He's the type of guy to wear the same fit for a month straight while wearing the most expensive shoes your eyes will ever picture.
His parents most likely smoke pot and he probably has a sibling with just as an elaborate name.
He's also the type of guy to buy a tub of ice-cream and a 24 pack of spoons, just to have 2 bites and leave on the highest point of the local playground. (These are all personal experiences I've had with my friend Dunamis)
Dynamisize (verb) – To make something more dynamic, energetic, or adaptable; to enhance the vitality or responsiveness of a system, process, or entity.
Reps are drowning in content. We need to dynamisize sales enablement with an intuitive, AI-powered knowledge base!
Your pup is bored of the same old route—dynamisize your walks with new trails, obstacle courses, or a doggy backpack!
Your profile is fine, but let’s dynamisize it with a killer bio, a mix of fun and mysterious photos, and a quirky opening line!
A close cousin to dynamic materialism, but with emphasis on the active principle—the dynamis or potentiality inherent in material reality. Dynamist materialism holds that matter contains within itself the potential for all the forms, complexities, and novelties that emerge in the universe—not through external design or imposition, but through the unfolding of inherent possibilities. The dynamist materialist sees evolution not as random variation plus selection but as the actualization of potentials latent in biological matter; sees history not as chaos but as the working-out of possibilities contained in social arrangements; sees consciousness not as ghost in machine but as what matter does when organized complexly enough.
Example: "Where traditional materialists saw only what is, his Dynamist Materialism saw what could be—the potentials latent in every situation, the futures struggling to be born from the matter of the present."
A philosophical framework emphasizing the active, creative potential inherent in nature—the dynamis or power of natural systems to generate novelty, complexity, and organization from within themselves. Dynamist naturalism holds that nature doesn't just change (passively responding to external forces) but creates—bringing forth genuinely new forms, structures, and possibilities through its own internal dynamics. Evolution is not just adaptation but invention; emergence is not just complication but genuine novelty; history is not just sequence but the unfolding of nature's creative potential. The dynamist naturalist sees a universe that is not just lawful but generative, not just ordered but ordering, not just structured but structuring.
Example: "Where others saw only random variation and selection, his Dynamist Naturalism saw nature's creativity—the universe's capacity to generate genuinely new possibilities from its own material."
A theoretical perspective emphasizing that the laws of physics are not static, eternal rules but dynamic, evolving principles that may change over cosmic time or under extreme conditions. Dynamism challenges the traditional view of laws as fixed and immutable, suggesting instead that they might be more like habits of nature—regularities that emerged with the universe and could, in principle, transform. This perspective draws on cosmological observations (constants that might vary), quantum gravity speculation (laws that might emerge from more fundamental processes), and philosophical considerations (why would laws be eternal when everything else changes?). Dynamism doesn't claim that anything goes, but that the boundaries of physical possibility might be more fluid than traditionally assumed—that the universe's rules might have a history and a future, not just a present.
Dynamism of the Laws of Physics Example: "Her dynamism of physical laws suggested that the constants we measure today might have been different in the earlyuniverse—and might change again in the distant future. The laws aren't carved in stone; they're carved in time."