduction

The Apostles' Creed, "Homo sapien is lethal via the cornea because it possesses no blood supply."

Found in the links below this one are a collection of forty-seven paintings, of which were all painted by my person, that visually depict the forty-seven terms that are set to compose the coming elements of the fundamental philosophy encyclopedia project. The project itself is slowly coming to be a doctoral work that I believe will serve well in the way of constructing a fundamentally philosophical school of thought. This school will be one that taps into the power of fundamentals by generating a literary lens through which an enumerable array of studies can find applicability. With current estimates spanning about the approximate length of a doctoral thesis, I ask that patience be had with the project described above, but rest assured that the progress will be gradually reported, so as to make available the individual components that are set to be the constituents of the larger work at hand.

With patience and time, spanning a number of years, the overall encyclopedic work will come to be made available to all those who visit these pages, and with the artwork made available below, the gradual accumulation of encyclopedic elements will retain integral applicability through the use of visualization and pictoral depiction as compounding educational elements.

Have fun viewing and enjoying the artwork! There is more set to follow and thank you for visiting!

P.S. With the way that the different 'genres' of artwork are listed, one can actually gauge the sequence and significance of the different terms. View the example below...

  1. Affliction
  2. Aspect
  3. System
  4. Conceptual Phase
  5. Need - Response Dynamic
  1. What is the problem?
  2. Where is it affecting you?
  3. Where are the specific regions which are being impacted by the problem?
  4. At what stage is the problem?
  5. What approach is appropriate for the problem?
Example Answers
  1. Labor Affliction
  2. Body Aspect
  3. Nervous System
  4. Phase One (***initial problem recognition phase)
  5. Physical Need (i.e. Exhaustion) - Physical Response (i.e. Rest)

No comments:

Post a Comment