Wikipedia:Reference desk/Humanities: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Wikipedia reference desk|Humanities]] |
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= December 29 = |
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{{Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Humanities/2008 May 25}} |
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== Set animal's name = sha? == |
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{{Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Humanities/2008 May 26}} |
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"In ancient Egyptian art, the Set animal, or sha,[citation needed]" - this seems like a major citation needed. Any help? |
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{{Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Archives/Humanities/2008 May 27}} |
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[[User:Temerarius|Temerarius]] ([[User talk:Temerarius|talk]]) 00:12, 29 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Which article does that appear in? ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 01:18, 29 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::It must be [[Set animal#:~:text=The sha is usually depicted,erect, are usually depicted as|this]] article. [[User:Omidinist|Omidinist]] ([[User talk:Omidinist|talk]]) 04:22, 29 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::That term was in the original version of the article, written 15 years ago by an editor named "P Aculeius" who is still active. Maybe the OP could ask that user about it? ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 05:00, 29 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:*{{tq|Each time, the word ''šꜣ'' is written over the Seth-animal.}}<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=0po3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA21&dq=%22Each+time+,+the+word+š3+is+written+over+the+Seth-animal.%22&hl=en]</sup> |
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:*{{tq|Sometimes the animal is designated as sha (''šꜣ'') , but we are not certain at all whether this designation was its name.}}<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=yNn7EAAAQBAJ&pg=PA68&dq=%22Sometimes+the+animal+is+designated+as+sha+(š)+,+but+we+are+not+certain+at+all+whether+this+designation+was+its+name.%22&hl=en]</sup> |
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:*{{tq|When referring to the ancient Egyptian terminology, the so-called sha-animal, as depicted and mentioned in the Middle Kingdom tombs of Beni Hasan, together with other fantastic creatures of the desert and including the griffin, closely resembles the Seth animal.}}<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=PRjOEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA483&dq=%22When+referring+to+the+ancient+Egyptian+ter-minology,+the+so-called+sha-animal,+as+depicted+and+mentioned+in+the+Middle+Kingdom+tombs+of+Beni+Hasan,+together+with+other+fantastic+creatures+of+the+des-ert+and+including+the+griffin,+closely+resembles+the+Seth+animal.%22&hl=en]</sup> |
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:*{{tq|''šꜣ'' ‘Seth-animal’}}<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=EwE2DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA81&dq=%22š+'Seth-animal'%22&hl=en]</sup> |
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:*{{tq|He claims that the domestic pig is called “sha,” the name of the Set-animal.}}<sup>[https://books.google.com/books?id=kc0UAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA141&dq=%22He+claims+that+the+domestic+pig+is+called+sha,+the+name+of+the+Set-animal.%22%22&hl=en]</sup> |
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:Wiktionary gives ''[[wikt:šꜣ#Noun 2|šꜣ]]'' as meaning "<u>wild</u> pig", not mentioning use in connection with depictions of the Seth-animal. The hieroglyphs shown for ''šꜣ'' do not resemble those in the article [[Set animal]], which instead are listed as ideograms in (or for) ''[[wikt:stẖ#Egyptian|stẖ]]'', the proper noun ''Seth''. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 08:27, 29 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::Thank you! The reason I brought it up was because the hieroglyph for the set animal didn't have the sound value to match in jsesh. |
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::[[User:Temerarius|Temerarius]] ([[User talk:Temerarius|talk]]) 22:15, 29 December 2024 (UTC) |
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{{Hiero|The word ''sha'' (accompanying<br>depictions of the Set animal)|<hiero>SA-A-E12.E12</hiero>|align=right|era=egypt}} |
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:::IMO they should be removed, or, if this can be sourced, be replaced by one or more of the following two: --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 09:49, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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{{clear}} |
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{{multiple image |
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| width = 125 |
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| image1 = Sha (animal).jpg |
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| alt1 = |
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| image2 = Set animal.svg |
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| alt2 = |
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| footer = Budge's original drawing and second version of PharaohCrab's drawing; the original looked very different, and this one is clearly based on Budge's as traced by me in 2009, but without attribution. |
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}} |
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:The article—originally "Sha (animal)" was one of the first I wrote, or attempted to write, and was based on and built on the identification by [[E. A. Wallis Budge]], in [https://books.google.com/books?id=b9ZDAQAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Budge,+Gods+of+the+Egyptians&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjxwteh7dmKAxUf48kDHeLjINYQ6AF6BAgGEAI#v=onepage&q=Sha&f=false ''The Gods of the Egyptians''], which uses the hieroglyph <hiero>M8</hiero> for the word "sha", and includes the illustration that I traced from a scan and uploaded to Commons (and which was included in the article from the time of its creation in 2009 until December 21, 2024 when [[User:PharaohCrab]] replaced it with his original version of the one shown above; see its history for what it looked like until yesterday). I have had very little to do with the article since [[User:Sonjaaa]] made substantial changes and moved it to "Seth animal" in 2010; although it's stayed on my watchlist, I long since stopped trying to interfere with it, as it seemed to me that other editors were determined to change it to the way they thought it should be, and I wasn't sophisticated enough to intervene or advocate effectively for my opinions. In fact the only edit by me I can see after that was fixing a typo. |
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:As for the word ''sha'', that is what Budge called it, based on the hieroglyph associated with it; I was writing about this specific creature, which according to Budge and some of the other sources quoted above has some degree of independence from Set, as it sometimes appears without him and is used as the determinative of one or two other deities, whose totemic animal it might also have been. One of the other scholars quoted above questions whether the word ''sha'' is the name of the animal, but still associates the word with the animal: Herman Te Velde's article, "Egyptian Hieroglyphs as Signs Symbols and Gods", quoted above, uses slightly modified versions of Budge's illustrations; his book ''Seth, God of Confusion'' is also quoted above, both with the transliteration ''šꜣ'', which in "Egyptian Hieroglyphs" he also renders ''sha''. [[Percy Newberry]] is the source cited by the [[Henry Francis Herbert Thompson|Henry Thompson]] quotation above, claiming that ''sha'' referred to a domestic pig as well as the Set animal, and a different god distinct from Set, though sharing the same attributes (claims of which Thompson seems skeptical). Herman Te Velde also cites Newberry, though he offers a different explanation for the meaning of "sha" as "destiny". ''All Things Ancient Egypt'', also quoted above, calls the animal "the so-called ''sha''-animal", while ''Classification from Antiquity to Modern Times'' just uses ''šꜣ'' and "Seth-animal". |
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= May 28 = |
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:I'm not certain what the question here is; that the hieroglyph transliterated ''sha'' is somehow associated with the creature seems to have a clear scholarly consensus; most of the scholars use it as the name of the creature; Herman Te Velde is the only one who suggests that it ''might'' not be its name, though he doesn't conclude whether it is or isn't; and one general source says in passing "so-called ''sha''-animal", which accepts that this is what it's typically referred to in scholarship, without endorsing it. Although Newberry made the connection with pigs, none of the sources seems to write the name with pig hieroglyphs as depicted above. Could you be clearer about what it is that's being discussed here? [[User:P Aculeius|P Aculeius]] ([[User talk:P Aculeius|talk]]) 16:47, 3 January 2025 (UTC) |
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== Paul Nicklen Art == |
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:[[File:Budgesh.png|thumb|things that start with sh]] |
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My son is doing a project for school and has a print out of Paul Nicklen's "A Brilliant Aurorae over Grey Mountains" painting. He has to have the name of the painting, artist name, and date of the painting. We obviously have the name of the painting and the artist. Can you tell me the date of the painting? |
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:I asked because I couldn't find it in Gardiner (jsesh, no match when searching by sound value) or Budge (dictionary vol II.) |
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:[[User:Temerarius|Temerarius]] ([[User talk:Temerarius|talk]]) 05:24, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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= December 30 = |
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Thank you, |
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== I do not say the Frenchman will not come. I only say he will not come by sea. == |
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Sherman, TX <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.96.233.174|71.96.233.174]] ([[User talk:71.96.233.174|talk]]) 01:36, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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1. What is the ultimate source of this famous 1803 quote by John Jervis (1735 – 1823), 1st Earl of St Vincent, First Lord of the Admiralty at the time. I googled Books and no source is ever given except possibly another collection of quotations. The closest I got was: "At a parley in London while First Lord of the Admiralty 1803". That's just not good enough. Surely there must be someone who put this anecdote in writing for the first time. |
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: Hi Sherman, why not show your son how to search google for Paul Nicklen. The first hit is the photographer's website. Your son can send him an email to ask when he took the picture (it is a photograph, not a painting, as far as I can tell - is it [http://pictopia.com/perl/gal?gallery_id=S339053&sequencenum=60&provider_id=318&process=gallery&page=thumbnails one of these]?). A few hits further down you can show your son Nicklen's official biography from National Geographic, which might help with the project too. [[User:WikiJedits|WikiJedits]] ([[User talk:WikiJedits|talk]]) 01:53, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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2. Wouldn't you say this use of the simple present in English is not longer current in contemporary English, and that the modern equivalent would use present continuous forms "I'm not saying... I'm only saying..." (unless Lord Jervis meant to say he was in the habit of saying this; incidentally I do realize this should go to the Language Desk but I hope it's ok just this once) |
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== dominating force == |
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[[Special:Contributions/178.51.7.23|178.51.7.23]] ([[User talk:178.51.7.23|talk]]) 11:47, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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who was the dominating force in WWII |
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:Assuming he's talking about England, does he propose building a bridge over the Channel? ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 12:13, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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in terms of military might and effectiveness |
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::How about a [[Channel_Tunnel#Earlier_proposals|tunnel]]? --[[User:Wrongfilter|Wrongfilter]] ([[User talk:Wrongfilter|talk]]) 12:29, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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not necessarily in terms of number of men <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.98.97.66|71.98.97.66]] ([[User talk:71.98.97.66|talk]]) 04:07, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:::It's a joke. He's saying that the French won't invade under any circumstances (see [[English understatement]]). [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 20:30, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:The [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] generally, and either the [[Soviet Union]] or the [[United States]] specifically, depending on your criteria. If you want a different scale, the [[tank]] and/or [[blitzkrieg]] tactics and the [[aircraft carrier]] would be good suggestions, much as trenches and the machine gun defined the Great War battlefield. — [[User talk :Lomn|Lomn]] 04:38, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::The First Lord of the Admiralty wouldn't be the one stopping them if the French came by tunnel (proposed in 1802) or air (the French did have hot air balloons). Any decent military officer would understand that an invasion by tunnel or balloon would have no chance of success, but this fear caused some English opposition against the Channel Tunnel for the next 150 years. Just hinting at the possibility of invasion by tunnel amongst military officers would be considered a joke. |
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::The [[Atomic bomb]]. [[User:Edison|Edison]] ([[User talk:Edison|talk]]) 07:01, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Unless he was insulting the British Army (no, now I'm joking). [[User:PiusImpavidus|PiusImpavidus]] ([[User talk:PiusImpavidus|talk]]) 10:30, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::The atomic bomb didn't fight the war; all it did was convince Japan to surrender at a time when they were at their weakest anyway. As has been said, radar won the war, the atomic bomb just ended it. The import of the atomic bomb even as a military weapon during WWII has been greatly exaggerated, to say nothing of the fact that after Hiroshima and Nagasaki the US supplies of them dwindled to almost nothing until the late 1940s. Carpet bombing had far more military consequences than the atomic bomb did. --[[Special:Contributions/98.217.8.46|98.217.8.46]] ([[User talk:98.217.8.46|talk]]) 17:13, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:The quoted wording varies somewhat. Our article [[John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent]] has it as "I do not say, my Lords, that the French will not come. I say only they will not come by sea" in an 1801 letter to the Board of Admiralty, cited to {{cite book | last = Andidora | first = Ronald | title = Iron Admirals: Naval Leadership in the Twentieth Century | publisher = Greenwood Publishing Group | year = 2000 | isbn = 978-0-313-31266-3 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=0P-A8rIfO34C&pg=PA3 | page = 3}}. Our article [[British anti-invasion preparations of 1803–05]] has Jervis telling the House of Lords "I do not say the French cannot come, I only say they cannot come by sea", and then immediately, and without citation, saying it was more probably [[George Elphinstone, 1st Viscount Keith|Keith]]. I can't say I've ever seen it attributed to Keith anywhere else. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 13:40, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Not for the most part of the war, though. [[User:SGGH|SGGH]] <sup>[[User_talk:SGGH|speak!]]</sup> 09:48, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:Hmm, Andidora does '''not''' in fact say it was in a letter to the Board of Admiralty, nor does he explicitly say 1801. And his source, ''The Age of Nelson'' by G J Marcus has it as Jervis telling the House of Lords sometime during the scare of '03-'05. Marcus doesn't give a source. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 13:52, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::The problem with this question is that the [[Second World War]] had different stages. There just isn't a single answer for the whole of the War. [[User:Xn4|<span style="color:#9911DD">Xn4</span>]] 16:25, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::[[Robert Southey]] was [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=LcGoSGtr84IC&pg=PA12#v=onepage&q&f=false attributing it to Lord St Vincent] as early as 1806, and while I don't want to put too much weight on his phrase "used to say" it does at any rate raise the possibility that St Vincent said (or wrote) it more than once. Perhaps Marcus and our St Vincent article are both right. --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 16:38, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::Interesting. Thanks. Some modern accounts (not Southey apparently) claim Lord St Vincent was speaking in the House of Lords. If that was the case, wouldn't it be found in the parliamentary record? How far back does the parliamentary record go for the House of Commons and/or the House of Lords. [[Special:Contributions/178.51.7.23|178.51.7.23]] ([[User talk:178.51.7.23|talk]]) 17:18, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:As for (2), the tense is still alive and kicking, if I do say so myself. [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 23:12, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::You don't say? [An idiom actually meaning "You say ''that'', do you?", although I dare say most of you know that.] {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.223.204|94.1.223.204]] ([[User talk:94.1.223.204|talk]]) 02:47, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::This is not what I am asking. [[Special:Contributions/178.51.7.23|178.51.7.23]] ([[User talk:178.51.7.23|talk]]) 05:05, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::::Then I will answer you more directly. You are wrong: while the usage you quote is ''less common'' than it once was, it ''is'' still current, according to my experience as a native BrE speaker for over 65 years. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.223.204|94.1.223.204]] ([[User talk:94.1.223.204|talk]]) 13:32, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::I kid you not. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 23:47, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== What percentage of Ancient Greek literature was preserved? == |
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== US Air Force Distinguished Service Medal == |
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Has anyone seen an estimate of what percentage of Ancient Greek literature (broadly understood: literature proper, poetry, mathematics, philosophy, history, science, etc.) was preserved. It doesn't matter how you define "Ancient Greek literature", or if you mean the works available in 100 BC or 1 AD or 100 AD or 200 AD... Works were lost even in antiquity. I'm just trying to get a rough idea and was wondering if anyone ever tried to work out an estimate. [[Special:Contributions/178.51.7.23|178.51.7.23]] ([[User talk:178.51.7.23|talk]]) 17:58, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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I've asked several people this, including Air Force public relations, and gotten no answer. What is the blue stone that is used at the center of the Distinguished Service Medal? [[User:Fonce Diablo|Fonce Diablo]] ([[User talk:Fonce Diablo|talk]]) 05:17, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::The [[US Military]] site [http://usmilitary.about.com/library/milinfo/afmedals/bldsm.htm here] discusses the "obverse design has a sunburst of thirteen gold rays separated by thirteen white enameled stars, with a semiprecious blue stone in the center." while [http://www.gruntsmilitary.com/afdsm.shtml this site] says "The blue stone in the center represents the vault of the heavens" but I can't find the specific material. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&safe=off&q=Air%20Force%20Distinguished%20Service%20Medal%20blue%20stone&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wp No books] seem to name is as anything other than "blue stone" either. [[User:SGGH|SGGH]] <sup>[[User_talk:SGGH|speak!]]</sup> 09:47, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:I don't have an answer handy for you at the moment, but I can tell you that people ''have'' tried to work out an estimate for this, at least from the perspective of "how many manuscripts containing such literature managed to survive past the early Middle Ages". We've worked this one out, with many caveats, by comparing library catalogues from very early monasteries to known survivals and estimating the loss rate. -- [[User:Asilvering|asilvering]] ([[User talk:Asilvering|talk]]) 20:38, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::: What if you called air force pr back and asked them who is the manufacturer of the medal? Then call that company - they should know. [[User:WikiJedits|WikiJedits]] ([[User talk:WikiJedits|talk]]) 13:12, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:One estimate is (less than) [https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/16/the-invisible-library] one percent. --[[User:Askedonty|Askedonty]] ([[User talk:Askedonty|talk]]) 20:40, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:We have a [[Lost literary work]] article with a large "Antiquity" section. [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 21:15, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== DHL company in Malaysia == |
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::These are works known to have existed, because they were mentioned and sometimes even quoted in works that have survived. These known lost works are probably only a small fraction of all that have been lost. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 23:35, 30 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:Few things which might be helpful: |
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:#{{xt|So profuse was Galen's output that the surviving texts represent nearly half of all the extant literature from ancient Greece.}}<ref>[[Galen|Galen's article]]</ref> |
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:#Although not just Greek, but only 1% of ancient literature survives.<ref>https://www.roger-pearse.com/weblog/2009/10/26/reference-for-the-claim-that-only-1-of-ancient-literature-survives/</ref> --{{User:ExclusiveEditor/Signature}} 11:12, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:The following quantities are known: <math>S,</math> the number of preserved works, <math>L,</math> the (unknown) number of lost works, and <math>M_L,</math> the number of lost works of which we know, through mentions in preserved works. In a (very) naive model, let <math>\mu</math> stand for the probability that a given work (lost or preserved) is mentioned in some other preserved work (so <math>M_L=\mu L</math>). The expected number of mentions of preserved works in other preserved works is then <math>M_S=\mu(S-1).</math> If we have the numerical value of the latter quantity (which is theoretically obtainable by scanning all preserved works), we can obtain an estimate for <math>\mu</math> and compute <math>L\approx\frac{M_L}{M_S}(S-1).</math> |
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How to explain the general environment of DHL company in Malaysia using the Pestel analysis and it`s competative environment using porter`s five forces. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/203.188.235.131|203.188.235.131]] ([[User talk:203.188.235.131|talk]]) 05:18, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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: --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 13:09, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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* Even without seeing any professional estimate of the kind I'm asking about here, my ballpark figure was that it had to be less than 1 percent, simply from noting how little of even the most celebrated and important authors has been preserved (e.g. about 5 percent for Sophocles) and how there are hundreds of authors and hundreds of works for which we only have the titles and maybe a few quotes, not to mention all those works of which we have not an inkling, the number of which it is, for this very reason, extremely hard to estimate. |
