THE WORLD-2🌏

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THE WORLD



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The are over 7,000 Languages and more then 4,000 Religions practiced world wide.

The world is home to millions of species, with new ones still being discovered.

About 71% of the earth's surface is water, with the Oceans holding 97% of it.

The world has incredible natural formations like the grand Canyon. Aurora Borealis, and Mount Everest.

The world is home to countless Ancient Ruins, Mysterious Artifacts, and Historical Landmark.

The world is a part of the vast universe, with the earth orbiting the sun and the Milky Way galaxy.

BEAUTIFUL BEACHES 🏖

1) The world has more than 7.9 billion people.

2) There are 195 countries in the world.

3) The longest river in the world is the Nile River. Which is 6,650 kilometers long.

4) The largest continent in the word is the world is Asia, which covers an area of 44.58 millions square kilometers.

5) The largest country in the world is Russia, which covers an area of 17.1 million square kilometre’s.

“THE WONDERS OF THE WORLD’S”

The world’s largest ocean is the pecific ocean, covering over 155 million square kilometer’s.

The highest mountain peak is Mount Everest reaching 8,848 meters above sea level.

The largest mountain range is the andes, stretching over 7,000 kilometer’s.

The world’s largest desert is the sahara, covering over 9 million square kilometer’s.

The largest river in South America is the Amazon River, stretching over 6,400 kilometer’s.

The world’s largest waterfall in Victoria falls, located in Zambia.

The largest living structure is the Great Barrier Reef, spanning over 2,300 kilometres.

The world’s driest desert is the Atacama Desert in Chile.

The largest island is Greenland, with an area of over 2 million square kilometres.

The world’s longest coastline belongs to Canada, stretching over 243,000 kilometres.

THE MOST POPULAR “ANIMALS”

ELEPHANT

One of the most popular wild animals, elephants are known for their large size, tusks, and social behaviour.

LEOPARD

A sleek and agile predator, leopards are known for their distinctive spots and nocturnal habits.

WOLF

A highly social animal, wolves are known for their pack behaviour and haunting howls.

JAGUAR

A powerful and majestic predator, jaguars are known for their distinctive spots and robust build.

DEER

A gentle and graceful herbivore, deer are known for their large eyes and agile movements.

Others popular animals include zebras, chimpanzees, bears, kangaroos, rhinoceroses, squirrels, mongooses, wombats, meerkats, hares, possums, chipmunks, jackals, alligators, monitor lizards, badgers, and dinosaurs.

THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MOUNTAIN🗻

http://THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MOUNTAIN🗻

Mount Fuji (Japan)

Iconic snow-capped peak.

Mount Everest (Nepal/China)

Highest peak in the world.

The Matterhorn (Switzerland)

Picturesque swiss alps.

Denali (Formerly Mount Mckinley, Alaska)

North America’s highest peak.

The Three Sister (Oregon, USA)

stunning volcanic peaks.

Mount Kilimanjaro (Tanzania)

Africa’s highest peak.

The Dolomites (Italy)

unique, towering mountain range.

Mount Olympus (Greece)

mythological home of the gods.

Mount Rainier (Washington, USA)

Majestic, glacier-covered peak.

The Andes (South America)

longest mountain range in the world.

