I love Tolkien, Harry Potter , MCU(i don't like reading comics sadly). I love reading and writing and Mainly Worldbuilding (would love to help you world build of you need). Quantum Physics ,Literature and philosophy,MATHEMATICS,Linguistics ,and Physiology are my favorite subjects. I play Minecraft.
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When i world build i add places and peoples but when it come time to map it its a big mess. Places overlap whether patterns are wrong. So i desided to try a different approach on a new world. Fix the map th3n the people. Inspired by Tachaora
Some ai images of Sir Corvus St. Clair (I sadly can't draw to save my life)
đŹ 0  đ 0  â¤ď¸ 1 ¡ Sir Corvus St. Clair ¡ He is a Vampire. Oc
There is still alot to be done
He is a Vampire born on 13 May 1785(Friday Ăže 1
He is a Vampire born on 13 May 1785(Friday Þe 13th). He was born to Sir James St. Clair* and Lady Catherine. When he was 17 years old one night while on a stroll in Þe woods with a friend*šshe was attacked and trying to save her he got bit by Edward Ruchbah*². That was on 12 March 1801(Thursday night). He went on to serve Þe knight like he father and was Knighted 1817(they never know he was a vampire)
*Sir James was Lord of Aurum Vale for King George III. He fought in Ăže 7 years war.
Drakason "The king of dragon's" son of Umbra "The greatâ
During the reign of Meleneth* a boy was lost in the north. The king of dragon's Umbra "The Great" adopted him. Because of eating Dragon Food by 33(Peak HUMAN age) he stops aging. (For dragons it 787 years, Eleves 2271, Dawafs 153 etc But you don't usually stop aging .it is a special case)
He is trained in the magic arts of Ignis Sacer (dragon magic).When Meleneth's Reign fell so did Umbra. He left his kingdom for a human aka "Drekasonr".
As king he attacks the dwarven Kingdom of Vindarborg. He takes dwarfs as prisoners and turns them into monster beings. He creates the VirLeti, 3m tall (9,10') that can breathe fire. They have huge wings of fire that can carry them and that contract(disappear).
Using this he created the strongest armor(Dragon magic, dwarf skill and magic combined)
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A perfect life for me would be living in a 2 bedroom apartment filled with books, math on Ăže walls you know what i mean. Living alone. But being rich enough to have a huge farm with a big house and few villas. So you can live how you want comfortably.
Coffee at Ăže Coffee shop evert morning. Doing work. No obligations except your self.
đŹ 0  đ 3  â¤ď¸ 0 ¡ The Inkwell Architect ¡ Build worlds, not bills.
Services:
⌠Foundation Tier (FREE): Core concept brainstorming, genre fu
đŹ 0  đ 3  â¤ď¸ 0 ¡ The Inkwell Architect ¡ Build worlds, not bills.
Services:
⌠Foundation Tier (FREE): Core concept brainstorming, genre fu
đŹ 0  đ 3  â¤ď¸ 0 ¡ The Inkwell Architect ¡ Build worlds, not bills.
Services:
⌠Foundation Tier (FREE): Core concept brainstorming, genre fu
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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đŹ 0  đ 3  â¤ď¸ 0 ¡ The Inkwell Architect ¡ Build worlds, not bills.
Services:
⌠Foundation Tier (FREE): Core concept brainstorming, genre fu
đŹ 0  đ 0  â¤ď¸ 0 ¡ The Inkwell Architect ¡ Build worlds, not bills.
Services:
⌠Foundation Tier (FREE): Core concept brainstorming, genre fu
Military action is important to the nation-it is the ground of death and life, the path of survival and destruction, so it is imperative to examine it.
Military action in a state is important because it's life and death and therefore necessary to examine. Ăe "Ground" is Ăže location of Ăže battle feild gain advantage you live lose advantage you die. Ăe "path" is how you adjust to gain victory, find it and you survive lose it and you perish.
MEL YAOCHEN:Whether you live or die depends on the configuration of the battleground; whether you survive or perish depends on the way of battle.
