Imagine a brain in outer space, floating motionless, surrounded by the black seas of infinity. The brain develops an eye, which turns to its surroundings, attempting to make sense of the empty black space, interpreting the light of the surrounding stars, the possible meaning of that light. The thoughts manifest a planet, a glowing orb swirling with milky clouds–its color radiant. The planet is swarming with the world – the world-for-us – its finer details invisible from a great distance. The world comes together; a great amount of blood is shed over conflicts forgotten by time, and the colors of the glowing orb begin to change, to sour; the world breaks apart. The world-for-us, suddenly faced with the possibility of the world-without-us, looks beyond the known and toward the unknown, thus creating the otherworldly. This act of creation results in a great fear of the unknown, or the infinite black space that seems to endlessly push in from beyond. The brain cannot fathom the otherworldly and remains unaware of its own disappearance, slipping into those blackest folds between distant stars. The world then fill this void and visualizes the otherworldly as a brain in outer space, floating motionless, surrounded by the black seas of infinity.