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: Have you seen our pages [[PEST analysis]] and [[Porter 5 forces analysis]]? Look at the criteria and then find out how DHL matches those. --[[Special:Contributions/71.236.23.111|71.236.23.111]] ([[User talk:71.236.23.111|talk]]) 09:29, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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* But as a corollary to my first question I have another three: |
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== My religion is between my god and me == |
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* 1. Has any modern historian tackled this paradox, namely the enormous influence that the culture of the Ancient World has had on the West while at the same time how little we actually know about that culture, and as a consequence the problem that we seem to believe that we know much more than we actually do? in other words that our image of it that has had this influence on Western culture might be to some extent a modern creation and might be very different of what it actually was? |
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I read the quote somewhere, but I can't remember who said it. At first I thought it was from Gandhi, but I can't find any site that attributed the quote to him. Can anyone help me identify who said it? Although now that I think about it, it could have been from an anonymous person. Anyway, your help in clarifying it would be appreciated. Thanks. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/58.69.217.138|58.69.217.138]] ([[User talk:58.69.217.138|talk]]) 08:13, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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::[[Malcolm X]] said "Island is my religion, but I believe my religion is my personal business. It governs my personal like and my personal morals. And my religious philosophy is personal between me and the God in whom I believe", that's the closest I can find. [[User:SGGH|SGGH]] <sup>[[User_talk:SGGH|speak!]]</sup> 09:43, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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* 2. I understand that in this regard there can be the opposite opinion (or we can call it a hypothesis, or an article of faith) which is the one that is commonly held (at least implicitly): that despite all that was lost the main features of our knowledge of the culture of the Ancient World are secure and that no lost work is likely to have modified the fundamentals? Like I said this seems to be the position that is commonly implicitly held, but I'm interested to hear if any historian has discussed this question and defended this position explicitly in a principled way? |
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== inherit the throne == |
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* 3. Finally to what extent is the position mentioned in point 2 simply a result of ignorance (people not being aware of how much was lost)? How widespread is (in the West) the knowledge of how much was lost? How has that awareness developed in the West, both at the level of the experts and that of the culture in general, since say the 15th century? Have you encountered any discussions of these points? |
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Why does gender sometimes matter in inheriting the throne and sometimes it doesn't? Princess Anne goes lower than her younger brothers, but why then does Princess Beatrice go higher than Peter Philips even though he's a male? [[Special:Contributions/67.68.32.13|67.68.32.13]] ([[User talk:67.68.32.13|talk]]) <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|comment]] was added at 10:50, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!--Template:Undated--> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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[[Special:Contributions/178.51.7.23|178.51.7.23]] ([[User talk:178.51.7.23|talk]]) 08:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:I think if all else is equal then it goes males first then females, but if they are 'steps' ahead then they don't get jumped up the queue. I have no idea if Beatrice is a closer relative than Peter Phillips, but presumably she is and that is why she is ahead. Whereas Anne is no closer than her younger brothers so they will 'overtake' her by virtue of being male. There's probably a wiki article on it under something like [[succession]] or [[British Monarchy]] [[Special:Contributions/194.221.133.226|194.221.133.226]] ([[User talk:194.221.133.226|talk]]) 11:15, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:[[Line of succession to the British throne]] is probably the best article. Beatrice outranks Peter because sons outrank daughters, and children come before siblings. Andrew's children come immediately after Andrew, and thus before Anne and her children. [[User talk:Algebraist|Algebraist]] 11:26, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::This is [[Primogeniture|Cognatic Primogeniture]], because they can't be bothered to change it to a more modern and equal system. Although some countries have. And I think some are even worse, hardly ever letting women rule.[[User:Hidden secret 7|HS7]] ([[User talk:Hidden secret 7|talk]]) 15:15, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::Japan for example ([[Japanese succession controversy]]), although there have been talk of changing it because of the lack of a suitable male heir. The birth of one seems to have delayed/reduced calls for this but the current PM for example, still supports it. The Windsor case is complicated by the fact that the support of the [[Commonwealth realms]] will be ideal to avoid the situation where the various laws are out of sync with each other on succession and the fact that many of those most supportive of the idea probably want to do away with the monarch anyway. The fact that the current line means it's likely to make no difference is another factor. If William gets married and his first born is a daughter with at least one son after that, there may be a stronger impetus (but it'll likely have to happen when the male heirs are still fairly young otherwise there will be complaints it's unfair to those who were raised expecting to be the next in line after their father) [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 16:12, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::::::It's also complicated by the facts that certain female members of the Royal Family reportedly desperately don't want to be higher up in the succession list, and that even if sex differences were wiped out the three closest heirs would remain the same. Therefore nobody feels an urgent need to change things. (Also, the change must be made by an act of Parliament, and I suspect the government of the day doesn't want the hassle.) --[[User:NellieBly|NellieBly]] ([[User talk:NellieBly|talk]]) 03:44, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::: To avoid controversy, it may be best to make changes before the younger brother is born. Some people here in [[Sweden]] are still bothered about [[Prince Carl Philip]] getting bumped from being first in line to the throne at the age of seven or so months, when the reforms of the [[Swedish_Act_of_Succession|Act of Succession]] were adopted to [[equal primogeniture]]. /[[Special:Contributions/85.194.44.18|85.194.44.18]] ([[User talk:85.194.44.18|talk]]) 16:30, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:The issues touched upon are major topics in [[historiography]] as well as the [[philosophy of history]], not only for the Ancient (Classical) World but for all historical study. Traditionally, [[historian]]s have concentrated on the culture of the high and mighty. The imprint on the historical record by ''[[hoi polloi]]'' is much more difficult to detect, except in the rare instances where they rose up, so what we think of as "the" culture of any society is that of a happy few. Note also that "the culture of the Ancient World" covers a period of more than ten centuries, in which kingdoms and empires rose and fell, states and colonies were founded and conquered, in an endless successions of wars and intrigues. On almost any philosophical issue imaginable, including [[natural philosophy]], ancient philosophers have held contrary views. It is not clear how to define "the" culture of the Ancient World, and neither is it clear how to define the degree to which this culture has influenced modern Western society. It may be argued that the influence of say Plato or Sophocles has largely remained confined to an upper crust. I think historians studying this are well aware of the limitations of their source material, including the fact that history is written by the victors. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 13:42, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::It's an odd hangover, particularly these days when discrimination by gender is generally outlawed in most other areas of life. They also discriminate on religious grounds - the monarch can technically be a member of any religion except Roman Catholicism. I believe Tony Blair talked about changing the law to make the succession arrangements more in line with modern thinking on inclusivity in employment, but it hasn't got past that stage. -- [[User:JackofOz|JackofOz]] ([[User talk:JackofOz|talk]]) 22:49, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::::::Actually, according to [http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/page5655.asp the Windsors' website], the religious requirements are more restrictive (must be a protestant and in communion with the CofE). Any such change would (I think) be hotly contested, and like Nil, I doubt any government will try to push it through until it actually matters. [[User talk:Algebraist|Algebraist]] 22:57, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:178.51.7.23 -- Think of it this way: What did it mean to "publish" something in the ancient world? You had at least one written manuscript of your work -- rarely more than a handful of such manuscripts. You could show what you had written to your friends, have it delivered to influential people, bequeath it to your heirs, or donate it to an archive or research collection (almost none of which were meaningfully public libraries in the modern sense of that phrase). However you chose to do it, once you were gone, the perpetuation of your work depended on other people having enough interest in it to do the laborious work of copying the manuscript, or being willing to pay to have a copy made. Works of literature which did not interest other people enough to copy manuscripts of it were almost always eventually lost, which ensured that a lot of tedious and worthless stuff was filtered out. Of course, pagan literary connoisseurs, Christian monks, Syriac and Arabic translators seeking Greek knowledge, and Renaissance Humanists all had different ideas of what was worth preserving, but between them, they ensured that a lot of interesting or engaging or informative works ended up surviving from ancient times. I'm sure that a number of worthy books still slipped through the gaps, but some losses were very natural and to be expected; for example, some linguists really wish that Claudius's book on the Etruscan language had survived, but it's not surprising that it didn't, since it would not have generally interested ancient, medieval, or renaissance literate people in the same way it would interest modern scholars struggling with Etruscan inscriptions. |
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::::::::I don't see how ordering by age is any fairer than ordering by sex and then age. It's not as though any of these people did anything to earn their place in the line of succession. The only benefit to changing the order that I can see would be a larger proportion of queens, which certainly wouldn't be a bad thing. I prefer queens anyway, kings are a lot less mobile and have to be carefully protected. But ultimately it seems like it would be much "fairer" to do away with the royal family and promote pawns instead—by general election presumably, or we could bring back the old system of quests perilous. Or get rid of the monarch entirely, but I'm not sure that's a good idea. There are advantages to having separate ceremonial and political heads of state. -- [[User:BenRG|BenRG]] ([[User talk:BenRG|talk]]) 23:01, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:By the way, college bookstores on or near campuses of universities which had a Classics program sometimes used to have a small section devoted to the small green-backed (Greek) and red-backed (Latin) volumes of the [[Loeb Classical Library]], and you could get an idea of what survived from ancient times (and isn't very obscure or fragmentary) by perusing the shelves... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 01:03, 3 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Indeed - at the other end of the scale, the ''[[Description of Greece]]'' by Pausanias seems to have survived into the Middle Ages in a single MS (now of course lost), and there are no ancient references to either it or him known. Since the Renaissance it has been continuously in print. [[User:Johnbod|Johnbod]] ([[User talk:Johnbod|talk]]) 03:00, 3 January 2025 (UTC) |
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{{reflist-talk}} |
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= December 31 = |
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:::::::::@ Algebraist: Putting aside the facts that Charles was the first-born anyway, and that his first-born child is also a male, one could argue that it matters a great deal already. It matters because the succession rules incorporate examples of structural discrimination that are out of step with the way the rest of the Commonwealth is expected to operate. A lot of people still look to the Royal Family as role models. The Queen and her various governors-general have given royal assent to all the various bits of anti-discrimination legislation throughout the Commonwealth, and I'm sure all the assenters would have agreed these are good laws that make for a better and fairer world. The Queen has done a lot of things to modernise the monarchy and ensure she's seen as being in touch with community expectations, e.g. paying taxes she's not legally required to pay etc. Many people want to see the outright removal of the monarchy, but even they would welcome a change to the succession laws to bring them more into line with the access and equity framework that we mere mortals live by. Granted, any such change would not have any actual effect until such time as the death of a monarch whose first-born child happens to be a female. The earliest possible occasion would be the death of William V (currently Prince William), assuming he has a daughter first. That's probably at least 60 years down the track, and who knows if there'll even be monarchies by then (Nepal has just abolished its monarchy). I'm more interested in the implicit unfairness in the British model that has always applied and continues to this day. Symbolic changes are just as important as practicable changes, and constitutional monarchies are all about symbolism. -- [[User:JackofOz|JackofOz]] ([[User talk:JackofOz|talk]]) 23:43, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Was the fictional character "The Jackal" (as played by Edward Fox and Bruce Willis) based on Carlos The Jackal? == |
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==Romani/Gipsy brass band music== |
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Hello. I've searched the articles on [[Romani music]], but haven't been able to find what I am looking for. Quite specifically, I am looking for a piece of brass band music. It's very enthralling and cheery, but I don't know what is being sung. I recently saw a surrealistic Yugoslavian film (though recently made) about two Yugoslavs who fought the German occupation. Not sure about the title. Anyway, the brass band was prominent, because it'd follow them and perform this same piece over and over again. Performed instrumentally (as it was in that film), it had good potential for repeating over again. Trumpets and bass drums were important, but there were many other brass instruments. It would go something like DAdahdah(dadada), DAdahdah(dadada), DAdahdah(dadada), DAdahdah(dadada)-aaa-*wild and chaotic, writing doesn't really suffice*. |
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Talking about the fictional assassin from the books and films. I once read somewhere that the real Carlos The Jackal didn't like being compared to the fictional character, because he said he was a professional Marxist revolutionary, not merely a hitman for hire to the highest bidder (not in the article about him at the moment, so maybe not true). [[Special:Contributions/146.90.140.99|146.90.140.99]] ([[User talk:146.90.140.99|talk]]) 02:47, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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I know you've been able to answer vaguer questions about pieces of art, literature and music before, so I hope this will suffice. :) [[User:Scaller|Scaller]] ([[User talk:Scaller|talk]]) 13:11, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:No, the character wasn't based on Carlos. The films are based on the 1971 historical fiction novel ''[[The Day of the Jackal]]'' by Frederick Forsyth, which begins with a fairly accurate account of the actual 1962 assassination attempt on Charles de Gaulle by the French Air Force lieutenant colonel [[Jean Bastien-Thiry]], which failed. Subsequently in the fictional plot the terrorists hire an unnamed English professional hitman whom they give the codename 'The Jackal'. |
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::The movie is [[Underground (film)]], the soundtrack is "Kalasjnikov". Thank you! [[User:Scaller|Scaller]] ([[User talk:Scaller|talk]]) 13:45, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:[[Carlos the Jackal]] was a Venezuelan terrorist named Ilich Ramírez Sánchez operating in the 1970s and '80s. He was given the cover name 'Carlos' when in 1971 he joined the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. When authorities found some of his weapons stashed in a friend's house, a copy of Forsyth's novel was noticed on his friend's bookshelf, and a ''Guardian'' journalist then invented the nickname, as journalists are wont to do. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.1.223.204|94.1.223.204]] ([[User talk:94.1.223.204|talk]]) 03:15, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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::There's also the fictionalised Ilich Ramírez Sánchez / Carlos the Jackal from the [[Jason Bourne]] novels. [[User:PiusImpavidus|PiusImpavidus]] ([[User talk:PiusImpavidus|talk]]) 10:44, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== References == |
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== Are there social movements using wikis? And how? == |
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I am on to creating an article on {{ill|Lu Chun|zh|陸淳}} soon. If anyone has got references about him other than those on google, it would be great if you could share them here. Thanks, {{User:ExclusiveEditor/Signature}} 11:20, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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I am trying to find information on whether there are any social movements using the wiki technology, and if so, how are they using it. If you can provide any examples (of social movement wikis, or works discussing that, or just anything you've heard) I would appreciate it.--<sub><span style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]]|[[User_talk:Piotrus|<font style="color:#7CFC00;background:#006400;"> talk </font>]]</span></sub> 13:55, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:Did you try the [[National Central Library]] of Taiwan? The library has a lot of collection about history of Tang dynasty. If you want to write a research paper for publication purpose, you need to know what have been written by others. Then the [https://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/ National Digital Library of Theses and Dissertation in Taiwan] under the central library can be a good starting point. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 09:16, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:Anytime a widespread group of people want to share information and collaborate, a wiki is a free and easy way to do so. They're easy enough to find. Google an issue and the word wiki. After you get past the wikipedia stuff, most major issues have at least one. ex: [http://autism.wikia.com/wiki/Autism_Wiki Autism Wiki] or [http://globalwarming.wikidot.com/ Global Warming Wiki]. [[Special:Contributions/160.10.98.34|160.10.98.34]] ([[User talk:160.10.98.34|talk]]) 16:21, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Battle of the Granicus == |
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:Depends on what you mean by "social movement"? I'd say Wikipedia qualifies. --[[User:D Monack|D. Monack]] | [[User talk:D Monack|''talk'']] 19:38, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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This month [https://archaeologymag.com/2024/12/location-of-alexander-the-greats-battlefield/ some news broke] about identification of the Battle of the Granicus site, stating in particular: "Professor Reyhan Korpe, a historian from Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University (ÇOMÜ) and Scientific Advisor to the “Alexander the Great Cultural Route” project, led the team that uncovered the battlefield". However, per [[Battle of the Granicus#Location]] it seems that the exact site has been known since at least [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-hellenic-studies/article/abs/battle-of-the-granicus-river/1C19CEF8F59308BED47331BE7063BB2C Hammond's 1980 article]. Am I reading the news correctly that what Korpe's team actually did was mapping Alexander’s journey to the Granicus rather than identifying the battle site per se? Per news, "Starting from Özbek village, Alexander’s army moved through Umurbey and Lapseki before descending into the Biga Plain". [[User:Brandmeister|Brandmeister]]<sup>[[User talk:Brandmeister|talk]]</sup> 23:38, 31 December 2024 (UTC) |
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== What is the name for the study of the history of printing / writing / the book? == |
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:If Körpe and his team wrote a paper about their discovery, I haven't found it, so I can only go by news articles reporting on their findings. Apparently, Körpe gave a presentation at the Çanakkale Provincial Directorate of Culture and Tourism for an audience of local mayors and district governors,<sup>[https://www.dailysabah.com/turkiye/site-for-alexander-the-greats-battle-of-granicus-identified-in-northwest-turkiye/news]</sup> and I think the news reports reflect what he said there. Obviously, the presentation was in Turkish. Turkish news sources, based on an item provided by [[Demirören News Agency|DHA]], quote him as saying, "{{tq|Bölgede yaptığımız araştırmalarda antik kaynakları da çok dikkatli okuyarak, yorumlayarak savaşın <u>aşağı yukarı</u> tam olarak nerede olduğunu, hangi köyler arasında olduğunu, ovanın tam olarak neresinde olduğunu bulduk.}}" [My underlining] Google Translate turns this into, "During our research in the region, by reading and interpreting ancient sources very carefully, we found out <u>more or less</u> exactly where the war took place, which villages it took place between, and where exactly on the plain it took place." I cannot reconcile "more or less" with "exactly". |
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I may want to study the above in graduate school. Assuming that I could get in to most programs, what would the best choice be? |
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:The news reports do not reveal the location identified by Körpe, who is certainly aware of Hammond's theory, since he cited the latter's 1980 article in earlier publications. One possibility is that the claim will turn out to have been able to confirm Hammond's theory definitively. Another possibility is that the location they identified is not "more or less exactly" the same as that of Hammond's theory. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 02:08, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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= January 1 = |
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In other words, would it be better to study history, English, or even anthropology? Where are the best programs located? Who are the leading scholars in this field? |
