Time and Motion

“Motion is a kind of change, and change takes place in time. Motion can be implied as well

as literal...” (Lupton 233).

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Motion is something all living beings utilize every day. Kinetics and dynamics describe our physical interactions to determine how and why things move. Water, for instance, is very much impacted by these forces which cause motions. This week I decided to uncover water's motion and how the objects it interacts with determining its behavior. What's interesting about water is that it is never still. Gravity, wind, waves, boats, and other forces impact water's movement. Even in a glass, on a molecular level, the hydrogen molecules are excited and bounce off the walls that contain the liquid. Nevertheless, water is always moving. 

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This week the images I chose to share were taken on a hike in Lake Tahoe. I really like how you can see the movement of the water, while everything is at a standstill. In the reading, it states that " it can be useful to think about the screen as an active, changing surface as well as a neutral stage or support on to which character rush on and off (Lupton 248). In this case, the character is water, rushing down the mountain and into the gorgeous blue lake.



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