Hayns: attitude to death and to warAttitude to death.Hayns have very complex and ambivalent attitude to death. Unlike humans, hayns do not regard death as a mystery- every single hayns knows for sure what a living creature feels when dying. Despite all the advantages, empathy and telepathy have a downside as well- other's sufferings feel like their own, inability to divide anyone into "outsiders" or "their own" groups. It is easy to kill one of their kind by turning him into a rival in their mind, which is a salvatory for the psyche, but completely impossible for an empath action. This conflict is a foundation of hayns' belief system. Their whole culture is a search for a co
Introduction: Created WorldsEstrarra, a planet, is where the history of the Created Worlds began. It is associated with Earth in a special way. There was a similar evolution and Esvarra's telepathists have an unidirectional mental connection to Earth's inhabitants. This connection isn't completelly investigated, but it had a great impact on the civilizations of Esvarra.The haynas are main intelligent species of the planet. By their phisiology they are more primitive than humans and more closer to baboons, than the anthropoids. Haynas have (like the most mammals of Esvarra) empathy and telepathy, specific "nonclosed" brain. This biological feature allows them to create
Lord Reson and the Multiversal Puzzle BoxLord Reson and the Multiversal Puzzle Box: A Nava–Verse AnecdoteAge 337 Relative: The infamous Lord Reson, leader of the Arcane Order, the mysterious being whose goal was to become the sole ruler of the Underworld and conquer the Nava–Verse, sat in a slouch on his throne, a ghastly seat composed of bones collected from every extant humanoid race in the Prime Galaxy, deep within his well–hidden floating bastion of darkness located behind a veil of darkness just beyond the edge of the Prime Galaxy. This castle, known as Fortress Reson, was a palace similar in architecture to that of a Xoultac yet distinct from it and many times larger than
POLY(mor)PHEMUS-> in Italian, then in English