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== Has there ever been an incident of a serial killer murdering another serial killer? == |
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Your help in answering my questions is greatly appreciated. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/204.87.70.194|204.87.70.194]] ([[User talk:204.87.70.194|talk]]) 14:57, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:This is a very general question. You haven't mentioned for example, whether you're likely to be restriced to one country. It sounds to me that you're an American, but whatever the case, are you willing to consider universities in the US? Canada? the UK? Australia? What about e.g. Germany or France or Japan (which will almost definitely entail learning French or German if you don't know it already). [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 15:41, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Question as topic. Has this ever happened outside of the movies? [[Special:Contributions/146.90.140.99|146.90.140.99]] ([[User talk:146.90.140.99|talk]]) 05:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Printing, of course, has a history which is very different from that of writing, and the history of writing divides into the history of the act of writing itself ([[palaeography]], etc) and that of writing as a literary art. Books are part of the history of all of them. So your question really needs more focus, as suggested by Nil Einne. [[User:Xn4|<span style="color:#9911DD">Xn4</span>]] 16:20, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:This is an interesting question. Just because you can't find any incident, doesn't mean this kind of case never happened (type II error). [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 09:57, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:I don't think the above really falls into anthropology; I've seen people studying such things in both English programs as well as History programs, as well as History of Science programs (in the latter venue, look at the works by Jim Secord or Adrian Johns). There are a lot of links at the bottom of the [[History of the book]] page that might be useful. From what I understand of it, the specific venue you will want will depend on what time period and location you are interested in (19th century Britain? 15th century France? etc.) or whether you have thematic interests (the book as a way of transmitting scientific knowledge? the book as reflective of changing literary patterns of the middle class?), etc. --[[Special:Contributions/98.217.8.46|98.217.8.46]] ([[User talk:98.217.8.46|talk]]) 17:10, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:Apparently yes: [[Dean Corll]] was killed by one of his his accomplices, [[Elmer Wayne Henley]]. --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 12:13, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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To clarify: yes, I am an American. I have studied English at both a small liberal arts school in the U.S. as well as an Oxbridge college in the U.K. and would prefer to continue studying in a country where English is the native language. I am interested in the medium of the book itself, its history, and its place in anthropological and cultural studies. I suppose I was wondering if English is the best path to studying the medium of the book (in graduate school). Thank you for your responses thus far. [[Special:Contributions/204.87.70.194|204.87.70.194]] ([[User talk:204.87.70.194|talk]]) 18:43, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::Of course it would be more notable if the two were not connected to each other. --[[Special:Contributions/142.112.149.206|142.112.149.206]] ([[User talk:142.112.149.206|talk]]) 08:22, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:You'll probably want to read up on some of the basic seminal texts in the field, just so you have a better idea of what it is you want to do and how it compares with what has already been done. After having done that it will be much easier to talk with potential professors about their programs, whether they would be apt for you. (And while I have no doubt that there would be anthropological insights to be gained, again, I have never seen anything that would make me think that this sort of study would be considered appropriate in an Anthropology department. They would wonder what you were doing had to do with their discipline. Just a tip. You might look into [[Science and Technology Studies]], a discipline which includes anthropology and history and would probably be more accepting to that approach, if you really want to go the Anthropology route. In general though I think you're looking at English programs or History programs.) --[[Special:Contributions/98.217.8.46|98.217.8.46]] ([[User talk:98.217.8.46|talk]]) 19:29, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:If you're including underworld figures, this happens not infrequently. As an Aussie, a case that springs to mind was [[Andrew Veniamin]] murdering [[Victor Pierce]]. Both underworld serial murderers. I'm sure there are many similar cases in organised crime. [[User:Eliyohub|Eliyohub]] ([[User talk:Eliyohub|talk]]) 08:40, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:To answer a part of the question, I don't know of a word for the study of the ''history'' etc. of books. There are plenty of nifty words in that general area, though. "Bibliogony" is the production of books. "Bibliology" is the scientific description of books. "Bibliopegy" is bookbinding. "Bibliopoesy" is the making of books. --[[User:Milkbreath|Milkbreath]] ([[User talk:Milkbreath|talk]]) 19:46, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::Aren't hired killers distinct from the usual concept of a serial killer? ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 09:11, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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: |
:Outside the movies? Sure, on [[Dexter (TV series)|TV]]. [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 21:09, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:The Dexter character from the multiple Dexter series is based on [[Pedro Rodrigues Filho]], who killed criminals, including murderers. It is necessary to decide how many merders each of those murders did in order to decide if you would want to classify them as serial killers or just general murderers. [[Special:Contributions/68.187.174.155|68.187.174.155]] ([[User talk:68.187.174.155|talk]]) 19:04, 3 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::It sounds like the ''[[Death Wish (1974 film)]]'' film series might have also drawn inspiration from Filho. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 03:24, 4 January 2025 (UTC) |
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== Another serial killer question == |
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::In academia in general it is called [[history of the book]]. If you told people you were interested in studying that they'd understand what you meant. If you said you were interested in bibilology they'd say ''Gesundheit''. ;-) --[[Special:Contributions/98.217.8.46|98.217.8.46]] ([[User talk:98.217.8.46|talk]]) 01:25, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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about 20 years ago, I saw a documentary where it was said that the majority of serial killers kill for sexual gratification, or for some sort of revenge against their upbringing, or because in their head that God (or someone else) told them to kill. But the FBI agent on the documentary said something about how their worst nightmare was an extremely intelligent, methodical killer who was doing what he did to make some sort of grand statement about society/political statement. That this sort of killer was one step ahead of law enforcement and knew all of their methods. Like a Hannibal Lecter type individual. He said that he could count on the fingers of one hand the sort of person who he was talking about, but that these killers were the most difficult of all to catch and by far the most dangerous. Can you tell me any examples of these killers? [[Special:Contributions/146.90.140.99|146.90.140.99]] ([[User talk:146.90.140.99|talk]]) 05:49, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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== What is the Marxist Scientific Method? == |
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:[[Ted Kaczynski]] ("the Unabomber") comes to mind. --[[Special:Contributions/142.112.149.206|142.112.149.206]] ([[User talk:142.112.149.206|talk]]) 07:06, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::I second this. Ted the Unabomber only got finally caught by chance, only after his brother happened to recognise him. [[User:Eliyohub|Eliyohub]] ([[User talk:Eliyohub|talk]]) 08:43, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:More than a few killed for money; [[Michael Swango]] apparently just for joy. The case of [[Leopold and Loeb]] comes to mind, who hoped to demonstrate superior intellect; if they had not bungled their first killing despite spending seven months planning everything, more would surely have followed. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 15:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:[[Joseph Paul Franklin]]. [[User:Prezbo|Prezbo]] ([[User talk:Prezbo|talk]]) 13:51, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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== Missing fire of London == |
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Is there any work that outlines the Marxist scientific method? --[[User:Gary123|Gary123]] ([[User talk:Gary123|talk]]) 15:16, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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[[British Movietone News]] covered the [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOIsenLDU9o burning down of the Crystal Palace] in this somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but apparently factual, film. At 00:15 it refers to 'the biggest London blaze since 1892'. What happened in 1892 that could be considered comparable to the Palace's demise, or at least sufficiently well-known to be referred to without further explanation? |
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:What do you mean by the Marxist scientific method? Do you mean the Marxist philosophy of science and nature? That is a subset of what is known as [[dialectical materialism]] (I don't think our page is very clear on the philosophy of nature aspects of it—it is really about hierarchical levels of knowledge that cannot affect one another, but that's a whole other story). Do you mean, the way in which Marxism calls itself a "science"? That is just hogwash with no methodology supporting it. --[[Special:Contributions/98.217.8.46|98.217.8.46]] ([[User talk:98.217.8.46|talk]]) 17:03, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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I can see nothing in [[History of London]], [[List of town and city fires]], [[List of fires]] or [[1892]]. The [https://londonfirejournal.blogspot.com/2007/05/welcome.html London Fire Journal] records "May 8, 1892 - Scott's Oyster Bar, Coventry Street. 4 dead.", but also lists later fires with larger death tolls. Does anyone have access to the Journal of the [[Royal Statistical Society]]'s article [https://academic.oup.com/jrsssa/article-abstract/56/1/124/7090013 ''Fires in London and the Metropolitan Fire Brigade in 1892'']? <span class="nowrap">[[User:Verbarson|-- Verbarson ]] <sup>[[User talk:Verbarson|talk]]</sup><sub>[[Special:Contributions/Verbarson|edits]]</sub></span> 13:48, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Probably not what you're looking for, but Ben Goldacre's [http://www.badscience.net/?p=141 Bad Science] mentions [[Trofim Lysenko]], a top Soviet biologist who: ''"thought natural selection was too individualistic, and spent his career growing plants really close together, in the hope they would develop collectivist tendencies."'' [[User:Dooky|Dooky]] ([[User talk:Dooky|talk]]) 15:20, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:I see the [[Great Fire of 1892]] destroyed half the capital of Newfoundland and Labrador. But comparing that to [[The_Crystal_Palace#Destruction_by_fire|the Crystal Palace fire]], which destroyed only the Crystal Palace, is an odd choice. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 14:45, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::That's amusing, but is not actually what Lysenko believed. Our page on Lysenko is much more accurate. He was scientifically wrong, but not for reasons that are very entertaining. --[[Special:Contributions/98.217.8.46|98.217.8.46]] ([[User talk:98.217.8.46|talk]]) 15:30, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::It would also be odd to call it a "London blaze". --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 15:15, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::The closest I found was the [[1861 Tooley Street fire]]. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 16:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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== Historical Religious Flag == |
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::::Also a large fire at Wood Street in the City in 1882 (perhaps later mistaken for 1892?). [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/13518096] [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 16:40, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::::I too wonder whether the Movietone newsreader was the victim of a typo. In December ''1897'' [[Cripplegate]] suffered "the greatest fire...that has occurred in the City since the Great Fire of 1666". [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=gJ7uvG29enQC&pg=PA91&dq=%221897+-+an+inquiry+respecting+the+greatest+fire+(+that+in+Cripplegate+)+that+has+occurred+in+the+City%22&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiOwqqy-daKAxUHXEEAHeoYKXAQ6AF6BAgGEAI#v=onepage&q=%221897%20-%20an%20inquiry%20respecting%20the%20greatest%20fire%20(%20that%20in%20Cripplegate%20)%20that%20has%20occurred%20in%20the%20City%22&f=false]. --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 11:46, 2 January 2025 (UTC) That's also mentioned, I now see, in Verbarson's London Fire Journal link. --[[User:Antiquary|Antiquary]] ([[User talk:Antiquary|talk]]) 12:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:{{re|Verbarson}} ''Fires in London and the Metropolitan Fire Brigade in 1892'' is available on JSTOR as part of the Wikipedia Library. It doesn't give details of any individual fires. [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 16:51, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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I need more information concerning an old flag with a red cross on the right side and the words "By This Sign Conquer" next to the cross. I have a picture of the flag. Need instructions to download the picture. Please contact me (here). |
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::{{Re|DuncanHill}}, so it is. The DOI link in that article is broken; I should have been more persistent with the JSTOR search. Thank you. <span class="nowrap">[[User:Verbarson|-- Verbarson ]] <sup>[[User talk:Verbarson|talk]]</sup><sub>[[Special:Contributions/Verbarson|edits]]</sub></span> 17:15, 1 January 2025 (UTC) |
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<small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/69.151.178.27|69.151.178.27]] ([[User talk:69.151.178.27|talk]]) 18:06, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:Unexpectedly, from the ''Portland Guardian'' (that's [[Portland, Victoria]]): [https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/65441175 GREAT FIRE IN LIONDON. A great fire is raging in the heart of the London ducks.] Dated 26 November 1892. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 07:02, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Oh, the poor ducks. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 12:05, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::<small>The whole OCR transcript of that blurred newspaper column is hilarious. "The fames have obtained a firm bold", indeed! {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.6.84.253|94.6.84.253]] ([[User talk:94.6.84.253|talk]]) 12:07, 2 January 2025 (UTC)</small> |
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::Setting aside the unsung history of the passionate ducks of London, what I see in that clipping is: |
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::* 1892 - Australia is still a colony (18+ years to go) |
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::* which is linked to the UK by (i) long-distance shipping, and (ii) [[Submarine communications cable#Cable to India, Singapore, East Asia and Australia|telegraph cables]] |
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::* because of (i), the London docks are economically important |
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::* because of (ii), they get daily updates from London |
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::Therefore, the state of the London docks (and the possible fate of the Australian ships there) is of greater importance to Australian merchants than it is to most Londoners. So headlines in Portland may not reflect the lesser priority of that news in the UK? <span class="nowrap">[[User:Verbarson|-- Verbarson ]] <sup>[[User talk:Verbarson|talk]]</sup><sub>[[Special:Contributions/Verbarson|edits]]</sub></span> 17:15, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::Yes, I was highly impressed by the rapidity of the Victorian Victorian telegraph system there. But my money's on Antiquary's theory, above - I think the newsreel announcer's script had 1892 as a typo for 1897. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 18:31, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::Which I have finally found (in WP) at [[Timeline of London (19th century)#1890 to 1899]] (using the same cite as Antiquary). It does look persuasively big ("The Greatest Fire of Modern Times" - [[The Star (1888–1960)|''Star'']]), though there were no fatalities. Despite that, an inquest was held. It sounds much more likely than the docks fire to have been memorable in 1936. <span class="nowrap">[[User:Verbarson|-- Verbarson ]] <sup>[[User talk:Verbarson|talk]]</sup><sub>[[Special:Contributions/Verbarson|edits]]</sub></span> 19:26, 2 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:(I removed your contact info as per the instructions at the top of this page -[[User:SandyJax|SandyJax]] ([[User talk:SandyJax|talk]]) 18:35, 28 May 2008 (UTC)) |
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= January 4 = |
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:The order of the [[Knights Templar]] uses a red cross and, on the seal, the Latin inscription "[[In hoc signo vinces]]". I could not find an image in WP, but there must be one in Google somewhere. --[[User:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM|Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM]] ([[User talk:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM|talk]]) 18:23, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Could the Sack of [[Jericho]] be almost == |
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::The actual Templars did not use that motto, so you've probably got a fake, or some modern recreation that claims to be Templars. "In hoc signo" was [[Constantine I]]'s motto. [[User:Adam Bishop|Adam Bishop]] ([[User talk:Adam Bishop|talk]]) 21:06, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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historical in the sense that the story of what happened, happened to a different city but was transferred to Jericho?[[User:Richard L. Peterson|Rich]] ([[User talk:Richard L. Peterson|talk]]) 05:37, 4 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:It might be. But then again, it might not be. Following whatever links there are to the subject within the article might be a good start for finding out about whatever theories there might be. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 07:19, 4 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:To believe that the events in the story are historical, whether for Jericho or another city, amounts to believing in a miracle. Barring miracles, no amount of horn-blowing and shouting can bring defensive walls down. |
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:Jericho was destroyed in the 16th century BCE. The first version of the [[Book of Joshua]] was written in the late 7th century BCE, so there are 9 centuries between the destruction and the recording of the story. An orally transmitted account, passed on through some thirty generations, might have undergone considerable changes, turning a conquest with conventional war practices, possibly with sound effects meant to install fear in the besieged, into a miraculous event. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 10:50, 4 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:[Edit Conflicts] The sack was described in the [[Book of Joshua]], which however was likely compiled around 640–540 BCE, some six or seven centuries after the supposed Hebrew conquest of Canaan. Some scholars now discount the whole Exodus and Conquest narrative as political lobbying written by [[Babylonian captivity|Jewish exiles in Babylonia]] (which the Persians later took over) hoping to be given control over the former territory of Israel as well as being restored to their native Judah. |
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== Meaning of the name Pen Argyl , and the people who founded the town . == |
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:The narrative logically explains why a people once 'Egyptian slaves' (like all subjects of the Pharoah) were later free in Canaan, but by then it was likely forgotten that Egypt once controlled almost the entirety of Canaan, from which it withdrew in the [[Late Bronze Age collapse|Late Bronze Age Collapse]]. The Hebrew peoples of the (always separate) states of Israel and Judah emerged from Canaanite culture ''in situ'', though minor folk movements (for example, of the [[Tribe of Levi]], who often had Egyptian names) may have had a role. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.6.84.253|94.6.84.253]] ([[User talk:94.6.84.253|talk]]) 10:52, 4 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::I heard the sack of Jericho in book of Joshua was an explanatory myth, not some kind of Exile claim to ownership, which is more logical anyway. If there were a more recent city that was sacked, it would be less than the estimate of 30 geneations of remembrance. I did forget to stress that when I asked if the story could be almost historical that I wasn't suggesting that Jericho's walls were supernaturally destroyed by trumpets. After all, the actual method of conquest in the story could be the connivance of the traitor Rahab.[[User:Richard L. Peterson|Rich]] ([[User talk:Richard L. Peterson|talk]]) 02:24, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::Oh, certainly the myth likely existed before it was consolidated with others into the written documents, just as stories about the mythical [[Danel]] may have been adapted into the fictional [[Daniel (biblical figure)|Daniel]] of the supposedly contemporary [[Book of Daniel]] describing his exploits in the 6th century BCE court of [[Nebuchadnezzar II]], although scholars generally agree that this was actually written in the period 167–163 BCE. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.6.84.253|94.6.84.253]] ([[User talk:94.6.84.253|talk]]) 07:15, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::The Israelites partly emerged ''in situ'' (though there was also a definite nomad/pastoralist component), especially along the West Bank hill-chain (running in an approximate north-south direction) where the [[Four-room house]] took hold among the rural inhabitants there. They were not originally city-dwellers, and their culture could not have been consolidated until the power of the Canaanite cities in that area had declined, and it's not too hard to believe that they sometimes moved against what cities remained, so that part of the conquest narrative is not necessarily a pure myth. Jericho was in the valley (not along the hill-chain), so was not part of the core settled rural agricultural four-room house area, but was inhabited more by pastoralists/animal-herders who became affiliated... [[User:AnonMoos|AnonMoos]] ([[User talk:AnonMoos|talk]]) 21:19, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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The name Pen Argyl ( pronounced Pehn Argil , or Pehn Arjil ) derives from 2 words : Pen , meaning the mountain region ; Argyl , from the word " argylite " , a type of slate . Together , the two words mean " Mountain of Slate " . This name was giving to the town by the immigrants ( the ancestors or grandparents of the people of Pen Aygyl ) who arrived to the United States from the town of Delabole ; Cornwall , England . Many of the men arriving from Cownwall were slate quarry workers ; having worked in the Delabole Slate Quarry . They left their homeland because of lack of work in the tin mines . Many were forced to leave their homes and find work in other places in United Kingdom , Canada , United States , and Australia . With them they brought their history , language , culture , and recipes . Although they are English ; they prefer to be known as Cornish people . Their Food : The people of Pen Argyl are known for making two of their most popular Cornish dishes : Saffron Buns ( or Saffron Cake ), and their Cornish Pasties ( sometimes called English Pasties ) ; which is beef ( cubed or ground beef ) , onions , and diced - cubed potatoes ; stuffed in a half - folded pastry pie crust . They also like making Rhubarb Pie . Pen Argyl is the home of the famous " Mr. Pasties " pasty shop , where they make the pasties homemade ; home of " Weona Park " (pronounced : we - own - a - park )and its carousel . <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/205.130.17.219|205.130.17.219]] ([[User talk:205.130.17.219|talk]]) 23:13, 28 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:This is the Wikipedia reference desk. Do you have a question? If not, you're probably lost. We have an article on Pen Argyl [[Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania|here]]. [[User talk:Algebraist|Algebraist]] 23:24, 28 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:: I have copied the info onto the talk page there. 205... if you'd like to add this information to the article, find sources (references) in reliable books or magazines. Put that source in < source > into the text you are adding in the edit window. It will show up as a footnote. Good luck with your edit. --[[Special:Contributions/71.236.23.111|71.236.23.111]] ([[User talk:71.236.23.111|talk]]) 02:10, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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==Accessibility, for URLs in text document== |
