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daily dose of geometry dash

the largest geometry dash furry server on discord
Have you heard of daily dose of geometry dash? I heard that it's perfect for furries!
by vrplays January 4, 2025
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For the new High school election I think I would vote Iris-and-Georgia-for-Co-Prez because they have so much aura
by Person1233 January 26, 2026
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The hypothesis that the development and dominance of specific technology suites (e.g., maritime, steppe cavalry, industrial manufacturing, digital networks) are heavily predisposed, though not absolutely determined, by the physical geography of the originating civilization. Rivers favor hydraulic empires and shipbuilding; open plains favor wheeled vehicles and cavalry; isolated islands favor naval power; mountainous regions favor decentralized, defensible settlements. Geography offers a menu of viable technological paths.
Example: The Theory of the Geographic Axis of Technologies explains why Britain, an island with accessible coal and a maritime culture, spearheaded the steam and naval technologies of the Industrial Revolution, while the vast, interconnected steppes of Eurasia fostered horse-based nomadic empires whose "technology" was superior breeding, saddles, and composite bows for millennia.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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The stronger, often discredited claim that human societies, their cultures, institutions, and technological trajectories are directly and inexorably shaped by their physical environment (climate, topography, resource availability). In its hard form, it suggests that geography is destiny, leaving little room for human agency, cultural innovation, or historical contingency. It's the idea that you can largely predict a society's fate by looking at a map.
Example: Hard Geographic Determinism would argue that the "laziness" attributed to certain tropical cultures is not cultural, but an inevitable adaptation to a hot climate where intense, sustained labor is physiologically dangerous, and food is abundant with little effort. It reduces complex history to environmental inputs, ignoring the vast diversity of societies that have arisen in similar landscapes. Theory of Geographic Determinism
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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The study of how the private interests, familial connections, secret allegiances, and personal pathologies of national leaders clandestinely drive state policy, often subverting or overriding official ideology and strategic national interest. It's the recognition that geopolitics is not a clean game of rational actors, but is conducted by flawed humans whose vanity, grudges, friendships, and corrupt dealings can alter the fate of nations behind a veil of official rhetoric.
Example: A president launching a trade war not after a strategic review, but because a rival leader personally insulted them at a G7 dinner, is Geopolitics Under the Covers. It's the unspoken, personal driver—ego, a secret business deal for a crony, blackmail—that explains an otherwise irrational or disproportionate state action. Theory of Geopolitics Under the Covers
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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A theoretical framework proposing that the laws of physics possess a geometric structure—that they are not arbitrary rules but expressions of the shape, curvature, and topology of spacetime and the mathematical spaces in which physical phenomena occur. This theory draws on insights from general relativity (where gravity is geometry) and modern theoretical physics, suggesting that what we call "laws" may be consequences of deeper geometric principles. The geometry of physical laws determines what kinds of interactions are possible, what symmetries constrain behavior, and what transformations leave phenomena unchanged. Understanding this geometry might reveal why the laws take the form they do—why there are exactly three spatial dimensions, why forces have particular strengths, why particles have specific properties. The theory suggests that physics is not just about what happens, but about the shape of the arena in which happening occurs.
Example: "His theory of the geometry of the laws of physics suggested that the reason we have three spatial dimensions isn't arbitrary—it's because only in three dimensions can stable orbits and complex structures exist. The laws aren't just rules; they're the shape of reality itself."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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