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Philosophical Posters

A Philosophical Poster Series
The first two posters were made to describe the philosophical use of the idea of cosmos. Both variations focus on one specifically colored dot that represents Earth. It is much smaller than the rest of the circles because Earth, according to this term, is part of a much bigger universe. 
The next two posters represent the idea of freedom. Both posters show shapes breaking out of a restricted and static areas. I tried to show freedom through the movement of shapes. 
I used patterns and movement in the next two posters to explain the idea of fatalism. The fate of each specific shape is predetermined by what had happened before.
In this poster describing Manicheanism, I used a circle as the object representing humans; specifically a human head. The whole page is divided, literally, by lightness and darkness, which represents the good and evil in the term's definition.
For Mutual Awareness, I made a couple of heads with circles fit into a singular, square box. I wanted this to represent a room full of people, and in this room, two specific people are aware of one another. 
The idea of syllogism almost works like a math equation, as described in each of the three posters below. I used different patterns in each of the circles to represent one specific part of the equation of the philosophical term. 
Philosophical Posters
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Philosophical Posters

I made this series of posters for my Visual Communications I class at the University of San Francisco. The class was tasked with an assignment th Read More

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