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:Pen Argyl is much better known these days for being the final resting place of [[Jayne Mansfield]]. Check out the photo of her tombstone in her article. --[[User:NellieBly|NellieBly]] ([[User talk:NellieBly|talk]]) 03:32, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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We've been asked to increase the accessibility of all documents we produce, esp. syllabi. I use WordPerfect, where I don't seem to be able to have a URL with a descriptive text in the way Word allows. 508 is the operative term. I'm trying this out: "Princeton University has some handy tips on what is called “active reading, on this webpage: https://mcgraw.princeton.edu/active-reading-strategies." In other words, descriptive text followed by a bare URL. Is that good for screen readers? {{U|Graham87}}, how does this look/sound to you? Thanks for your help, [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 18:03, 4 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:{{replyto|Drmies}} I wouldn't make a general rule about that as it's context-dependent ... depending on how many URL's are in a document, reading them might get annoying. In general I'd prefer to read a link with descriptive text rather than a raw URL, because the latter aren't always very human-readable ... but I don't think this is really an accessibility issue; just do what would make sense for a sighted reader here. [[User:Graham87|Graham87]] ([[User talk:Graham87|talk]]) 00:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::[[User:Graham87|Graham87]], thanks. There's only one or two in a ten-page document. According to our bosses, this is an accessibility issue--but it seems to me as if someone sounded an alarm and now everyone who doesn't actually know much about the issue is telling us to comply with a set of directives which they haven't given us. Instead, we are directed to some self-help course that involves only Word. It's fun. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:Stop using WordPerfect and start using Word. --[[User:Viennese Waltz|Viennese Waltz]] 07:05, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::I don't know why, but it seems many legal professionals prefer WordPerfect. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 10:21, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::[[User:Viennese Waltz|Viennese Waltz]], thanks so much for that helpful suggestion. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:27, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:You can create a hyperlink to a file using WordPerfect. First, you select text or a graphic you want to create a hyperlink. Then you click “Tools”, select “Hyperlink” and then type a path or document you want to link to. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 10:18, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::[[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]], that sounds like it might work: thank you. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:{{small|Do web browsers display WordPerfect documents? I don't think I have a WordPerfect viewing app installed on my platform (macOS). Does anyone have a [[URL]] of a WordPerfect document handy? --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 14:56, 5 January 2025 (UTC)}} |
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::[[User:Lambiam]], WP translates easily to PDF and to Word. I use PDFs in my [[Learning management system|LMS]]. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::You can see why WordPerfect is popular in legal circles at [[WordPerfect#Key characteristics]] (fourth bullet point) and [[WordPerfect#Faithful customers]]. [[Special:Contributions/2A00:23A8:1:D801:8C31:BAC2:88CF:A92B|2A00:23A8:1:D801:8C31:BAC2:88CF:A92B]] ([[User talk:2A00:23A8:1:D801:8C31:BAC2:88CF:A92B|talk]]) 16:48, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::I don't have the feeling this answers my question. Would I have to find and install an app that translates .wpd documents to .pdf or .doc documents? Would I then be able to tell my browser to use this app? The question is informative, not meant to bash a product that I have zero familiarity with. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 17:05, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::I've opened early WordPerfect (WP 5.1) documents using both Word and Firefox without any need for a third party translator. The only trick was changing the file extension to .WPD so that my computer could create the file association more easily. In the old days, file extensions were not so rigorously restrictive and many files ended up with extensions like .01 or .v4 or whatever. [[User:Matt Deres|Matt Deres]] ([[User talk:Matt Deres|talk]]) 17:39, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::::I cannot check if it would work for me, for lack of access to any WordPerfect document of any age. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 21:22, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::::[https://search.justice.gov/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&affiliate=justice-archive&query=wordperfect Here's a bunch of them, in the DOJ archives.] [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 00:25, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::::::Thanks, finally an answer. When I click on a {{mono|.wpd}} link, the file is downloaded. I can then open and view it with [[LibreOffice]]. (I can also open it with [[Apache OpenOffice|OpenOffice]], but then I get to see garbage like ╖#<m\r╛∞¼_4YÖ¤ⁿVíüd╤Y.) --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 14:44, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Yes, web browsers do display WordPerfect documents. If you google “wpd online viewer”, you will find a lot of them. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 23:04, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::When I google [https://www.google.com/search?q=%E2%80%9Cwpd+online+viewer%E2%80%9D&udm=14 [{{mono|“wpd online viewer”}}]], I get two hits, one to this page and one to [https://fileproinfo.com/tools/viewer/wpd a site] where you can <u>upload</u> a WPD document in order to be able to view it online. What happens when you view an html page with something like {{mono|<nowiki><a href="file:///my-document.wpd">Looky here!</a></nowiki>}} embedded? --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 13:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::Yes, you're right. Only Docx2doc (https://www.docx2doc.com/convert) and [[Jumpshare]] provide online viewers now. However, there are still other offline alternative, such as Cisdem (https://www.cisdem.com/document-reader-mac.html) and [[Apache OpenOffice|Apache]]. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 09:46, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::Some other text editors, such as [[TextMaker]], can open and view WPD files. However, after editing, the WPD files can only be saved as other formats, such as docx or doc. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 09:49, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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One more thing that just came up--we got rapped on the fingers though the mandatory "training" didn't touch on it. We've been told that hyphens are bad. The internet tells me that screenreaders have trouble with hyphenated words, but does this apply also to date ranges? {{U|Graham87}}, does yours get this right, "Spring Break: 17-21 March"? For now I'm going with "Spring Break, 17 to 21 March", but it just doesn't look good to my traditional eyes. And on top of that I have to use sans serif fonts... [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 17:44, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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= May 29 = |
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*To give another example, I have to redo this: "Final grades are computed along the following scale: A: 90-100; B+: 87-89; B: 80-86; C+: 77-79; C: 70-76; D+: 67-69; D: 60-66; F: Below 60." [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 17:49, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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**{{replyto|Drmies}} Under its default setting my screen reader does read out the hyphens, but I have my punctuation set lower than normal because I don't like hearing too much information so it doesn't for me. The other major Windows screen reader, [[NonVisual Desktop Access|NVDA]], also reads them out by default. [[User:Graham87|Graham87]] ([[User talk:Graham87|talk]]) 01:05, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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***Thanks [[User:Graham87|Graham87]]--I appreciate your expertise. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 01:14, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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***:As recently discussed on the Help or Teahouse desk, a date or other range should ''technically'' use an unspaced [[En Dash]], not a hyphen (according to most manuals of style, including our own), but I doubt that screen readers would notice the difference. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.6.84.253|94.6.84.253]] ([[User talk:94.6.84.253|talk]]) 08:23, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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= January 5 = |
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== Name for belief about acquiring attributes == |
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== How to search for awkwardly named topics == |
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I'm trying to think of the general name for the belief that consuming something will bring the consumer the attributes of that thing. For instance, if you consume the sexual organs of a tiger, you will be virile, or that if you consume a turtle you will be slow. Ring any bells? -- [[User:Beland|Beland]] ([[User talk:Beland|talk]]) 00:49, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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On and off I've been looking for good sources for the concepts of [[general union]] and [[trade union federation]] so as to improve the articles, but every time I try I only get one or two somewhat helpful results. Many of the results are not of material about the concepts of general union or trade union federations, but often about a ''specific'' instance of them, and as a result hard to gleen a lot from about the broader concept. Typcially this is because of issues such as many general unions being named as such (for example [[Transport & General Workers' Union]]). I'm aware of the search trick that'd be something like {{tq|"general union" -Transport & General Workers' Union}} but I've found it largely cumbersome and ineffective, often seeming to filter out any potential material all together |
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:[[James George Frazer]] in ''[[The Golden Bough]]'' calls it "sympathetic magic", or, more specifically, the branch of that magic he calls "homeopathic magic" or "imitative magic", the other being "contagious magic". (That book is [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/3623 on line at Gutenberg] and is a must-read for anyone interested in stuff like this.) He proposes that one of the two principles on which magic is based is that like produces like. --[[User:Milkbreath|Milkbreath]] ([[User talk:Milkbreath|talk]]) 01:08, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Thought I'd ask because I'd like to improve those articles, and this is an issue I'm sure would come up again for me otherwise on other articles [[User:Bejakyo|Bejakyo]] ([[User talk:Bejakyo|talk]]) 13:22, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:Do any of the articles listed at [[Unionism]] help? [[User:Blueboar|Blueboar]] ([[User talk:Blueboar|talk]]) 14:35, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::And somewhat related is [[Lamarckism]]. --—<i><b>— [[User:Gadget850|<font color = "gray">Gadget850 (Ed)</font>]]<font color = "darkblue"> <sup>[[User talk:Gadget850|''talk'']]</sup></font></b> - </i> 23:15, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:If you search for [https://www.google.com/search?q=%22a+trade+union+federation%22+-%22is+a+trade+union+federation%22&hl=en {{mono|["a trade union federation" -"is a trade union federation"]}}], most hits will not be about a specific instance. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 14:43, 5 January 2025 (UTC) |
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= January 6 = |
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::::Not really... Lamarck's idea was that acquired characteristics were passed to the next generation: our article gives an example of a blacksmith passing his strong arms on to his children. A theory of evolution based on sympathetic magic would say that dragonflies evolved to become fast by their habit of eating quick moving insects. [[User:Matt Deres|Matt Deres]] ([[User talk:Matt Deres|talk]]) 16:52, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== What does the [[Thawabit]] consist of? == |
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::Sometimes evolution comes close, as it might say dragonflies became fast (evolved) in order to eat quick moving insects. Is it like that? [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 01:57, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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I asked about this at the article talk page and WikiProject Palestine, no response. Maybe it's not a question Wikipedia can answer, but I'm curious and it would improve the article. [[User:Prezbo|Prezbo]] ([[User talk:Prezbo|talk]]) 09:13, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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== Voodoo? == |
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*It's acronym (or an abbreviation) for the four principles enumerated in the article. Like how the [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]] ''is'' the first ten amendments to the US Constitution. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 13:16, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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*:''Thawabit'' is short for ''alThawabit alWataniat alFilastinia'', the "Palestinian National Constants". ''Thawabit'' is the plural of ''[[wikt:ثابت#Noun|thabit]]'', "something permanent or invariable; constant". --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 13:36, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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*:What I'm saying is that I'm not sure the article is correct. The sourcing is thin, reference are paywalled, offline, or dead, and Google isn't helpful. Other scholarly and activist sources give different versions of the Thawabet, e.g.[https://books.google.com/books?id=ysdyCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA137&dq=thawabit+palestine&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjSwMDm4NaKAxViElkFHUtYNM0Q6AF6BAgKEAI#v=onepage&q=thawabit%20palestine&f=false This one] adds the release of Palestinian prisoners, [https://www.instagram.com/eu_jps/p/C_D3DSZIL_n/?img_index=8 this one] adds that Palestine is indivisible. The article says that these principles were formulated by the PLO in 1977 but doesn't link to a primary source (like the Bill of Rights). I don't know if you're a subject matter expert here, I'm not--actually trying to figure this out. [[User:Prezbo|Prezbo]] ([[User talk:Prezbo|talk]]) 13:39, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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*::I was able to access the paywalled articles through the Wikipedia library, which adds a little more clarity. [[User:Prezbo|Prezbo]] ([[User talk:Prezbo|talk]]) 10:18, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:According to [https://books.google.com/books?id=ysdyCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA138&dq=%22+the+objection+to+recognize+the+State+of+Israel+as+the+nation-state+of+the+Jewish+people%22&hl=en this source], a fifth principle was added in 2012: "the objection to recognize the State of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people". However, I cannot find this in the [https://web.archive.org/web/20131019163530/http://palestineun.org/category/mission-documents/statements/page/2/ cited source] --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 13:29, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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When a villain can only be killed if a certain object is destroyed, eg in Lord of the rings, Sauron dies if the One Ring is destroyed; the genie Jafar dies if his lamp is destroyed; and in Harry Potter, Voldemort dies if all his horcruxes, which contain pieces of his soul, are destroyed. Is there a word for this objecting being more than just standing for, (apart from effigy) the villain? [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 01:39, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::I checked the Arabic Wikipedia article before I responded above, and they list the same four principles. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 13:41, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::That appears to be a translation of the English article, so this doesn't mean much to me. [[User:Prezbo|Prezbo]] ([[User talk:Prezbo|talk]]) 13:44, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::::I've poked around a little, and there doesn't appear to have been any change. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 13:59, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::::The list in the book I linked to above is not the same as that in our article. The book does not include a "right to resistance", but demands the release by Israel of all Palestinian prisoners. It would be good to have a sourced, authoritative version, in particular the actual 1977 formulation by the PLO. Of course, nothing is so changeable as political principles, so one should expect non-trivial amendments made in the course of time. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 14:21, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::::::That book is incorrect. <span style="font-family: Cambria;"> [[User:Abductive|<span style="color: teal;">'''Abductive'''</span>]] ([[User talk:Abductive|reasoning]])</span> 21:07, 6 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::::::How do you know? --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 00:04, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::The text does not explicitly say, "among others", but the use of {{lang|ar|بها بما في ذلك}} suggests that this list of four principles is not exhaustive. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 00:27, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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= January 7 = |
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:Would "soul vessel" or "icon" fit the bill?--[[Special:Contributions/71.236.23.111|71.236.23.111]] ([[User talk:71.236.23.111|talk]]) 01:52, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::How about [[phylactery]]?--[[User:Lenticel|<span style="color: teal; background: white; font-weight: bold">Lenticel</span>]] <sup>([[User talk:Lenticel|<span style="color: green; font-weight: bold">talk</span>]])</sup> 02:07, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::That looks like a [[medicine bag]] to me. --[[Special:Contributions/71.236.23.111|71.236.23.111]] ([[User talk:71.236.23.111|talk]]) 02:27, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Is there such a thing as a joke type index? == |
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::::They all sound like it. I'll put those in a see also at the end of the article and maybe a section with links. Thanks for your help. [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 04:23, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Has anyone produced an index of joke types and schemata (schemes?) along the lines of the [[Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index]] for folk tales? More generally what kind of studies of the structure of jokes and humor are available? Has anyone come up with an A.I. that can generate new jokes? [[Special:Contributions/178.51.8.23|178.51.8.23]] ([[User talk:178.51.8.23|talk]]) 18:15, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::::You are no doubt aware that "phylactery" is a word in its own right having nothing to do with all this, borrowed without permission for the obscure fictional mumbo-jumbo. [[The Golden Bough|Frazer]] could come up with nothing better than "soul-box" (p. 680) to contain the "external soul". Incidentally. in poking around I discovered what I think I used to know, that the "Host" of the [[Eucharist]] is not the same word as the ordinary "host" but instead derives from the Latin for "sacrifice". I was hoping it would have to do with "hosting" the soul or something of Christ, but no. --[[User:Milkbreath|Milkbreath]] ([[User talk:Milkbreath|talk]]) 10:58, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:For starters, there's [[Index of joke types]]. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 21:14, 7 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:AI generated jokes have been around for years. Just Google for it. They range from weird to meh. [[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]]|[[User talk:Shantavira|<sup>feed me</sup>]] 10:38, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:[[Gershon Legman]] made an attempt of sorts in his two joke collections, but it was kind of a half-assed approach: there are a bunch of indices printed on pages, but no key tying them together per se. His interest was in the core of the subject of the joke, so he might have said, for example, that ''these'' jokes were all based on unresolved Oedipal drives while ''those'' jokes were based on hatred of the mother (he was a capital "F" Freudian). The link Bugs shared is more about the formats of the jokes themselves, though some are also differentiated by their subject (albeit in a more superficial way than Legman attempted). [[User:Matt Deres|Matt Deres]] ([[User talk:Matt Deres|talk]]) 21:15, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:[[Arthur Koestler]] has attempted to develop a theory of humour (as well as art and discovery), first in ''Insight and Outlook'' (1949) and slightly elaborated further in ''[[The Act of Creation]]'' (1964). He did, however, not develop a typology of jokes. IMO [[Victor Raskin]]'s [[Theories of humor#Script-based semantic theory of humor|script-based semantic theory of humor]] presented in ''Semantic Mechanisms of Humor'' (1985) is essentially the same as Koestler's, but Raskin does not reference Koestler in the book. For an extensive overview of theories of humour see [https://www.oalib.com/research/2052736 Contemporary Linguistic Theories of Humour]. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 00:51, 9 January 2025 (UTC) |