Platoâs Republic and the Question of the Ideal Community
Platoâs Republic asks one of philosophyâs most enduring questions: what makes a just and well-ordered community, and how can individuals strive to become ideal members within it? Rather than presenting arguments directly, Plato writes in imagined dialogue, using his mentor Socrates as the central speaker to examine justice, morality, and the nature of the good life.
The dialogue opens with Socrates and Glaucon returning from a religious festival in the Piraeus, the port of Athens. They are intercepted by Polemarchus and a group of friends, who playfully compel them to remain for dinner and to watch a torch race. This seemingly casual beginning sets the stage for a deep philosophical inquiry into justice.
Socrates: The Philosophical Midwife
Socrates (c. 469/470â399 BCE) was an Athenian philosopher who wrote nothing himself. He lived between approximately 470 and 399 BCE and devoted his life to questioning fellow citizens about virtue, justice, knowledge, and the good life. His method of persistent questioningânow called the Socratic methodâaimed not to transmit knowledge but to expose false beliefs and stimulate genuine understanding. Born to a sculptor and a midwife, Socrates famously compared his philosophical practice to midwifery: helping others give birth to ideas.
Rejecting wealth, political power, and conventional success, Socrates emphasized moral self-examination above all else. He claimed no wisdom of his own, asserting that his only knowledge was awareness of his ignorance. This stance distinguished him from the Sophists, who charged fees for instruction and often claimed expertise. Socratesâ relentless questioning of powerful figures and social norms earned him both admiration and resentment, ultimately leading to his trial and execution by hemlock on charges of impiety and corrupting the youth. His death became a lasting symbol of philosophical integrity and devotion to truth. In The Republic, Socrates serves as Platoâs mouthpiece for exploring justice, the ideal state, and the structure of the human soul.
Book I: Three Conceptions of Justice
Book I of The Republic presents three major arguments concerning the nature of justice, each associated with a different character: Cephalus, Polemarchus, and Thrasymachus.
Socrates and Cephalus
Cephalus is a wealthy, elderly metic (foreigner) originally from Syracuse, invited to Athens by the statesman Pericles. He amassed his fortune through a shield factory in the Piraeus, allowing him a life of comfort and leisure. In the dialogue, Cephalus represents traditional Greek morality, rooted in religious piety, honesty, and respect for established customs. His understanding of justice is practical rather than philosophical, focused on living honorably and avoiding punishment in the afterlife. When the discussion becomes abstract, he politely withdraws, reflecting a worldview shaped by tradition rather than critical inquiry.
Cephalus argues that the greatest benefit of wealth is that it allows a just person to avoid cheating or lying. Because he is financially secure, he does not need to defraud others and can repay his debts to both gods and men. From this, he implies that justice consists in telling the truth and paying what one owes.
Socrates challenges this definition with a counterexample: is it just to return a borrowed weapon to a friend who has gone mad? The obvious answerânoâdemonstrates that justice cannot be reduced to rigid rules of truth-telling and repayment. Moral judgment must consider circumstances, and Cephalusâ definition proves inadequate.
Socrates and Polemarchus
After Cephalus leaves, his son Polemarchus takes over the discussion. Polemarchus, the brother of the orator Lysias, was a young Athenian aristocrat active in civic life. He is portrayed as loyal, earnest, and confident in inherited moral beliefs, particularly regarding friendship and loyalty. Historically, Polemarchus was executed without trial during the reign of the Thirty Tyrants in 404 BCE, largely so the regime could seize his familyâs property.
Polemarchus cites the poet Simonides, defining justice as âgiving to each what is owed to him.â Through Socratesâ questioning, this idea is refined into the claim that justice consists in benefiting oneâs friends and harming oneâs enemies.
Socrates challenges this view with two major arguments. First, he points out the problem of fallibility. Humans often mistake who their true friends and enemies are, which could lead them to harm good people and help bad ones. Such outcomes cannot be just.
