Particulars

Individual articles
Universal quality
Minutia detachment

Developing a distinctive shade of meaning by honing in on appearance details, objects are defined by the quality of the light. Intentionality equates to attention, even when you are getting closer, but do not know exactly where you are going.

“I like design, I like details, to me it is just another form of self-expression.” – John Malkovich

Apron Ramp

Gate stand
Parking area
Surface portico

Coming and going during a multistage journey, the window view from inside the loading airplane is of a bustling but confined place. Air travel involves many levels of limited constraint.

“Anyone using the word ‘tarmac’ in the last 50 years is almost certainly using it as a synonym of ‘asphalt concrete’.” – David Richerby

Improvisation Spontaneity

Formal invention
Reflective gesture
Significant content

In a tour of an industrial printing plant, random ink spillage is here visually organized into an abstract expression. Found ancillaries derive their art identity from the designation divulged by the artist.

“We favor the simple expression of the complex thought.” – Barnett Newman

Crack of Dusk

Fiery horizon
Sliding down
Angular momentum

In a play of imagination while driving into the night’s transmutation, lights dance and glimmer on the sensible skyline.

“A sunset is the sun’s fiery kiss to the night.” – Crystal Woods

Coin Laundering

Cleanse aspiration
Purity made simple
Apparel recovery

Taking the measure of correlation between a system and its environment in the evening light, defilements and contamination are wiped away.

“Art is unquestionably one of the purest and highest elements in human happiness. It trains the mind through the eye, and the eye through the mind.” – John Lubbock

By Way of Which

Directed at
States of affairs
Immanent objectivity

Conscious human beings are not merely affected by environmental conditions, but are also conscious of things as things: physical objects and events, selves and other persons, and abstract thoughts and propositions. Establishing a relationship to existence, most of the events that comprise mental life have this distinguishing attribute of being “of” or “about” something.

“Intentionality is what characterizes consciousness in the pregnant sense and which, at the same time, justifies designating the whole stream of mental processes as the stream of consciousness and as the unity of one consciousness.” – Edmund Husserl

Dormitive Power

Object expression
Possibility intercept
Encounter assimilation

In an aesthetic frame of mind, there are logical similarities between psychological and physical descriptions. Approached from a receptive angle, unconventional hypotheticals become veracious.

“Prediction and explanation are exactly symmetrical. Explanations are, in effect, predictions about what has happened; predictions are explanations about what’s going to happen.” – John Rogers Searle

Verson

Particular specified form
Certain divergent respects
Iteration identity sequence

In an attempt to augment individual uniqueness over sameness, names and numbers can help to establish a relational identity, as mere labels for a set of problems. Gottfried Leibniz established the modern formulation of identity, stipulating that x is the same as y if and only if every predicate true of x is true of y as well. Of course, truth is just as slippery as equivalence.

“Ordinary people are products of their environment and fit in. Artists transcend their environment and stand out.” – Oliver Gaspirtz

Surging Progression

Implicit feature
Essential entity
Surface disturbance

Consciousness exists to the extent a human experiences it. At natural interface boundaries, the nature of the relation between subjective human reality and objective independent reality comes alive. In consciousness, phenomenal appearance is reality.

“Where conscious subjectivity is concerned, there is no distinction between the observation and the thing observed.” – John Rogers Searle

Natural Flow

Repeated cycles
Generally portrayed
Different seasonal aspects

Narrowly focused on immediate and present conditions, the idea of time as consisting of endlessly reiterated oscillations is perhaps useful.

“Here we are, trapped in the amber of the moment. There is no why.” – Kurt Vonnegut

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