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: [[Katschei]] is also famous for this. [[Special:Contributions/134.96.105.72|134.96.105.72]] ([[User talk:134.96.105.72|talk]]) 08:16, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:<nitpick alert> [[Sauron]] doesn't die. He is just rendered impotent ([[Viagra]] endorsement time?). </nitpick alert> [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 16:06, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::One of the other examples has a similar inaccuracy. [[Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows#Second act and final confrontation|Spoiler here.]] --Anon, 00:06 UTC, May 30, 2008. |
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:This is so helpful, I'm copying the whole thread to the [[Talk:Sympathetic magic|talk page]]. [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 00:10, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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= January 8 = |
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== ''The Nest'' magazine, UK, 1920s == |
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Why would the Tin Woodman in the Wizard of Oz be [[The_Wonderful_Wizard_of_Oz#Cultural_impact|replaced by a snake in Hindu countries]]? Just curious, not wanting formal legal advice. :) [[User:Abeg92|Ab]][[User:Abeg92/ea|<span style="color:#00FF00;">e</span>]][[User talk:Abeg92|g92]]<small>[[Special:Contributions/Abeg92|contribs]]</small> 03:17, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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I have a copy of {{cite book | title = The Grocer's Window Book | year = 1922 | location = London | publisher = The Nest Magazine }}, "arranged by The Editor of ''The Nest''". The address of ''The Nest'' Magazine is given as 15 Arthur Street, London, EC4. It contains suggestions for arranging window displays in an attractive manner to attract customers into independent grocer's shops. I would be interested to know more about ''The Nest''. I suspect it may have something to do with Nestles Milk, as 1) the back cover is a full-page advertisement for Nestles and Ideal Milk, and there are several other adverts for Nestles products in the book, and 2) one of the suggested window displays involves spelling out "IDEAL" with tins of Ideal Milk. Thank you, [[User:DuncanHill|DuncanHill]] ([[User talk:DuncanHill|talk]]) 02:13, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:This is a very interesting question. I've had a good trawl round via Google, but the only sites that assert this look like [[WP:Mirrors]]; I can't find anything that looks independent or gives any explanation of why this would be the case. |
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:{{Tq|Nest, 1922. M.—1st. 6d. Nestle and Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk Co., 15 Arthur Street, E.c.4}}[https://archive.org/details/willings-press-guide-and-advertisers-directory-and-handbook-49/page/130/mode/1up?q=nest+%2215+Arthur+Street%22] according to ''Willing's press guide and advertisers directory and handbook.'' I also found it in ''The Newspaper press directory and advertisers' guide,'' which merely confirms the address and the price of sixpence. Both of these were for the year 1922, which suggests to me that the magazine might not have survived into 1923. M signifies monthly, and 1st probably means published on the 1st of the month. [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 19:37, 9 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:The information appears to have been added by [[User:Woggly]] in this diff [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=The_Wonderful_Wizard_of_Oz&diff=3079498&oldid=3079463] four years ago. Since they are still an active contributor, I've dropped a note on their talk page asking if they can help shed any more light on the matter. -- <strong>[[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]]</strong> 12:26, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::This is cited to someone's website, but the website provides no additional reference beyond the assertion that it is so. I question whether this satisfys the [[WP:V|verifiability]] requirement and have tagged the assertion in the article as needing a better reference. [[User:Edison|Edison]] ([[User talk:Edison|talk]]) 19:27, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Historical U.S. population data by age (year 1968) == |
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::[[User:Woggly]] has provided the following additional info: |
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::Hi. I learned about the Tinman/snake substition in a presentation given by Dick Rutter in the year 2000, at the Wizard of Oz Centennial Convention that was held in Bloomington, Indiana, by the International Wizard of Oz Club. Rutter is an orthodonist and Oz enthusiast, who owns what very well may be the world's largest collection of international editions of the Wizard of Oz. He gave a slideshow presentation of books from his collection, including several books from Hindu countries, and reported the snake anecdote. I hope this information helps. --woggly (talk) 22:50, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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In the year 1968, what percentage of the United States population was under 25 years old? I am wondering about this because I am watching the movie [[Wild in the Streets]], and want to know if a percentage claimed in the film was pulled out of a hat or was based in fact. [[Special:Contributions/2601:18A:C500:E830:CE4:140C:29E5:594F|2601:18A:C500:E830:CE4:140C:29E5:594F]] ([[User talk:2601:18A:C500:E830:CE4:140C:29E5:594F|talk]]) 04:17, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Karenjc" --<strong>[[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]]</strong> 22:57, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:What percentage did they give? ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 05:14, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::52% (it's on the movie poster). [[User:Card_Zero|<span style=" background-color:#fffff0; border:1px #995; border-style:dotted solid solid dotted;"> Card Zero </span>]] [[User_talk:Card_Zero|(talk)]] 16:11, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:Tabel No. 6 in the [http://www2.census.gov/prod2/statcomp/documents/1971-02.pdf 1971 US Census Report] (p. 8) gives, for 1960, {{val|80093}} Kpeople age 0–24 on a total population of {{val|180007}} Kpeople, corresponding to 44.5%, and, for 1970, {{val|94095}} Kpeople age 0–24 on a total population of {{val|204265}} Kpeople, corresponding to 46.1%. Interpolation results in an estimate of 45.8% for 1968. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 12:36, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::{{small|Who are Kpeople? ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 23:48, 9 January 2025 (UTC)}} |
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:::Reverse engineering and a spot of maths: k = kilo = 1 000 = 1 thousand. [[User:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM|Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM]] ([[User talk:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM|talk]]) 10:49, 10 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::{{small|So, Kpeople means 1 thousandpeople. ←[[User:Baseball Bugs|Baseball Bugs]] <sup>''[[User talk:Baseball Bugs|What's up, Doc?]]''</sup> [[Special:Contributions/Baseball_Bugs|carrots]]→ 18:07, 10 January 2025 (UTC)}} |
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== Countries with greatest land mass == |
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:::Emailed Dr Rutter and requested help in tracking down the source. -- <strong>[[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]]</strong> 23:26, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Can someone please fill in these blanks? Thank you. |
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== Who is this writer? == |
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1. Currently, the USA ranks as number _____ among countries with the greatest land mass. |
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I remember reading on the internet about some author who cranked out science fiction books (by dictation) at a rate of about one every week and a half. Supposedly they were full of filler, including a long tooth-brushing scene. Also, he was said to be the most prolific science fiction writer ever. I can't remember the name! Argh! [[Special:Contributions/98.199.17.3|98.199.17.3]] ([[User talk:98.199.17.3|talk]]) 03:20, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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2. If the USA were to "annex" or "acquire" both Canada and Greenland, the USA would rank as number _____ among countries with the greatest land mass. |
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:I believe that Isaac Asimov was the most prodigious, however I don't know that his works are "full of filler" nor am I aware that he dictated his work. [[User:Wikiant|Wikiant]] ([[User talk:Wikiant|talk]]) 12:43, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/32.209.69.24|32.209.69.24]] ([[User talk:32.209.69.24|talk]]) 05:20, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::[[Philip K. Dick]] wrote a lot. However, he was rather crazy and was writing more to write than to create science fiction. In his worst states, I would not be surprised if he wrote an entire story about brushing teeth. In his better states, he created the foundation of many great stories. -- [[User:Kainaw|<font color='#ff0000'>k</font><font color='#cc0033'>a</font><font color='#990066'>i</font><font color='#660099'>n</font><font color='#3300cc'>a</font><font color='#0000ff'>w</font>]][[User talk:Kainaw|™]] 13:02, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:See [[List of countries and dependencies by area]], which gives a nuanced answer to your first question, and the answer to your second question is obvious from the data in the article.-[[User:Gadfium|Gadfium]] ([[User talk:Gadfium|talk]]) 05:24, 8 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::Not [[L. Ron Hubbard bibliography|L. Ron Hubbard]], by any chance? --[[User:Richardrj|Richardrj]] [[User talk:Richardrj|<sup>talk </sup>]][[Special:Emailuser/Richardrj|<sup>email</sup>]] 13:13, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:4 and 1. But the chance of Trump to annex Canada is close to zero. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 09:58, 10 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Also the US somehow annexing Greenland is infinitely improbable. It's part of the European Union. [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 12:59, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::Trump's presidential term is four years and the process of discussion would take longer than that. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 14:20, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::No it isn't. [[User:Tamfang|—Tamfang]] ([[User talk:Tamfang|talk]]) 00:16, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::Yes it is effectively: [[Greenland and the European Union]] says "all citizens of the Realm of Denmark residing in Greenland (Greenlandic nationals) are EU citizens". [[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 14:16, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::But Denmark is a NATO member. The US invading Greenland will trigger [[NATO Article 5]]. --[[User talk:Lambiam#top|Lambiam]] 11:14, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::::Also, US is a member of NATO. The situation will be very complicated. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 11:37, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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= January 11 = |
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:Sounds a bit dubious. A book every week and a half works out to just under 35 a year. Over say 20 years, that's nearly 700. Asimov (a freak, or an alien, or a whole gaggle of aliens) is considered by many to be the most prolific science-fiction author. By comparison, he wrote just over 500 books, not all science fiction, over a much longer period. Now it's possible for somebody to write drivel and call it science fiction, but would it be published? I think not. [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 13:34, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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==JeJu AirFlight 2216 == |
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::I have heard this before - the toothbrushing scene story is very familiar. I did wonder whether it might be [[John Creasey]], who is known for his prolific output (well over 600 books) under a variety of names and who was capable of writing a short pulp novel (35,000 words) overnight. He's best known as a thriller writer, but he did write SF too. There's also [[Kenneth Bulmer]]. However, I have a niggling feeling it's another name, and one I ought to remember. Will keep looking. --<strong>[[User:Karenjc|<font color="red">Ka</font>]][[User_talk:Karenjc|renjc]]</strong> 17:28, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Is this the beginning of a new conspiracy theory? |
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On 11 January, the Aviation and Railway Accident Investigation Board stated that both the CVR and FDR had stopped recording four minutes before the aircraft crashed.[79] |
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Why would the flight recorder stop recording after the bird strike? Don't they have backup battery for flight recorders? |
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::Asimov's rate picked up over his lifetime, and during his final decade, he was producing about one book every two weeks. --[[User:Carnildo|Carnildo]] ([[User talk:Carnildo|talk]]) 20:50, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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[[User:Ohanian|Ohanian]] ([[User talk:Ohanian|talk]]) 09:59, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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: |
:Do you mean JeJu Air Flight 2216? [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 14:27, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Yes, you are right, flight 2216 not 2219. I have updated the title. [[User:Ohanian|Ohanian]] ([[User talk:Ohanian|talk]]) 14:51, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::The toothbrushing thing reminded me of [[Kilgore Trout]], which lead me to [[Philip José Farmer]]. Mr Farmer does not seem to have written 700 books, but he is a SF writer with three names whose list of works in his article is quite long. [[Special:Contributions/161.222.160.8|161.222.160.8]] ([[User talk:161.222.160.8|talk]]) 23:22, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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It says on wikipedia that "With the reduced power requirements of solid-state recorders, it is now practical to incorporate a battery in the units, so that recording can continue until flight termination, even if the aircraft electrical system fails. ". So how can the CVR stop recording the pilot's voices??? [[User:Ohanian|Ohanian]] ([[User talk:Ohanian|talk]]) 10:11, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::[[A. Bertram Chandler]] comes to mind, but his article shows "40 novels and 200 works of short fiction". --—<i><b>— [[User:Gadget850|<font color = "gray">Gadget850 (Ed)</font>]]<font color = "darkblue"> <sup>[[User talk:Gadget850|''talk'']]</sup></font></b> - </i> 23:25, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:The aircraft type was launched in 1994, this particular aircraft entered service in 2009. It may have had an older type of recorder. |
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::Most of Asimov's work over most of his lifetime wasn't science fiction, and a lot of works that are counted in his total are ones he only edited as an anthologist. Another prolific author best known for SF is [[Robert Silverberg]]; our article says he wrote a million words a year at his peak, and I once saw him quoted -- I think in the 1980s -- as saying he'd written more books than Asimov. But I haven't heard the story being asked about, for him or anyone else. --Anonymous, 00:18 UTC, May 30. |
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:I too am puzzled by some aspects of this crash, but I'm sure the investigators will enlighten us when they're ready. [[User:PiusImpavidus|PiusImpavidus]] ([[User talk:PiusImpavidus|talk]]) 11:41, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::Having looked into this briefly, it sounds like an independent power supply for the CVR (generally called a Recorder Independent Power Supply/RIPS) was only mandated for aircraft manufacturer from 2010 in the US [//www.ecfr.gov/current/title-14/chapter-I/subchapter-G/part-121/subpart-K/section-121.359] [//www.pprune.org/11803679-post1676.html]. I doubt anyone else required them before. [//www.easa.europa.eu/bg/downloads/46032/en] So not particularly surprising if this aircraft didn't have one. I think, but am not sure, that even in the US older aircraft aren't required to be retrofitted with these newer recorders. (See e.g. [//downloads.regulations.gov/FAA-2023-2270-0107/attachment_1.pdf] [//www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/Advisory_Circular/AC_20-186.pdf] [//www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/Advisory_Circular/20-186A.pdf].) In fact, the only regulator I could find with such a mandate is the Canadian one and that isn't until 2026 at the earliest [//www.midcanadamod.com/sales-service-support/be-ready-for-the-new-canadian-cvr-rips-mandate/]. Of course even if the FAA did require it, it's a moot point unless it was required for any aircraft flying to the US and this aircraft was flying to the US. I doubt it was required in South Korea given that it doesn't seem to be required in that many other places. There is a lot of confusing discussion about what the backup system if any on this aircraft would have been like [//www.reddit.com/r/aviation/comments/1hyozsq/update_jeju_air_2216s_both_cvr_fdr_stopped/] [//www.reddit.com/r/korea/comments/1hyst0g/jeju_air_an_expert_weighs_in_on_the_missing_last/] [//www.pprune.org/accidents-close-calls/663324-jeju-737-800-crash-muan-airport-south-korea-85.html]. The most I gathered from these discussions is that because the aircraft was such an old design where nearly everything was mechanical, a backup power supply wasn't particularly important in its design. The only expert commentary in RS I could find was in Reuters [//www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/south-korea-jeju-air-jet-blackboxes-stopped-recording-4-minutes-before-crash-2025-01-11/] "{{tqi|a former transport ministry accident investigator, said the discovery of the missing data from the budget airline's Boeing 737-800 jet's crucial final minutes was surprising and suggests all power, including backup, may have been cut, which is rare.}}" Note that the RIPS only have to work for 10 minutes, I think the timeline of this suggests power should not have been lost for 10 minutes at the 4 minutes point, but it's not something I looked in to. BTW, I think this is sort of explained in some of the other sources but if not see [//www.reddit.com/r/aviation/comments/18lteps/why_doesnt_the_faaeasa_require_that_cvrs_and_fdrs/]. Having a RIPS is a little more complicated than just having a box with a battery. There's no point recording nothing so you need to ensure that the RIPS is connected to/powering mics in the cabin. [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 01:28, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:The aircraft made 13 flights in 48 hours, meaning less than 3.7 hours per flight. Is it too much? Its last flight from Bangkok to Korea had a normal flight time for slightly more than 5 hours. Does it mean the pilots had to rush through preflight checks? [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 15:31, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:With this kind of schedule, it is questionable that the aircraft is well-maintained. [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 15:32, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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The OP seems to be obsessed with creating a new conspiracy theory out of very little real information, and even less expertise. Perhaps a new hobby is in order? [[User:DOR (HK)|DOR (ex-HK)]] ([[User talk:DOR (HK)|talk]]) 19:37, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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Just for info, the article is [[Jeju Air Flight 2216]]. This question has not yet been raised at the Talk page there. Thanks. [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 19:42, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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==Relation== |
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Is [[Colin Campbell Ross]] related to [[John Campbell Ross]]? [[User:IntfictExpert|Interactive Fiction Expert]]/[[User talk:IntfictExpert|Talk to me]] 06:23, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:...nor should it be, per [[WP:TALK]]. [[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]]|[[User talk:Shantavira|<sup>feed me</sup>]] 10:03, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:I doesn't seem very likely. Ross is a common surname, and Campbell as a given name, although less common, is not uncommon. In the absence of a specific reason to think the two are related, the most likely guess is that they aren't. In the same way it is unlikely that [[Charles Campbell Ross]] and [[Duncan Campbell Ross]] are related. Ditto for [[Lodge Hill Cemetery, Birmingham#Notable burials|Alan Strode Campbell Ross]] and [[List of Shortland Street characters#W|Callum Campbell Ross]]. --[[User talk:Lambiam|Lambiam]] 07:06, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::I disagree. It's quite a critical aspect in the investigation of the accident. Not sure it's some kind of "conspiracy", however. [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 10:18, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::But I suggest it should only be raised if, and to the extent that, it is mentioned in [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|Reliable sources]], not [[Wikipedia:No original research|OR]] speculated about by/in the Wikipedia article or (at length) the Talk page. On the Talk page it might be appropriate to ask if there ''are'' Reliable sources discussing it. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} [[Special:Contributions/94.8.29.20|94.8.29.20]] ([[User talk:94.8.29.20|talk]]) 10:53, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::Quite. [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 10:54, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::::Have now posed the question there. [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 12:07, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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== |
== Fortune 500 == |
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Is there any site where one can view complete Fortune 500 and Fortune Global 500 for free? These indices are so widely used so is there such a site? --[[User:40bus|40bus]] ([[User talk:40bus|talk]]) 20:05, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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Who were the most barbaric: Vikings, Goths, Mongols or Huns? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/76.121.93.179|76.121.93.179]] ([[User talk:76.121.93.179|talk]]) 09:05, 29 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:You can view the complete list here: https://fortune.com/ranking/global500/ [[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 21:50, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:That is a very subjective question, and not very useful as a question about history; to the monks of Lindisfarne, the Vikings were pretty barbaric, but the inhabitants of thirteenth century Baghdad would argue that the Mongols were the most barbarous. But what about all their good qualities, their civilization, their contributions to humanity? All of them founded extensive empires and had literature and art. Does that make them less barbaric? [[User:Adam Bishop|Adam Bishop]] ([[User talk:Adam Bishop|talk]]) 09:23, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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= January 12 = |
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:: As usual the answer depends on who wrote the book you're reading. Romans are great because the beat "barbaric" tribes into shaping their empire. Moguls are "barbaric" because they beat "great" nations to shape their empire (?!)--[[Special:Contributions/71.236.23.111|71.236.23.111]] ([[User talk:71.236.23.111|talk]]) 18:49, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Questions == |
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== Simple Question .... Long answer == |
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# Why did the United Kingdom not seek euro adoption when it was in EU? |