IT’S NATURAL BEAUTY

It’s beautiful✨❤

The world is the totality of entities, the whole of reality, or everything that exists.[1] The nature of the world has been conceptualized differently in different fields. Some conceptions see the world as unique, while others talk of a “plurality of worlds”. Some treat the world as one simple object, while others analyze the world as a complex made up of parts. Image of the physical world, captured by the Hubble Space Telescope scientific cosmology, the world or universe is commonly defined as “the totality of all space and time; all that is, has been, and will be”. Theories of modality talk of possible worlds as complete and consistent ways how things could have been. Phenomenology, starting from the horizon of co-given objects present in the periphery of every experience, defines the world as the biggest horizon, or the “horizon of all horizons”. In philosophy of mind, the world is contrasted with the mind as that which is represented by the mind. Theology conceptualizes the world in relation to God, for example, as God’s creation, as identical to God, or as the two being interdependent. In religions, there is a tendency to downgrade the material or sensory world in favor of a spiritual world to be sought through religious practice. A comprehensive representation of the world and our place in it, as is found in religions, is known as a worldview. Cosmogony is the field that studies the origin or creation of the world, while eschatology refers to the science or doctrine of the last things or of the end of the world. In various contexts, the term “world” takes a more restricted meaning associated, for example, with the Earth and all life on it, with humanity as a whole, or with an international or intercontinental scope. In this sense, world history refers to the history of humanity as a whole, and world politics is the discipline of political science studying issues that transcend nations and continents. Other examples include terms such as “world religion”, “world language”, “world government”, “world war”, “world population”, “world economy”, or “world championship”.Etymology the English word world comes from the Old English wear old. The Old English is a reflex of the Common Germanic *world, a compound of was ‘man’ and Aliza ‘age’, thus literally meaning roughly ‘age of man’;[2] this word led to Old Frisian worlds, Old Saxon world, Old Dutch wrote, Old High German weald, and Old Norse versed.[3]The corresponding word in Latin is mundus, literally ‘clean, elegant’, itself a loan translation of Greek cosmos ‘orderly arrangement’. While the Germanic word thus reflects a mythological notion of a “domain of Man” (compare Midgard), presumably as opposed to the divine sphere on the one hand and the chthonic sphere of the underworld on the other, the Greco-Latin term expresses a notion of creation as an act of establishing order out of chaos.[4]Conceptions different fields often work with quite different conceptions of the essential features associated with the term “world”.[5][6] Some conceptions see the world as unique: there can be no more than one world. Others talk of a “plurality of worlds”.[4] Some see worlds as complex things composed of many substances as their parts while others hold that worlds are simple in the sense that there is only one substance: the world as a whole.[7] Some characterize worlds in terms of objective spacetime while others define them relative to the horizon present in each experience. These different characterizations are not always exclusive: it may be possible to combine some without leading to a contradiction. Most of them agree that worlds are unified totalities.[5][6]Monism and pluralism Monism is a thesis about oneness: that only one thing exists in a certain sense. The denial of monism is pluralism, the thesis that, in a certain sense, more than one thing exists.[7] There are many forms of monism and pluralism, but in relation to the world as a whole, two are of special interest: existence monism/pluralism and priority monism/pluralism. Existence monism states that the world is the only concrete object there is.[7][8][9] This means that all the concrete “objects” we encounter in our daily lives, including apples, cars and ourselves, are not truly objects in a strict sense. Instead, they are just dependent aspects of the world-object.[7] Such a world-object is simple in the sense that it does not have any genuine parts. For this reason, it has also been referred to as “blobject” since it lacks an internal structure like a blob.[10] Priority monism allows that there are other concrete objects besides the world.[7] But it holds that these objects do not have the most fundamental form of existence, that they somehow depend on the existence of the world.[9][11] The corresponding forms of pluralism state that the world is complex in the sense that it is made up of concrete, independent objects.[7]Scientific Cosmology scientific cosmology can be defined as the science of the universe as a whole. In it, the terms “universe” and “cosmos” are usually used as synonyms for the term “world”.[12] One common definition of the world/universe found in this field is as “[t]he totality of all space and time; all that is, has been, and will be”.[13][5][6] Some definitions emphasize that there are two other aspects to the universe besides spacetime: forms of energy or matter, like stars and particles, and laws of nature.[14] World-conceptions in this field differ both concerning their notion of spacetime and of the contents of spacetime. The theory of relativity plays a central role in modern cosmology and its conception of space and time. A difference from its predecessors is that it conceives space and time not as distinct dimensions but as a single four-dimensional manifold called spacetime.[15] This can be seen in special relativity in relation to the Makowski metric, which includes both spatial and temporal components in its definition of distance.