Apophysis 2.0: Free Fully Commented Scripts

  • December 16, 2004
  • James Skemp

I offer the following, fully commented, scripts for use by the Apophysis (2.0) community. Feel free to copy the following scripts into the script editor for Apophysis 2.0 or download the script files from http://strivinglife.net/. Feel free to save the scripts on your own computers, but please do not share these scripts with others; rather, direct them to this article so they can be aware of my other scripts and any enhancements I release. Comments regarding these scripts are welcomed with open arms.

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On the Saying 'Shitcakes'

  • December 6, 2004
  • James Skemp
The language used in this article is for mature audiences. If you might be offended, please stop reading now. The saying “Shitcakes” is in no way a popular saying[1]. In fact, it’s something of a rarity in the world today. However, since it is a saying that I have heard many a time, and since I wanted to try to understand where this statement may have originated, I decided to try to work through its significance.

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Rank and File Cheat Sheets

  • November 18, 2004
  • James Skemp
Since I'm a fan of rank and file puzzles, I've created a couple of sheets that can be helpful in solving these puzzles. You can download them below, in PDF format. These two sheets will allow you to have a guide you can use to cross off numbers as you use them. These are basically the same, save one has highlighted cells. Cheat sheet #1 Cheat sheet #1 with highlighting Rank and File is a logistical puzzle, common to The Original Logic & Math Puzzles™ by Ebb.

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On the Biblical Story of the Fall

  • November 17, 2004
  • James Skemp
I was at work, doing work, when I suddenly realized that the story of the fall really does have some importance, outside of the religions that teach it. The story of the fall is the story of Eve and Adam dining on the fruit of the tree of knowledge, or wisdom. I’d like to discuss here what I have found to be the true significance of this story. First, there are a few major items, or things, that need to be discussed in any discussion of this story.

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Who is Richard Skemp?

  • November 13, 2004
  • James Skemp
Checking my referrers, I often ran across the phrase ‘Richard Skemp’ (sometimes with initial caps, often without). Since I like to be able to help people, I figured I would take a look at whom this individual is. The following is what I was able to learn from my foray into the information online. Mathematics is a necessary tool in everyday life. One of the problems, however, that I often find myself thinking about, is how you teach someone math.

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On InboxDollar$.com, and similar programs

  • November 13, 2004
  • James Skemp
There’s a lot of hoopla about making money online for doing very little. I can remember, when I first got onto the Internet for extended amounts of time, during my early college years, when my roommate, Jeremy Peterson, would find something online and share it with me. Sometimes these things ended up being busts, but sometimes they would end up fairly big. Napster, for example, was probably introduced to me by him, which was a great thing until it went down.

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Games: Thoughts on Syberia™

  • October 31, 2004
  • James Skemp
As a Halloween gift to myself, I picked up a copy of Syberia™ at Best Buy yesterday afternoon. Since then, and after trying out a controller I picked up to play my PSX games on my PC, I’ve been playing it (Syberia™) with a few breaks, here and there. What follows are my thoughts on the game thus far, with around half the game complete. First off, the game is extremely aesthetically pleasing.

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On Humour at Another's Expense

  • October 25, 2004
  • James Skemp
Have you ever visited Cliff Yablonski Hates You on SomethingAwful.com? For those of you have not, maybe you'll want to take a look, maybe you won't. Google it if you'd like to see it for yourself (or just browse Something Awful), or read on. One of the easiest kinds of humour is the kind at the expense of another. Honestly, it's funny to see someone suffer some kind of hardship or accident.

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Jen

  • October 21, 2004
  • James Skemp

Jen: I have lived for six moments, each longer than the last.

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What are the futures of those illusions Freud?

  • September 26, 2004
  • James Skemp
Notes: While primarily based upon The Future of an Illusion, Civilization and Its Discontents may have crept into this discussion. Not that this is necessarily a bad thing, seeing as how the latter is a sequel of the former, but if you have not read the latter, some of the ideas here may be new to you. Sigmund Freud tells us, near the end of the work, that “the sole purpose” of The Future of an Illusion is point out the necessity of man surmounting infantilism.

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