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This is not supposed to offend anyone but I have a feelinbg it might. The other day I was sitting with my partner watching a program about Steven Hawking and his wonderful theories. Then, my partner said to me,' so if this is true, it blows Christianity away and the creation of the world in seven days...' I have a huge amount of respect for both religion and science but I couldn't help feeling my partner had won me over on this one. Any ideas? |
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# Why did Russia, Belarus and Ukraine not join EU during Eastern Enlargement in 2004, unlike many other former Eastern Bloc countries? |
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Kirk UK <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/87.82.79.175|87.82.79.175]] ([[User talk:87.82.79.175|talk]]) 17:27, 29 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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# Why is Russia not in NATO? |
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# If all African countries are in AU, why are all European countries not in EU? |
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# Why Faroe Islands and Greenland have not become sovereign states yet? |
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# Can non-sovereign states or country subdivisions have embassies? |
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# Why French overseas departments have not become sovereign states yet? --[[User:40bus|40bus]] ([[User talk:40bus|talk]]) 13:35, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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#:I see that [[University College London|UCL]] offer a course on [https://www.ucl.ac.uk/languages-international-education/preparation-courses/upc-foundation/course-information/modern-european-history-politics Modern European History & Politics]. Had you considered that, perhaps? [[User:Martinevans123|Martinevans123]] ([[User talk:Martinevans123|talk]]) 13:43, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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#:# See: [[United Kingdom and the euro]] |
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#:# Russia, Belarus and Ukraine do not meet the criteria for joining the European Union |
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#:# If you google "Nato's primary purpose", you will know. |
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#:# The two do not have logical connection. |
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#:# They are too small to be an independent country |
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#:# Non-sovereign states or countries, for example Wales and Scotland, are countries within a sovereign state. They don't have embassies of their own. |
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#:# Unlike the British territories, all people living in the French territories are fully enfranchised and can vote for the French national assembly, so they are fully represented in the French democracy and do not have the need of becoming a sovereign state. |
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#:[[User:Stanleykswong|Stanleykswong]] ([[User talk:Stanleykswong|talk]]) 15:16, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:Too many questions all at once… but to address the first with an overly simplistic answer: The British preferred the Pound. It had been one of the strongest currencies in the world for generations, and keeping it was a matter of national pride. [[User:Blueboar|Blueboar]] ([[User talk:Blueboar|talk]]) 14:03, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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::1. See [[United Kingdom and the euro]] |
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:The short answer is that Christianity doesn't depend on the world being created in seven days. Most Christians take the passage describing that as being theological rather than scientific. [[User:DJ Clayworth|DJ Clayworth]] ([[User talk:DJ Clayworth|talk]]) 17:30, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::2. {{xt|"... geopolitical considerations, such as preserving Russia’s status as a former imperial power, is more important to Moscow than economic issues when it comes to foreign policy. Russia’s sees [in 2004] relations with the EU to be much less important than bilateral relations with the EU member-states that carry the most political weight, namely France, Germany and, to some extent, Britain. Russia thus clearly emphasizes politics over economics. While NATO enlargement was seen by Moscow to be a very important event, Russia barely noticed the enlargement of the EU on May 1."}} [https://carnegieendowment.org/events/2004/05/russia-and-the-european-union?lang=en ''Russia and the European Union'' (May 2004)]. See also [[Russia–European Union relations]]. |
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::7 days doesnt necessarily refer to 7 literal days. = ) --[[User:Cameron|Cameron]] ([[User Talk:Cameron|T]]|[[Special:Contributions/Cameron|C]]) 17:52, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::3. See [[Russia–NATO relations]]. |
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::[[User:Alansplodge|Alansplodge]] ([[User talk:Alansplodge|talk]]) 14:10, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:Someone's bored again and expecting us to entertain them. [[User:Nanonic|Nanonic]] ([[User talk:Nanonic|talk]]) 15:59, 12 January 2025 (UTC) |
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:::It should be noted that the Biblical description of the order of events, and not solely the timing between them, is spurious. [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%201 Genesis] claims that plants were created before the Sun that drives their photosynthesis, and that land organisms were produced before life in water. This description of events, and their attribution to God, would seem very reasonable to an ignorant person 2000 years ago but not by an author inspired by an [[omniscient]] God. The Bible also includes appaling examples of cruelty, [[collective punishment]], and sadism, but again, these examples can easily be explained by the Bible's author's acceptance of comtemporary values. I think the Bible should, if rationality is not completely disregarded, be taken as simply the work of a mundane person 2000 years ago. --[[User:Bowlhover|Bowlhover]] ([[User talk:Bowlhover|talk]]) 04:27, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::It only blows Christianity away if one assumes that the point of the Bible is to relay historical fact. I can similarly "blow away" the program you were watching by pointing out that Steven Hawking is three-dimensional and composed (principally) of carbon, while in the program you were watching he was a two-dimensional arrangement of photons. Of course, this misses the point that the program was meant to portray Steven Hawking's ideas, not to physically represent him. [[User:Wikiant|Wikiant]] ([[User talk:Wikiant|talk]]) 18:01, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Hang on, seven days is seven days surely? Seven phases I can understand as being interpreted in many different ways but seven days equals seven blocks of twenty four hours. If not, then why say seven days? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/87.82.79.175|87.82.79.175]] ([[User talk:87.82.79.175|talk]]) 18:22, 29 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:During the program, would you have thought it odd if someone had pointed to the TV and said, "That's Steven Hawking"? It seems a straightforward statement -- surely, Steven Hawking is Steven Hawking. But it wasn't Steven Hawking; it was an image. In fact, the point of the program wasn't that the image was or was not Steven Hawking. The point was the information the program was trying to get across -- Hawking (or his image) was merely a vehicle for the information. Similarly, the specific words in the Bible are vehicles for transmitting an idea -- the idea is that (1) God is the source of all things; (2) God loves us. [[User:Wikiant|Wikiant]] ([[User talk:Wikiant|talk]]) 18:34, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::In other words, ''[[The Treachery of Images|ceci n'est pas une semaine]]''? [[User:Deor|Deor]] ([[User talk:Deor|talk]]) 18:44, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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This is not what I'm asking, I'm familiar with the Rene Magritte ananagy of 'C’est Ne Pas Ne Pas Une Pipe', that's not what I'm referring to in the Hawking Statements. Moving away from Hawking statements, whether it be big bang theory, string theory or whatever, can the two exist simultaneously? Can a god creation of the universe exist alongside a scientific explanation of gravitational fields, probability fields and black holes. If we ignore the phrase 'on the first day, God said let there be light' in the bible, then does that mean that any phrases in the bible can be ignored if they 'don't fit'? Keeping to the original question, is there any research that explains how a religious and scientific explanation can co exist. Thanks - Kirk Uk <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/87.82.79.175|87.82.79.175]] ([[User talk:87.82.79.175|talk]]) 19:51, 29 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:The issue is, what do you mean by "don't fit?" If you take the words in the Bible as statements of fact, then not only do they "not fit" with science, they don't even "fit" with themselves (do a google search on "contradictions in the bible" -- there's a lot of them). Now, if you take the words as conveying the idea that God created the universe, then there need not be a contradiction with science. Science explains *how* the universe came into being, but religion addresses *why* the universe came into being. [[User:Wikiant|Wikiant]] ([[User talk:Wikiant|talk]]) 20:00, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::You may find [http://www.watchtower.org/e/200609/article_03.htm this article] interesting. Particularly the second subheading 'The Marriage of Teachings—Does It Work?'. Best, --[[User:Cameron|Cameron]] ([[User Talk:Cameron|T]]|[[Special:Contributions/Cameron|C]]) 20:34, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Don't get hung up on the "7 days" of Genesis 1. If you read Genesis 2, you will find the story of creation told in quite a different way (and order). From a Christian perspective, both are the Word of God, and thus speak of the Truth. Yet they appear to contradict each other. That doesn't fit with our modern preference for describing facts in a scientific, analytical way, so it seems nonsense. But, as Wikiant says, that is to take the passages in a way they were never intended. Think instead of traditional story telling as a way of conveying truths and ideas. There's a hundred versions of ''Robin Hood'', yet we all understand the gist of it; we tell of [[the Tortoise and the Hare]], when that never occurred ("How stupid, as if a hare and a tortoise could ''talk'', and run a race"), yet we use it to demonstrate severals truths & concepts (that of not being too confident; that slow and steady often wins, etc). Even now we use fiction to portray truth. There never was a [[Saving Private Ryan|Private Ryan]]; do we then doubt [[D-Day]] happened? So, no, faith and science don't have to tie up ''exactly'': they speak of different things. Can they be held together? There is much in the way of research, philosophy, discussion regarding that. Check out, for a start, [[Intelligent Design]], [[Theistic evolution]], [[Jewish views on evolution]]. There are plenty of links to follow from those. Also consider JRR Tolkein's [[On Fairy-Stories]], where he addresses the idea that where fairy stories tell of truths, the Bible is the ultimate "fairy story" to portray the ultimate truth. Basically, science hasn't "blown away" religion. There are many intellectually satisfied people of faith (of all persuasions). [[User:Gwinva|Gwinva]] ([[User talk:Gwinva|talk]]) 22:02, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::Addit: to clarify: I am NOT claiming that the Bible is merely story, and the various events described within it didn't happen. I was merely suggesting that each part of the Bible must be read as it was intended to be read; some is story, some is poetry, some contains historical records, some are personal letters, etc etc. Studies of ''any'' texts must start first with an analysis of style, and asking "why was this written". [[User:Gwinva|Gwinva]] ([[User talk:Gwinva|talk]]) 22:14, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::I've known a few fundamentalist Christians who are so tied to the idea that the Bible is the inerrant word of God, that they believe the world was created, destroyed and then created again ''just'' to deal with the dual creation stories in Genesis. — <b>[[User:HandThatFeeds|<span style="font-family:Comic Sans MS; color:DarkBlue">The Hand That Feeds You]]</span>:<sup>[[User talk:HandThatFeeds|Bite]]</sup></b> 22:44, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::Yes, it seems to me that a hard-core fundamentalist view of the Bible is not overly dissimilar from idolatry. [[User:Wikiant|Wikiant]] ([[User talk:Wikiant|talk]]) 22:50, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Hawking and the Bible can both be right for one very simple reason: We really don't know what "seven days" means in the Bible. The only thing we can be reasonably sure of is that it wasn't the equivalent of one week in our time. Why? The sun wasn't even created until the "fourth day" of Genesis (Gen 1:16). If the sun wasn't created yet, and the sun is the most natural way we tell one day from another |
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, how can we say that each of these days is twenty-four hours? We can't. Your friend's analysis was a bit simplistic. Hawking hasn't blown the Bible away, and the Bible hasn't blown Hawking away. [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 23:19, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Note as well [[Day]] describes the issues to some extent and bear in mind that the Bible was not originally written in English [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 10:16, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== [[Gold State Coach]] == |
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The state coach of the UK, has it been valued, it must be worth hundreds of thousands --[[User:Hadseys|Hadseys]] 19:25, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:Well, it's part of the [[Royal Collection]], and I don't think anyone's valued that specifically. I remember somewhere, someone saying that they had an insurer in at Buckingham Palace one day, and he was in just one room and gave up! But it's value would be hundreds of thousands if not millions; after all, it's a work of art, and it's royal provenance is pretty immense, having carried every sovereign since George III. [[User:PeterSymonds|PeterSymonds]] [[User talk:PeterSymonds|<small>(talk)</small>]] 19:29, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::*And its coated in gold leaf all over and got lots of paintings by famous artists, wonder how much it'd fetch on ebay :P --[[User:Hadseys|Hadseys]] 19:33, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Lol, they probably won't know what it is and it'll go for £75 as a nice novelty item. ;) [[User:PeterSymonds|PeterSymonds]] [[User talk:PeterSymonds|<small>(talk)</small>]] 20:04, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::*Bargain then :D |
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:::::Well it's got my bid! And if things get desperate she can throw in six horses. I did always get fed up with taking the bus into town... [[User:PeterSymonds|PeterSymonds]] [[User talk:PeterSymonds|<small>(talk)</small>]] 21:10, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::Once removed from its context, the state coach belongs in [[Las Vegas]] as much as anywhere. In Las Vegas the publicized amount it would be insured for would essentially be a publicity stunt. The problem: you're asking to evaluate something that embodies ineffable cultural values in terms of something without any intrinsic value. Two conventional systems that don't intersect: "invaluable", "priceless" give hints...--[[User:Wetman|Wetman]] ([[User talk:Wetman|talk]]) 23:52, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::*Ye but if it was robbed how much would the queen be able to claim in insurance? --[[User:Hadseys|Hadseys]] 11:18, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Plus we value the invaluable all the time. QUALYs (Quality of Life Years?) for deciding what drugs to put on the nhs. Life insurance policies valuing the loss of income if a partner/person was to die. Auctions selling all manner of cultural artefacts. I expect that given that it is A) a work of art, B) Part of the British Royal Family and C) Famous that this thing would be worth well over £1m, probably 10x that (if not more) to a collector. Of course this is based on purely knowledge of auctions/antiques built up from years of watching [[The Antiques Roadshow]] as a child. [[Special:Contributions/194.221.133.226|194.221.133.226]] ([[User talk:194.221.133.226|talk]]) 11:33, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Pear and Fig dish == |
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Is there a traditional Chinese or middle eastern Pear and fig dish? If so, what is it called? --[[User:Ghostexorcist|Ghostexorcist]] ([[User talk:Ghostexorcist|talk]]) 19:36, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:I have three large traditional Chinese recipe books. There are only two recipes that include figs. One is a fig/vinegar syrup intended for pork. The other is a fig-filling for sesame balls. Neither recipe includes pears. -- [[User:Kainaw|<font color='#ff0000'>k</font><font color='#cc0033'>a</font><font color='#990066'>i</font><font color='#660099'>n</font><font color='#3300cc'>a</font><font color='#0000ff'>w</font>]][[User talk:Kainaw|™]] 21:58, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::I've come across a pear-and-fig chutney, which I'm pretty sure comes originally from India, but don't ask me if it's from any particular part of the sub-continent. If you focus on chutneys, you may be able to get nearer to it. [[User:Xn4|<span style="color:#9911DD">Xn4</span>]] 23:21, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::What is the name of this chutney? --[[User:Ghostexorcist|Ghostexorcist]] ([[User talk:Ghostexorcist|talk]]) 00:58, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::::One name for it is (ahem) 'Pear and Fig Chutney', as made, for instance, by Maison Therese Ltd. I can't say it's traditional, but for all I know it may be, somewhere. [[User:Xn4|<span style="color:#9911DD">Xn4</span>]] 11:02, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Where figs ripen dependably in the open (i.e., not cossetted against a warm, south-facing brick wall), pears don't get enough winter cold to set fruit dependably. That's the basic reason why there is not a "traditional" Chinese or Middle Eastern dish combining pears and figs: the ingredients come out of separate cultural contexts. --[[User:Wetman|Wetman]] ([[User talk:Wetman|talk]]) 23:44, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Secret codes in france WWII == |
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I was watching the movie 'The Longest Day' over the weekend, and was left wondering how the secret code words played over the radio to the French Resistance were distributed to various cells? Every movie or book I've read with this concept has just taken it for granted that the right people will know what some random assortment of words will mean, but historically, how did they decide upon the meanings?[[Special:Contributions/142.33.70.60|142.33.70.60]] ([[User talk:142.33.70.60|talk]]) 20:03, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:[[Philippe de Vomécourt]], at least, was given the code in London:<blockquote>When would they come? In London I had been told to listen to the B.B.C. on the first and the fifteenth of each month. The message announcing the invasion would be broadcast after the 9 P.M. news—among the other curious messages that were put out night after night, like my own messages to tell my family I was well. April 15, May 1, May 15—each of them passed without the message I was waiting to hear.<p>Then the first of June.<p>"''Les sanglots longs des violons de l'automne....''" It was the first line of a poem by Verlaine. And it meant the invasion was soon to be launched. Only a few of us in the Resistance knew the significance of this message, and we could not tell our friends. We must now wait for the second half of the message, which would tell us that the invasion was to be launched within the next forty-eight hours. It was big news to carry about with me, and it was hard to hold it back from the others, but it could scarcely have added to the feverish excitement with which all were now possessed. Everyone could feel, despite all the disappointments of the past, that the invasion must come very soon. I looked at their faces, the faces of men whose friendship I held dear: men like Vincent and "Dédé," my adjutant, Captain Makowski, known as Maurice, and Colon, in charge of the Cher. I thought to myself, "You have not long to wait now."<p>And on the fifth of June, the imperturbable voice of the B.B.C. announcer, unaware of the momentous importance of the words he was speaking, said:<p>"''Blessent mon coeur d'une langueur monotone....''" It was the following line of the Verlaine poem, and it was the second part of the message. It signified that within two days Allied forces would be fighting once more on French soil.<p>Then followed a long string of "action messages," the coded messages by which each réseau received its orders to carry out the various prearranged operations against the railways, bridges, lines of communication, and so on. It was soon apparent that all notions of "graduated" action, on a selective basis, had been abandoned. About 300 "action" messages were broadcast that night, which meant, in effect, an order for a general uprising in every county in France. The messages went on and on, taking up far, far more time than usual. The Germans are said to have known the meaning of the two lines from Verlaine. Had they needed other proof that the invasion was imminent, those 300 "action" messages must have given it to them. That the Germans did not react more urgently, that the invasion, launched in bad weather, should have found them relatively so unprepared, with Rommel on leave with his family in Germany, was the purest fortune for the Allies. But, of course, there had been false alarms about the invasion for the past three years, when, just as now, the code words signaling imminent landings had been broadcast, and our hearts leaped in vain. Perhaps the Germans had also become skeptical by now of these messages.De Vomécourt, Philippe. (1961). ''An Army of Amateurs''. pp. 229-30. {{OCLC|1634632}}</blockquote>—[[User:EricR|eric]] 21:18, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::I assume that only a few trusted people in the Resistance would know the codewords, and they would tell the others at the appropriate time. Given the huge effort that went into the deception operation I would be surprised if a few 'false' codewords hadn't been planted for the Germans to hear about in the hope that if they did find the real ones they would ignore them. The above passage would seem to bear that out. [[User:DJ Clayworth|DJ Clayworth]] ([[User talk:DJ Clayworth|talk]]) 17:57, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Governments & bank accounts == |
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A local government is similar to a business as they both take in revenue and pay expenses and employees. But a business stores its money in a bank account. How does a government treasury store its money? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.218.11.128|71.218.11.128]] ([[User talk:71.218.11.128|talk]]) 23:34, 29 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:The U.S. Treasury is the U.S. Government's bank. Also, the two entities are dissimilar in that the firm's goal is to maximize profit while the (implicit) goal of governments tends to be to maximize revenue. [[User:Wikiant|Wikiant]] ([[User talk:Wikiant|talk]]) 23:38, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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I'm talking more of a local government.[[Special:Contributions/71.218.11.128|71.218.11.128]] ([[User talk:71.218.11.128|talk]]) 23:47, 29 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:I'm pretty sure local goverments keep their money in bank accounts like everyone else. [[User talk:Algebraist|Algebraist]] 10:23, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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It's really too simplistic to say "a business stores its money in a bank account". Most businesses have their capital tied up in property, equipment, trading stock, vehicles, infrastructure, etc., and beyond what's needed for cashflow purposes few have much cash in the bank, because businesses can generally find better uses for their money. If there's a company pension fund, it's likely to be invested in property, stocks and shares, bonds, etc. on the advice of fund managers, although there are times when a large part of a pension fund may be held in cash on deposit. |
