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Showing posts from August, 2022

Center of Everything

The world could be changed if there was a person at the bottom of the societal stature, particularly that of the western world. Having the entire of the human looking down at them, not to harm but to observe and improve society. That person would require more than a lifetimes worth of a study to create a transition between a world of pain, suffering and death, into a world that must not become a dictatorship but far less cruel. The best in the world could use their knowledge to guide them and assist in transformation society, preventing the cycles of history from repeating itself - no small task but possible. That person should aquire a central point of education in all subjects and study above and below to communicate problems that hinder either end of the interlectual structure. They must know what has remained the same and what has changed through the previous cycles of history. It would need to be a massive worldwide effort that appeals to the hearts and kindnesses of all classes a...

Imagining reality

 A little book that inspired me was  where realism and fantasy meet , it is infact a book for artists and although I'm not good at art  some of my finer unseen moments reside within this catagory. Think about the characters that are in stories, Jane Austen for example, whilst studying english  Pride and Prejudice , I noticed that there was a soldier and a clergy man. It seems as though inspiration could have come from two men that lived two centuaries before,  Edmwnd Prys  a clergy man and  Thomas Prys  a sailor and he was also a soildier (and poet). This may not seem like any great revelation to most that have studied history and Austens works. Neither then should it surprise anybody that  Edmund Burke  lived in Austen's time and so did  Thomas Clarkson . I went about looking for patterns of pairs or groups of people throughout history and alive in the modern world. This novel was written in the rough period of 200 years ago. A pat...

The Weir's of Crump

Born in 1882 was the civil engineer Edwin Crump, interestingly he designed the self titled Crump weir, it is used to measure stream flows in open channels, he died in 1961. W.R White later studied the Crump weir.  The Crump weir is a "two dimentional triangular weir, it has has a horizontal crest in the transverse direction and a triangular shape in the streamwise direction", wikipedia . But, what exactly is a weir; "A weir is a small dam built across a river to control the upstream waterlevel".  Practical Engineering . It also draws to attention within the above linked blog post that it should be considered that water powered the mills of history for a long time. Consider also that weirs can help with the flow of boats that are also navigating the river, historically this would have been vital to trade. The relevance to my studies. 

Personality and success.

Consider for a moment that ones personality is shaped by social influences. First through family members and then by interactions with frameworks of wider societies. Consider that personality is broadly catagorized into type a and type b personalities, though I won't go into these methods of catagorization any further, there is another system that is used for grouping personalities.  They are  Openness to experience Conscientiousness Extraversion Agreeableness Neuroticism It is possible for two very different people to produce the same outcomes of catagories until you delve deeper into the dynamics of personality. Think of having a lazy person that sits around drunk most of the time and does not have the most agreeable of personalities, the other delves into the difficult world web development and dabbles with  software design yet is also not the most agreeable of people, they are very different people, should society prefer one to the other. Now, consider the differences...

The Thomas Ship

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Formally the Sally the Thomas was a ship of the 1700s. It was known to have connections to the Bristolian Slave trade. The ship was captured by the french in 1794 just 9 years after It was renames from sally to Thomas. This was an armoured ship it had 14 4&6 pounder guns. It was known to have had 7 slave voyages whilst sailing under the name Thomas. Sickness might not have been an uncommon thing on a 1700s slave ship, but three of the sailors that had become sick on this ship were visited by a man known to be Thomas Clarkson whom had published two volumes in relation to the abolition of the slave trade. They also had a murdered shipmate, prehaps why this ship has played a significant role in history.  Interestingly, the artist W.Turner was inspired to create a painting called the slavr ship. He had read Thomas Clarkson's works about the abolition of slavery. His paining was first exhibited in 1840. The image below can be seen in the book  Turner, Masters of Art There is a ...

Quadratic Thought.

This description, is the birth of a thought and is not fully in formation, yet, for a first post it gives an example of a spardic note that my or may not correlate to further content. In my second post I intend to display how different the subject could be. Consider the four sections of a graph. Consider not, it's positive and negative values but rather see it as sections for expressing matters of society. At this early stage think less about populating the graph with batches of population data, but instead think of it as an area for the segregation of individuals. This example uses the y axis to describe educational level and the X axis for segregation of social class.  Example . Think of the planet Earth There is the northern hemisphere and the southern hemisphere. Each has a polar regions. In the northern hemisphere there is the north pole and in the southern hemisphere there is the south pole. Using the quadratic graph example above, without considering the ...