Second, and more decisively, Socrates asks whether it is ever just to harm anyone at all. He argues that harming a person makes them worse with respect to virtue, just as harming a horse makes it worse as a horse. Since justice is a virtue, it cannot produce injustice in others. Therefore, justice cannot involve harming anyone. Polemarchus concedes the point but is left confused, and the definition of justice remains unresolved.
Socrates and Thrasymachus
The final and most confrontational argument in Book I involves Thrasymachus, a Sophist from Chalcedon. Known in antiquity as a skilled rhetorician with an aggressive speaking style, Thrasymachus represents a cynical, power-based view of morality. Sophists charged fees for instruction and often challenged traditional moral assumptions. In The Republic, Thrasymachus embodies a form of political realism in which moral concepts serve the interests of the powerful.
Thrasymachus boldly declares that âjustice is nothing other than the advantage of the stronger.â In every city, he argues, the ruling group makes laws that benefit itself. Obedience to these laws is called âjustice,â meaning that justice always serves those in power rather than any objective moral good.
Socrates responds in stages. First, he argues that every genuine craftâsuch as medicine or shepherdingâaims at the good of its subject, not the practitioner. A true ruler, properly understood, rules for the benefit of the ruled, not for personal advantage.
Second, Socrates points out that rulers can make mistakes about what is in their own interest. If justice requires obeying rulers, then citizens would sometimes be just by doing what harms the ruler. To escape this problem, Thrasymachus revises his position, claiming that a ruler in the strict sense never errs. Justice, therefore, becomes the advantage of the infallibly stronger.
Finally, Socrates argues that justice is a form of wisdom and virtue, while injustice is ignorance and vice. Even groups of unjust peopleâsuch as a band of thievesâmust practice some form of justice among themselves to function. Injustice breeds conflict, hatred, and instability, making effective cooperation impossible. From this, Socrates concludes that the tyrantâthe most unjust individualâis not happy or powerful in any meaningful sense. Instead, he is fearful, isolated, and miserable, incapable of achieving true fulfillment.
Thrasymachus is reduced to silence, visibly embarrassed and rhetorically defeated, though not genuinely convinced. He feels outmaneuvered rather than persuaded, and the dialogue ends without a final definition of justice. Book I thus serves not as a conclusion, but as a provocation, clearing away inadequate views and preparing the ground for the deeper arguments that follow in the rest of The Republic.
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âSome call me the king of the worldâ as he manifests a sceptre âothers call me the invincible warrior of ApolĂtheonâ and appears in his hand a great sword âa lot of people know me as Myrkr the master of the dark artsâ he pulls out an short staff âbut I am the lord of the underworld Dovhulrâ and now he is leaning on a fiery Staff on it engraved âDovhulr drĂłttinn undirheimaâ. He sits down on a great throne. âWhat do you want, ladyâ snaps Dovhulr. âMy son has fallen to your servant Illverkâ Helen laments.
âWhat must I do about that" interrogates Dovhulr as he stands up and leans towards her face.
This is a short story I am writing
Dovhulr â the lord of the underworld. Also known as the warrior Athanasios of ApolĂtheon, king of the world and ApolĂtheon, he is the master of the dark arts Myrkr. He is the devil (more like hades than lucifer but still the devil. So, devil and (God) of the dead.) He came to earth as a warrior Athanasios and help conquer the city of ApolĂtheon. Which few hundred years later became the capital city of the largest kingdom ever know and he came down (or up) again to be its leader (at its peak). He created something called the dark arts as an (sensi) by the name of Myrkr. He also is very lustful or likes to encourage lust. Â
Illverk- is a fallen servant of Dovhulr. Because Dovhulr is not necessary bad but he is the devil or the god of the underworld. So basically Illverk makes people join gangs/CULTS and make them kill etc.
Helen- her son joined a gang/CULT and killed a few people among other things. So she basically said I am going to the devil himself to (help) my son out, and she asks the devil to sort his servant out and (save) her son.