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In the UK, principal local authorities are (as you say) similar to businesses, and all of the above applies to them, except that they are more likely to have significant reserves, especially after selling major assets, and those are usually invested (on professional advice) to provide the best possible return without excessive risk. Like businesses, local authorities are likely to have borrowed money, especially for developing new housing or other major schemes. However, the lowest tier of local authorities in the UK (town, parish, or community councils) are more limited in their room for manoeuvre: there are restrictions on their powers to borrow money and to hold reserves. [[User:Xn4|<span style="color:#9911DD">Xn4</span>]] 10:37, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Ok, that was a bad comparison. But a city still has to pay its workers, like a business, so that paycheck has to come from somewhere. [[Special:Contributions/71.218.1.96|71.218.1.96]] ([[User talk:71.218.1.96|talk]]) 17:28, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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= May 30 = |
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== what are these buildings == |
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what are these buildings located on treasure island in san Francisco |
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[http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=2&FORM=LMLTCP&cp=q935tp4t20jq&style=b&lvl=1&tilt=-90&dir=0&alt=-1000&scene=13255276&phx=0&phy=0&phscl=1&encType=1] <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/71.98.97.66|71.98.97.66]] ([[User talk:71.98.97.66|talk]]) 04:04, 30 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:When I Googled for "star shaped buildings" on Treasure Island, [http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/earth/4239381.html?page=2 this] said they are barracks, part of the former naval base. [[User:Adam Bishop|Adam Bishop]] ([[User talk:Adam Bishop|talk]]) 07:39, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::That's kinda weird. The armed forces aren't usually noted for odd architecture. Was the navy trying to subtly one-up [[The Pentagon]]? [[User:Clarityfiend|Clarityfiend]] ([[User talk:Clarityfiend|talk]]) 22:14, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== The River Nile == |
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To what extent is the current management of the river Nile sustainable? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/78.146.164.190|78.146.164.190]] ([[User talk:78.146.164.190|talk]]) 08:09, 30 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:{{dyoh}} [[User:Krator]] ([[User talk:Krator|t]] [[Special:Contributions/Krator|c]]) 12:14, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::And here's the aforementioned help with pointing towards articles. You may want to look at [[Sustainability]] [[Nile]] [[Hydropolitics in the Nile Basin]]. Don't forget to look at linked pages (click on words in blue in the text) and "See also" pages mentioned. [[Water management]] is still under construction, but may also hold useful links. --[[Special:Contributions/76.111.32.200|76.111.32.200]] ([[User talk:76.111.32.200|talk]]) 19:34, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Walibri's strange custom == |
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I've read on the net that when men of the Walibri tribe of central Australia greet each other, they shake genitals instead of hands. The web pages saying this story are all unreliable, of course, (blogs or discussion forums) but I was wondering if there is some truth in the story? --[[Special:Contributions/211.243.246.207|211.243.246.207]] ([[User talk:211.243.246.207|talk]]) 08:10, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:I'm not sure the tribe even exists (apologies to any member of the tribe if I'm wrong) but on a quick google search every reference to them talks about this genitals shaking custom. I can't find any reference to anything else about the tribe. Other aboriginal tribes seem well represented on the net so why not this one?[[User:Iiidonkeyiii|Iiidonkeyiii]] ([[User talk:Iiidonkeyiii|talk]]) 08:32, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::[[List of Indigenous Australian group names]] doesn't list them.[[User:Iiidonkeyiii|Iiidonkeyiii]] ([[User talk:Iiidonkeyiii|talk]]) 08:37, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Perhaps you mean the [[Warlpiri]], whose language kept coming up in my linguistics classes... but I've never heard of this supposed custom. [[Special:Contributions/134.96.105.72|134.96.105.72]] ([[User talk:134.96.105.72|talk]]) 12:17, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::Our leg is being pulled. [[User:Xn4|<span style="color:#9911DD">Xn4</span>]] 23:21, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Is there a website with the names of clothes? == |
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I never paid ANY attention to clothing, like, I wouldn't know what twill is or what pleated meant. Now I have a job that requires me to... any web sites that would show pictures of all the clothes and parts and what they are called? I barely know what a shirt is... THANKS. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/87.88.122.226|87.88.122.226]] ([[User talk:87.88.122.226|talk]]) 09:26, 30 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:You may be interested in [[:Category:Textiles]] and [[:Category:Clothing]]. [[Special:Contributions/152.16.16.75|152.16.16.75]] ([[User talk:152.16.16.75|talk]]) 10:21, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::And a [http://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&q=fashion+glossary&btnG=Google+Search&meta= google search for "fashion glossary"] brings up some useful sites. [[User:WikiJedits|WikiJedits]] ([[User talk:WikiJedits|talk]]) 10:42, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::We have an article on [[nudism]]. I am certain that it covers relevant parts. --[[User:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM|Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM]] ([[User talk:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM|talk]]) 17:02, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::I thought nudism ''didn't'' cover relevant parts. [[User:DJ Clayworth|DJ Clayworth]] ([[User talk:DJ Clayworth|talk]]) 17:50, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:: Have a look here [[http://www.infovisual.info/06/pano_en.html]] for clothing show and tell. --[[Special:Contributions/76.111.32.200|76.111.32.200]] ([[User talk:76.111.32.200|talk]]) 19:11, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Eastern Europe and Cluster Bombs == |
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See: [[Convention on Cluster Munitions]]. |
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[[Image:Cononclubom.png|thumb|300px|right]] |
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In the map to the right several countries are missing. That large nations such as the US and China didn't sign the convention is no surprise. However, Poland, Romania and Greece (?) didn't sign the convention either. Why would that be? This seems like a very good way to lose credibility within the EU. [[User:Krator]] ([[User talk:Krator|t]] [[Special:Contributions/Krator|c]]) 12:11, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:It depends on who are the ruling parties of a country and its public interest/perception. This issue might seem like a no-brainer to sign-up to, but unless it scores you politically positive press/media coverage - or your party is generally anti-war/anti-weaponary there is little incentive to change. The nations you mention will probably receive very little detriment from not signing up. People tend to be too black & white in their consideration of the issue. Those who didn't sign the treaty are not necessarily disinterested/uncaring of the effects of cluster bombs, they may simply believe this convention is unmanageable, not worth signing up for, would cause additional issues. They may have their own internal defense-measures that prevent use of them, or they may not use them so see no value in signing up for something. The reasons can be numerous and many could be quite reasonable (similar is how people get excited by Kyoto by ignoring that just because you don't sign-up doesn't mean you don't take the issue seriously, you may just disagree with the method of control). [[Special:Contributions/194.221.133.226|194.221.133.226]] ([[User talk:194.221.133.226|talk]]) 13:51, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:I'd also suspect that there's a strong correlation to how many countries found it politically easy to sign up and how many countries did not have any cluster munitions in their armaments in the first place. --[[Special:Contributions/98.217.8.46|98.217.8.46]] ([[User talk:98.217.8.46|talk]]) 14:51, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::According to the article, technically no countries have signed - that doesn't happen until December. [[User:Rmhermen|Rmhermen]] ([[User talk:Rmhermen|talk]]) 17:30, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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Having read this question, I started to search Polish websites for some info on cluster bombs and I found out that, sadly, cluster munition is produced in Poland and that Polish Armed Forces maintain and keep expanding their cluster munition stockpiles. Poland participated in the Oslo conference but refrained from signing the convention, saying it must first "analyze it thouroghly". This has been criticized by Polish NGOs such as Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights in Poland and Polish Red Cross. [http://www.podbeskidzie.biz/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2765&Itemid=55] — [[User:Kpalion|Kpalion]]<sup>[[User talk:Kpalion|(talk)]]</sup> 08:16, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Australian Experience == |
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The question about an Australian Aboriginal group earlier got me thinking. So here's my question: I'm a white European who has lived in Australia for 5 years, in that time I've met many different people from many different countries - Chinese, Spanish, Iranian's, Ugandans -you name them, I've met them socially. But in that whole time I've only ever met ONE Aboriginal Australian. |
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I'm not really sure what my question is, but I think it's something like - Am I moving in the wrong circles? Have other migrant Australian's noticed this? –[[User:Iiidonkeyiii|Iiidonkeyiii]] ([[User talk:Iiidonkeyiii|talk]]) 12:51, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:You don't mentioned where precisely you live. The indigenous population in Australia nowadays is rather small about 2% of the population. Even for those, a fair percentage of them are isolated in certain areas I believe. So it's not surprising it's fairly uncommon to meet one. [[Indigenous Australians]] may interest you. [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 15:50, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::Many people who live in the Australian metropolises will go through their entire lives without ever meeting an indigenous person that they're aware of. I say "that they're aware of" because indigenous people don't go around with an "Indigenous person" sign around their neck, and many self-identified indigenous people have mixed blood lines and don't have any of the stereotypical visible characteristics that some people assume they all have. You may in fact have met a number of indigenous people who didn't choose to reveal this information in a social setting. -- [[User:JackofOz|JackofOz]] ([[User talk:JackofOz|talk]]) 16:05, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::I've lived in Australia for all of my 36 years, and I have met very few Aboriginal people, although I acknowledge what Jack says, that I may have met some who didn't mention it. Most of the Aboriginal people I have met were those I met up north, when I went to Onslow (north-west coast of Western Australia). When I was there, I actually met very few white people, because I was staying in an Aboriginal community there. There is an informal apartheid in Australia, which reaches near-formal status at various times. In some country pubs, so Aboriginal people have told me, there are still "whites-only" and "blacks-only" sections. You will eventually meet an Aboriginal person if you are open and tolerant, but to guage the degree of separation, watch when you see Aboriginal people in public: see who else they are with. You guessed it, they will be Aboriginal also. |
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::Thanks for the question, because I like hearing sympathetic people who are concerned about these issues. You might care to read ''My Place'' by Sally Morgan, which was quite a famous book in its time, at least in WA. It's the autobiography of an Aboriginal woman who, for a long time, didn't know anything about her heritage, and went through rediscovering it, and dealing with the pain, and conquering any hatred and anger she might have felt. [[Special:Contributions/203.221.127.63|203.221.127.63]] ([[User talk:203.221.127.63|talk]]) 18:05, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::The wrong circles. The circles you need to move in in Sydney would be openings of Aboriginal art gallery exhibitions (not the same as exhibitions of Aboriginal art) where the gallery is run by Aboriginal people; and other Aboriginal interest groups such as Aboriginal rights, housing, health, dance company, theatre etc. Everleigh Street in Redfern is an Aborigines only place, and as other concentrations of ethnic groups are found in certain districts (such as Leichhardt/Italians; Liverpool Street/Spanish etc) , Redfern is regarded as the Aboriginal one. Otherwise, country areas moreso, and I found that Western Australia gives more media coverage in general especially through their editions of national news media (The Australian, The Age etc). [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 00:29, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Christian beliefs about life after death == |
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Hi do non Catholic Christians believe that a person is judged as soon as they die or is the fate of going to heaven or hell only determined on the day of judgement? If so is a person considered dead and unaware of anything until they are physically resurrected on the day of judgement? Any biblical quotes to do with this will be very helpful. Thanks [[User:Richie1001|Richie1001]] ([[User talk:Richie1001|talk]]) 14:08, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:There are a lot of non-Catholic Christians. I doubt there is unity in their belief in this matter [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 15:45, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:Even Catholic theologians aren't in agreement on this. [[User:Wikiant|Wikiant]] ([[User talk:Wikiant|talk]]) 16:55, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::This was discussed with verses on Yahoo answers here: [http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20061002005411AA5rAAt]. [[User:Rmhermen|Rmhermen]] ([[User talk:Rmhermen|talk]]) 17:20, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== Child-in-Common == |
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What does the phrase "have a child-in-common" mean? Does it only refer to biological children? Or does it include stepchildren? |
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Pskudnik30[[User:Pskudnik30|Pskudnik30]] ([[User talk:Pskudnik30|talk]]) 14:30, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== early 20th-century Scandinavian criminal == |
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I have tried in vain to find an article (that I read a year or so ago) about an unidentified Scandinavian criminal who targeted women sometime during the early 20th century. According to the article, he was never caught. I am fairly certain it was in the "Mysterious People" category. Does anyone know who I am talking about ? Thank you in advance. [[User:Philippe Laurichesse|Philippe Laurichesse]] ([[User talk:Philippe Laurichesse|talk]]) 22:37, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== cremated remains found in a box == |
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An article seems to have disappeared from Wikipedia (from the category, I believe, of "Mysterious People") concerning the cremated remains of a woman in a box which arrived at a police station in Australia. Her name and her dates of birth and death were written on the box. It was never discovered who had sent the box nor why it had been sent. Any help identifying the article or its source would be greatly appreciated. [[User:Philippe Laurichesse|Philippe Laurichesse]] ([[User talk:Philippe Laurichesse|talk]]) 22:40, 30 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:This sounds like nothing extraordinary or otherwise notable which was probably why the article was deleted if it is missing [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 06:55, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:You might like to put your question on the [[:Category:Mysterious people]] talk page where someone might be able to help you, [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 07:30, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:::Google is your friend. This item appears in various places on the Internet: "Aug 14, 2007 POTTSTOWN, Pa. (AP) - Cremated human remains were found Tuesday inside a package placed in a mail collection box, police said. "In my 19 years of police work, never has something like this occurred," Pottstown police Capt. F. Richard Drumheller said. The letter carrier found the package wrapped haphazardly in a plastic bag, with no mailing address or return address, and notified police. A police dog did not detect any explosives, so officers opened it and found a box with a metal plate with the deceased person's name on it and the years "1957-2000." Police asked that the person's name not be released until relatives are found."--[[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]]|[[User talk:Shantavira|<sup>feed me</sup>]] 07:39, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::::Thanks for the response. In fact, Google -- being a corporation that controls its results, privileging those in English even when you type in words in other languages (for example, it refuses to give me non-English Wikipedia pages for certain subjects) -- is not my friend. (If I use it, it's because there's nothing better, as with a lot of commercial monopolies.) But, of course, I realize that your comment was not meant to be taken that way. Believe it or not, I actually did look, at one point, and, as I recall, did not find anything, but it could very well be that I was slightly inebriated or not in my right mind at the time. Anyway, thanks again. [[User:Philippe Laurichesse|Philippe Laurichesse]] ([[User talk:Philippe Laurichesse|talk]]) 08:49, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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= May 31 = |
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== Hats == |
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I didn't know who else to ask this question to, and so I thought I'd throw it out to the Wikipedia community: Do people wear REAL hats anymore? I never see anyone with a nice [[Akubra]] or [[Fedora]], or any of the other types. Why and when did they go out of style, and does anyone wear them in the present day? I really miss the hats of old. They added a certain intangible sense of adventure and sophistication that is just not present in today's society. Unfortunately, I am too young to have experienced the hat wearing days. Would someone in a city look like a fool if he were to wear one of these types of hats, or is it still socially acceptable? When I am older, I would really like to wear some of these hats of old, but I'm just wondering if I would just be doing myself a disservice. I don't know what brought me to the topic, but I figured if anyone would know, it would be the Wikipedians! |
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Thanks! |
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Mike [[User:MAP91|MAP91]] ([[User talk:MAP91|talk]]) 02:36, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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: Off the top of my head :) - the Queen (of the UK) wears hats regularly, though perhaps she is of old. However, I believe hats similar to hers are often seen at UK weddings and funerals. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/65.92.191.40|65.92.191.40]] ([[User talk:65.92.191.40|talk]]) 02:51, 31 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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:: Yeehaw. Come to Texas for hats. For ladies' hats "African American" churches usually give good shows. As for the hats you quoted. Unless you can pull them off with a certain "look", wait. Fashion tends to recycle trends. I think I saw a popstar wear one recently (Timber???) Not everyone looks good in a hat. If you do and can give it a modern twist (leather jacket and double wrap scarf maybe?), give it a try. --[[Special:Contributions/76.111.32.200|76.111.32.200]] ([[User talk:76.111.32.200|talk]]) 06:41, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:It depends what you mean by 'real' hat too. [[Baseball cap|These]] are resonably common in certain crowds and I personally consider them real [[hats]] (as does our article on hats) even if [[Cap|this article]] suggests there is a difference. Hats with a fuller brim are less common in general perhaps but are still quite common in certain places, e.g. among the [[Amish]] (and some [[Mormons]]/LDS followers too I think) and [[Cowboys]]+[[Cowgirls]], where the functional usage is important (hot tropical ountries by people working under the sun, by more ordinary people when going out in the sun for extended periods especially tourists particularly Japanese ones), in certain occasions like the ones mentioned above and to some horse races ([http://www.aucklandcupweek.co.nz/aucklandcupweek/fashion/directory.cfm]) [[User:Nil Einne|Nil Einne]] ([[User talk:Nil Einne|talk]]) 06:49, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::In country Australia you can still walk up to a hat-wearer and ask, Is that an [[Akubra]] you're wearing? because they do, as well as the high top 10-gallon type. Musicians and [[Daniel Johns]] of Silverchair does, another singer, Guy Sebastian constantly wears a compact brim hat; girls wear a British urchin type hat with a soft full crown and peak in winter. It depends on their peer group. The late [[Heath Ledger]] wore a hat. Maybe it's an Australian thing, though Michael Stipe of R.E.M. wore a hat. Some people wear "statement" hats as a personal badge. Racing men and other horsey types routinely wear hats. The cap's been putting cap-hair on people for decades. My guess is when hair was big for men and women, hats declined through association with their parents' generation and associations with formality. Now formality is good. If you miss hats, why not start them off again. You'll be in step with [[Indiana Jones]] whose variable [[Fedora]] is making a return. Hats are still being produced for both sexes. Unbelievably I still see artists wearing the [[beret]], though the Indian cotton brimless hat is popular too. As for me? I'm female and take my [[Panama hat]] (copy) to the beach. Goes well with sawnoff jeans... [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 07:13, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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::PS The celebs I mentioned are hugely listed at the article for their preferred hat, the [[Trilby]] a tighter looking variant of the fed. [[User:Julia Rossi|Julia Rossi]] ([[User talk:Julia Rossi|talk]]) 07:23, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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== [[1969 White Paper]] == |
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Hello. Does the 1969 White Paper have a metaphoric meaning? I know that white papers denote reports that help politicians make decisions. I was wondering whether the word 'White' in the phrase '1969 White Paper' meant the assimilation of Canadian Aboriginals into the mainstream white society. Thanks in advance. --[[User:Mayfare|Mayfare]] ([[User talk:Mayfare|talk]]) 04:10, 31 May 2008 (UTC) |
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:No, as you implied yourself, [[white paper]] is a generic term for this sort of document not matter what its subject; so the fact that this one was on a racial topic is just a coincidence. I've added a link in the article. --Anonymous, edited 05:45 UTC, May 31, 2008. |
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December 29
[edit]Set animal's name = sha?
