Verse:Hmøøh/Ngedhraism: Difference between revisions
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The "Second Mover" concept began as a goddess of mathematics and the arts, called Ȝronaeā (Old Eevo Ŋronae; modern Eevo ''Ŋrone'') in Old Eevo texts. Ancient Thensarian pagans saw a duality (i.e. an opposite but complementary relationship) between nature and human endeavors such as science, mathematics and the arts. The creator god Ħembānom, First Mover, created nature; Ȝronaeā, the Second Mover, then helps humans analyze and create. | The "Second Mover" concept began as a goddess of mathematics and the arts, called Ȝronaeā (Old Eevo Ŋronae; modern Eevo ''Ŋrone'') in Old Eevo texts. Ancient Thensarian pagans saw a duality (i.e. an opposite but complementary relationship) between nature and human endeavors such as science, mathematics and the arts. The creator god Ħembānom, First Mover, created nature; Ȝronaeā, the Second Mover, then helps humans analyze and create. | ||
===Warring philosophies=== | ===Warring philosophies=== | ||
A series of natural disasters and outbreaks, known as the [___ Calamities], set off social instability as well as eroding trust in institutions. | A series of natural disasters and outbreaks, known as the [___ Calamities], set off social instability as well as eroding trust in institutions. The disasters had taught the Talmans that the natural order was not to be trusted; thus the Second Mover took center place in Talman thought and became the symbol of good against evil. However, exactly how the Second Mover "moved" humans was still a matter of heated debate among philosophers. | ||
Amid the ensuing chaos, many nobles and warlords vied for hegemony. | |||
===Medieval Ngronaism=== | ===Medieval Ngronaism=== | ||