[16] General relativity goes one step further by integrating the concept of mass into the concept of spacetime as its curvature.[16] Quantum cosmology uses a classical notion of spacetime and conceives the whole world as one big wave function expressing the probability of finding particles in a given location.[17]Theories of Modality the world-concept plays a role in many modern theories of modality, sometimes in the form of possible worlds.[18] A possible world is a complete and consistent way how things could have been.[19] The actual world is a possible world since the way things are is a way things could have been. There are many other ways things could have been besides how they actually are. For example, Hillary Clinton did not win the 2016 US election, but she could have won them. So there is a possible world in which she did. There is a vast number of possible worlds, one corresponding to each such difference, no matter how small or big, as long as no outright contradictions are introduced this way.[19]Possible worlds are often conceived as abstract objects, for example, in terms of non-obtaining states of affairs or as maximally consistent sets of propositions.[20][21] On such a view, they can even be seen as belonging to the actual world.[22] Another way to conceive possible worlds, made famous by David Lewis, is as concrete entities.[4] On this conception, there is no important difference between the actual world and possible worlds: both are conceived as concrete, inclusive and spatiotemporally connected.[19] The only difference is that the actual world is the world we live in, while other possible worlds are not inhabited by us but by our counterparts.[23] Everything within a world is spatiotemporally connected to everything else but the different worlds do not share a common spacetime: They are spatiotemporally isolated from each other.[19] This is what makes them separate worlds.[23]It has been suggested that, besides possible worlds, there are also impossible worlds. Possible worlds are ways things could have been, so impossible worlds are ways things could not have been.[24][25] Such worlds involve a contradiction, like a world in which Hillary Clinton both won and lost the 2016 US election. Both possible and impossible worlds have in common the idea that they are totalities of their constituents.[24][26]Phenomenology within phenomenology, worlds are defined in terms of horizons of experiences.[5][6] When we perceive an object, like a house, we do not just experience this object at the center of our attention but also various other objects surrounding it, given in the periphery.[27] The term “horizon” refers to these co-given objects, which are usually experienced only in a vague, indeterminate manner.[28][29] The perception of a house involves various horizons, corresponding to the neighborhood, the city, the country, the Earth, etc. In this context, the world is the biggest horizon or the “horizon of all horizons”.[27][5][6] It is common among phenomenologists to understand the world not just as a spatiotemporal collection of objects but as additionally incorporating various other relations between these objects. These relations include, for example, indication-relations that help us anticipate one object given the appearances of another object and means-end-relations or functional involvements relevant for practical concerns.[27]Philosophy of Mind in philosophy of mind, the term “world” is commonly used in contrast to the term “mind” as that which is represented by the mind. This is sometimes expressed by stating that there is a gap between mind and world and that this gap needs to be overcome for representation to be successful.[30][31][32] One problem in philosophy of mind is to explain how the mind is able to bridge this gap and to enter into genuine mind-world-relations, for example, in the form of perception, knowledge or action.[33][34] This is necessary for the world to be able to rationally constrain the activity of the mind.[30][35] According to a realist position, the world is something distinct and independent from the mind.[36] Idealists conceive of the world as partially or fully determined by the mind.[36][37] Immanuel Kant’s transcendental idealism, for example, posits that the spatiotemporal structure of the world is imposed by the mind on reality but lacks independent existence otherwise.[38] A more radical idealist conception of the world can be found in Berkeley’s subjective idealism, which holds that the world as a whole, including all everyday objects like tables, cats, trees and ourselves, “consists of nothing but minds and ideas”.[39]Theology different theological positions hold different conceptions of the world based on its relation to God. Classical theism states that God is wholly distinct from the world. But the world depends for its existence on God, both because God created the world and because He maintains or conserves it.[40][41][42] This is sometimes understood in analogy to how humans create and conserve ideas in their imagination, with the difference being that the divine mind is vastly more powerful.[40] On such a view, God has absolute, ultimate reality in contrast to the lower ontological status ascribed to the world.[42] God’s involvement in the world is often understood along the lines of a personal, benevolent God who looks after and guides His creation.[41] Deists agree with theists that God created the world but deny any subsequent, personal involvement in it.[43] Pantheists reject the separation between God and world. Instead, they claim that the two are identical. This means that there is nothing to the world that does not belong to God and that there is nothing to God beyond what is found in the world.[42][44] Pantheism constitutes a middle ground between theism and pantheism. Against theism, it holds that God and the world are interrelated and depend on each other. Against pantheism, it holds that there is no outright identity between the two.[42][45]

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