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Settings, sceneries, and landscapes: Difference between revisions

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<onlyinclude>'''Settings, sceneries, and landscapes''' can be described as a subjective effect component that manifests within both [[Visual effects: External hallucinations|external]] and [[Visual effects: Internal hallucinations|internal hallucinations]].
<onlyinclude>'''Settings, sceneries, and landscapes''' can be described as a subjective effect component that manifests within both [[Visual effects: External hallucinations|external]] and [[Visual effects: Internal hallucinations|internal hallucinations]]. They can be defined as the experience of the setting in which the [[Scenarios and plots|plot]] of an [[Visual effects: External hallucinations|external]] or [[Visual effects: Internal hallucinations|internal hallucination]] occurs. These are capable of manifesting a seemingly infinite variety of potential places and settings.
 
These can be defined as the experience of the setting in which the [[Scenarios and plots|plot]] of an [[Visual effects: External hallucinations|external]] or [[Visual effects: Internal hallucinations|internal hallucination]] occurs. These are capable of manifesting a seemingly infinite variety of potential places and settings.


When explored, the geography of these settings are capable of rendering themselves as static and coherent in organization but will usually manifest as a non-linear, nonsensical and continuously ever-changing layout which does not obey the rules of everyday physics. In terms of the chosen locations, appearance and style of these settings, they seem to be selected at random and are often entirely new and previously unseen locations. They do, however, play a heavy emphasis on replicating and combining real life locations stored within the person's memories, especially those which are prominent within one's life and daily routine.  
When explored, the geography of these settings are capable of rendering themselves as static and coherent in organization but will usually manifest as a non-linear, nonsensical and continuously ever-changing layout which does not obey the rules of everyday physics. In terms of the chosen locations, appearance and style of these settings, they seem to be selected at random and are often entirely new and previously unseen locations. They do, however, play a heavy emphasis on replicating and combining real life locations stored within the person's memories, especially those which are prominent within one's life and daily routine.  

Revision as of 07:44, 12 June 2017

Settings, sceneries, and landscapes can be described as a subjective effect component that manifests within both external and internal hallucinations. They can be defined as the experience of the setting in which the plot of an external or internal hallucination occurs. These are capable of manifesting a seemingly infinite variety of potential places and settings.

When explored, the geography of these settings are capable of rendering themselves as static and coherent in organization but will usually manifest as a non-linear, nonsensical and continuously ever-changing layout which does not obey the rules of everyday physics. In terms of the chosen locations, appearance and style of these settings, they seem to be selected at random and are often entirely new and previously unseen locations. They do, however, play a heavy emphasis on replicating and combining real life locations stored within the person's memories, especially those which are prominent within one's life and daily routine.

There are some common present archetypes within this component. These commonly include the visitation of:

Planetary systems, galaxies, quasars, jungles, rain forests, deserts, ice-scapes, cities, natural environments, caves, space habitats, vast structures, civilizations, technological utopias, ruins, machinescapes, historical settings, rooms and other indoor environments, incomprehensible geometric landscapes and more.

Psychoactive substances

Compounds within our psychoactive substance index which may cause this effect include:

... further results

Experience reports

Anecdotal reports which describe this effect within our experience index include:

See also