[edit]"In ancient Egyptian art, the Set animal, or sha,[citation needed]" - this seems like a major citation needed. Any help? Temerarius (talk) 00:12, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
- Which article does that appear in? ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 01:18, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
- It must be this article. Omidinist (talk) 04:22, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
- That term was in the original version of the article, written 15 years ago by an editor named "P Aculeius" who is still active. Maybe the OP could ask that user about it? ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 05:00, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Each time, the word šꜣ is written over the Seth-animal.
[1]Sometimes the animal is designated as sha (šꜣ) , but we are not certain at all whether this designation was its name.
[2]When referring to the ancient Egyptian terminology, the so-called sha-animal, as depicted and mentioned in the Middle Kingdom tombs of Beni Hasan, together with other fantastic creatures of the desert and including the griffin, closely resembles the Seth animal.
[3]šꜣ ‘Seth-animal’
[4]He claims that the domestic pig is called “sha,” the name of the Set-animal.
[5]
- It must be this article. Omidinist (talk) 04:22, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
- Wiktionary gives šꜣ as meaning "wild pig", not mentioning use in connection with depictions of the Seth-animal. The hieroglyphs shown for šꜣ do not resemble those in the article Set animal, which instead are listed as ideograms in (or for) stẖ, the proper noun Seth. --Lambiam 08:27, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
- Thank you! The reason I brought it up was because the hieroglyph for the set animal didn't have the sound value to match in jsesh.
- Temerarius (talk) 22:15, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
| |||||||
The word sha (accompanying depictions of the Set animal) in hieroglyphs | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- IMO they should be removed, or, if this can be sourced, be replaced by one or more of the following two: --Lambiam 09:49, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- The article—originally "Sha (animal)" was one of the first I wrote, or attempted to write, and was based on and built on the identification by E. A. Wallis Budge, in The Gods of the Egyptians, which uses the hieroglyph
for the word "sha", and includes the illustration that I traced from a scan and uploaded to Commons (and which was included in the article from the time of its creation in 2009 until December 21, 2024 when User:PharaohCrab replaced it with his original version of the one shown above; see its history for what it looked like until yesterday). I have had very little to do with the article since User:Sonjaaa made substantial changes and moved it to "Seth animal" in 2010; although it's stayed on my watchlist, I long since stopped trying to interfere with it, as it seemed to me that other editors were determined to change it to the way they thought it should be, and I wasn't sophisticated enough to intervene or advocate effectively for my opinions. In fact the only edit by me I can see after that was fixing a typo.
- As for the word sha, that is what Budge called it, based on the hieroglyph associated with it; I was writing about this specific creature, which according to Budge and some of the other sources quoted above has some degree of independence from Set, as it sometimes appears without him and is used as the determinative of one or two other deities, whose totemic animal it might also have been. One of the other scholars quoted above questions whether the word sha is the name of the animal, but still associates the word with the animal: Herman Te Velde's article, "Egyptian Hieroglyphs as Signs Symbols and Gods", quoted above, uses slightly modified versions of Budge's illustrations; his book Seth, God of Confusion is also quoted above, both with the transliteration šꜣ, which in "Egyptian Hieroglyphs" he also renders sha. Percy Newberry is the source cited by the Henry Thompson quotation above, claiming that sha referred to a domestic pig as well as the Set animal, and a different god distinct from Set, though sharing the same attributes (claims of which Thompson seems skeptical). Herman Te Velde also cites Newberry, though he offers a different explanation for the meaning of "sha" as "destiny". All Things Ancient Egypt, also quoted above, calls the animal "the so-called sha-animal", while Classification from Antiquity to Modern Times just uses šꜣ and "Seth-animal".
- I'm not certain what the question here is; that the hieroglyph transliterated sha is somehow associated with the creature seems to have a clear scholarly consensus; most of the scholars use it as the name of the creature; Herman Te Velde is the only one who suggests that it might not be its name, though he doesn't conclude whether it is or isn't; and one general source says in passing "so-called sha-animal", which accepts that this is what it's typically referred to in scholarship, without endorsing it. Although Newberry made the connection with pigs, none of the sources seems to write the name with pig hieroglyphs as depicted above. Could you be clearer about what it is that's being discussed here? P Aculeius (talk) 16:47, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
- I asked because I couldn't find it in Gardiner (jsesh, no match when searching by sound value) or Budge (dictionary vol II.)
- Temerarius (talk) 05:24, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
December 30
[edit]I do not say the Frenchman will not come. I only say he will not come by sea.
[edit]1. What is the ultimate source of this famous 1803 quote by John Jervis (1735 – 1823), 1st Earl of St Vincent, First Lord of the Admiralty at the time. I googled Books and no source is ever given except possibly another collection of quotations. The closest I got was: "At a parley in London while First Lord of the Admiralty 1803". That's just not good enough. Surely there must be someone who put this anecdote in writing for the first time.
2. Wouldn't you say this use of the simple present in English is not longer current in contemporary English, and that the modern equivalent would use present continuous forms "I'm not saying... I'm only saying..." (unless Lord Jervis meant to say he was in the habit of saying this; incidentally I do realize this should go to the Language Desk but I hope it's ok just this once)
178.51.7.23 (talk) 11:47, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- Assuming he's talking about England, does he propose building a bridge over the Channel? ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 12:13, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- How about a tunnel? --Wrongfilter (talk) 12:29, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- It's a joke. He's saying that the French won't invade under any circumstances (see English understatement). Alansplodge (talk) 20:30, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- The First Lord of the Admiralty wouldn't be the one stopping them if the French came by tunnel (proposed in 1802) or air (the French did have hot air balloons). Any decent military officer would understand that an invasion by tunnel or balloon would have no chance of success, but this fear caused some English opposition against the Channel Tunnel for the next 150 years. Just hinting at the possibility of invasion by tunnel amongst military officers would be considered a joke.
- Unless he was insulting the British Army (no, now I'm joking). PiusImpavidus (talk) 10:30, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- How about a tunnel? --Wrongfilter (talk) 12:29, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- The quoted wording varies somewhat. Our article John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent has it as "I do not say, my Lords, that the French will not come. I say only they will not come by sea" in an 1801 letter to the Board of Admiralty, cited to Andidora, Ronald (2000). Iron Admirals: Naval Leadership in the Twentieth Century. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-313-31266-3.. Our article British anti-invasion preparations of 1803–05 has Jervis telling the House of Lords "I do not say the French cannot come, I only say they cannot come by sea", and then immediately, and without citation, saying it was more probably Keith. I can't say I've ever seen it attributed to Keith anywhere else. DuncanHill (talk) 13:40, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- Hmm, Andidora does not in fact say it was in a letter to the Board of Admiralty, nor does he explicitly say 1801. And his source, The Age of Nelson by G J Marcus has it as Jervis telling the House of Lords sometime during the scare of '03-'05. Marcus doesn't give a source. DuncanHill (talk) 13:52, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- Robert Southey was attributing it to Lord St Vincent as early as 1806, and while I don't want to put too much weight on his phrase "used to say" it does at any rate raise the possibility that St Vincent said (or wrote) it more than once. Perhaps Marcus and our St Vincent article are both right. --Antiquary (talk) 16:38, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- Interesting. Thanks. Some modern accounts (not Southey apparently) claim Lord St Vincent was speaking in the House of Lords. If that was the case, wouldn't it be found in the parliamentary record? How far back does the parliamentary record go for the House of Commons and/or the House of Lords. 178.51.7.23 (talk) 17:18, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- Robert Southey was attributing it to Lord St Vincent as early as 1806, and while I don't want to put too much weight on his phrase "used to say" it does at any rate raise the possibility that St Vincent said (or wrote) it more than once. Perhaps Marcus and our St Vincent article are both right. --Antiquary (talk) 16:38, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- As for (2), the tense is still alive and kicking, if I do say so myself. Clarityfiend (talk) 23:12, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- You don't say? [An idiom actually meaning "You say that, do you?", although I dare say most of you know that.] {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 02:47, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- This is not what I am asking. 178.51.7.23 (talk) 05:05, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- Then I will answer you more directly. You are wrong: while the usage you quote is less common than it once was, it is still current, according to my experience as a native BrE speaker for over 65 years. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 13:32, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- I kid you not. --Lambiam 23:47, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- Then I will answer you more directly. You are wrong: while the usage you quote is less common than it once was, it is still current, according to my experience as a native BrE speaker for over 65 years. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 13:32, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- This is not what I am asking. 178.51.7.23 (talk) 05:05, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- You don't say? [An idiom actually meaning "You say that, do you?", although I dare say most of you know that.] {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 02:47, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
What percentage of Ancient Greek literature was preserved?
[edit]Has anyone seen an estimate of what percentage of Ancient Greek literature (broadly understood: literature proper, poetry, mathematics, philosophy, history, science, etc.) was preserved. It doesn't matter how you define "Ancient Greek literature", or if you mean the works available in 100 BC or 1 AD or 100 AD or 200 AD... Works were lost even in antiquity. I'm just trying to get a rough idea and was wondering if anyone ever tried to work out an estimate. 178.51.7.23 (talk) 17:58, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- I don't have an answer handy for you at the moment, but I can tell you that people have tried to work out an estimate for this, at least from the perspective of "how many manuscripts containing such literature managed to survive past the early Middle Ages". We've worked this one out, with many caveats, by comparing library catalogues from very early monasteries to known survivals and estimating the loss rate. -- asilvering (talk) 20:38, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- One estimate is (less than) [6] one percent. --Askedonty (talk) 20:40, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- We have a Lost literary work article with a large "Antiquity" section. AnonMoos (talk) 21:15, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- These are works known to have existed, because they were mentioned and sometimes even quoted in works that have survived. These known lost works are probably only a small fraction of all that have been lost. --Lambiam 23:35, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
- Few things which might be helpful:
- So profuse was Galen's output that the surviving texts represent nearly half of all the extant literature from ancient Greece.[1]
- Although not just Greek, but only 1% of ancient literature survives.[2] --ExclusiveEditor 🔔 Ping Me! 11:12, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- The following quantities are known: the number of preserved works, the (unknown) number of lost works, and the number of lost works of which we know, through mentions in preserved works. In a (very) naive model, let stand for the probability that a given work (lost or preserved) is mentioned in some other preserved work (so ). The expected number of mentions of preserved works in other preserved works is then If we have the numerical value of the latter quantity (which is theoretically obtainable by scanning all preserved works), we can obtain an estimate for and compute
- --Lambiam 13:09, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- Even without seeing any professional estimate of the kind I'm asking about here, my ballpark figure was that it had to be less than 1 percent, simply from noting how little of even the most celebrated and important authors has been preserved (e.g. about 5 percent for Sophocles) and how there are hundreds of authors and hundreds of works for which we only have the titles and maybe a few quotes, not to mention all those works of which we have not an inkling, the number of which it is, for this very reason, extremely hard to estimate.
- But as a corollary to my first question I have another three:
- 1. Has any modern historian tackled this paradox, namely the enormous influence that the culture of the Ancient World has had on the West while at the same time how little we actually know about that culture, and as a consequence the problem that we seem to believe that we know much more than we actually do? in other words that our image of it that has had this influence on Western culture might be to some extent a modern creation and might be very different of what it actually was?
- 2. I understand that in this regard there can be the opposite opinion (or we can call it a hypothesis, or an article of faith) which is the one that is commonly held (at least implicitly): that despite all that was lost the main features of our knowledge of the culture of the Ancient World are secure and that no lost work is likely to have modified the fundamentals? Like I said this seems to be the position that is commonly implicitly held, but I'm interested to hear if any historian has discussed this question and defended this position explicitly in a principled way?
- 3. Finally to what extent is the position mentioned in point 2 simply a result of ignorance (people not being aware of how much was lost)? How widespread is (in the West) the knowledge of how much was lost? How has that awareness developed in the West, both at the level of the experts and that of the culture in general, since say the 15th century? Have you encountered any discussions of these points?
178.51.7.23 (talk) 08:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- The issues touched upon are major topics in historiography as well as the philosophy of history, not only for the Ancient (Classical) World but for all historical study. Traditionally, historians have concentrated on the culture of the high and mighty. The imprint on the historical record by hoi polloi is much more difficult to detect, except in the rare instances where they rose up, so what we think of as "the" culture of any society is that of a happy few. Note also that "the culture of the Ancient World" covers a period of more than ten centuries, in which kingdoms and empires rose and fell, states and colonies were founded and conquered, in an endless successions of wars and intrigues. On almost any philosophical issue imaginable, including natural philosophy, ancient philosophers have held contrary views. It is not clear how to define "the" culture of the Ancient World, and neither is it clear how to define the degree to which this culture has influenced modern Western society. It may be argued that the influence of say Plato or Sophocles has largely remained confined to an upper crust. I think historians studying this are well aware of the limitations of their source material, including the fact that history is written by the victors. --Lambiam 13:42, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- 178.51.7.23 -- Think of it this way: What did it mean to "publish" something in the ancient world? You had at least one written manuscript of your work -- rarely more than a handful of such manuscripts. You could show what you had written to your friends, have it delivered to influential people, bequeath it to your heirs, or donate it to an archive or research collection (almost none of which were meaningfully public libraries in the modern sense of that phrase). However you chose to do it, once you were gone, the perpetuation of your work depended on other people having enough interest in it to do the laborious work of copying the manuscript, or being willing to pay to have a copy made. Works of literature which did not interest other people enough to copy manuscripts of it were almost always eventually lost, which ensured that a lot of tedious and worthless stuff was filtered out. Of course, pagan literary connoisseurs, Christian monks, Syriac and Arabic translators seeking Greek knowledge, and Renaissance Humanists all had different ideas of what was worth preserving, but between them, they ensured that a lot of interesting or engaging or informative works ended up surviving from ancient times. I'm sure that a number of worthy books still slipped through the gaps, but some losses were very natural and to be expected; for example, some linguists really wish that Claudius's book on the Etruscan language had survived, but it's not surprising that it didn't, since it would not have generally interested ancient, medieval, or renaissance literate people in the same way it would interest modern scholars struggling with Etruscan inscriptions.
- By the way, college bookstores on or near campuses of universities which had a Classics program sometimes used to have a small section devoted to the small green-backed (Greek) and red-backed (Latin) volumes of the Loeb Classical Library, and you could get an idea of what survived from ancient times (and isn't very obscure or fragmentary) by perusing the shelves... AnonMoos (talk) 01:03, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
- Indeed - at the other end of the scale, the Description of Greece by Pausanias seems to have survived into the Middle Ages in a single MS (now of course lost), and there are no ancient references to either it or him known. Since the Renaissance it has been continuously in print. Johnbod (talk) 03:00, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
References
December 31
[edit]Was the fictional character "The Jackal" (as played by Edward Fox and Bruce Willis) based on Carlos The Jackal?
[edit]Talking about the fictional assassin from the books and films. I once read somewhere that the real Carlos The Jackal didn't like being compared to the fictional character, because he said he was a professional Marxist revolutionary, not merely a hitman for hire to the highest bidder (not in the article about him at the moment, so maybe not true). 146.90.140.99 (talk) 02:47, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- No, the character wasn't based on Carlos. The films are based on the 1971 historical fiction novel The Day of the Jackal by Frederick Forsyth, which begins with a fairly accurate account of the actual 1962 assassination attempt on Charles de Gaulle by the French Air Force lieutenant colonel Jean Bastien-Thiry, which failed. Subsequently in the fictional plot the terrorists hire an unnamed English professional hitman whom they give the codename 'The Jackal'.
- Carlos the Jackal was a Venezuelan terrorist named Ilich Ramírez Sánchez operating in the 1970s and '80s. He was given the cover name 'Carlos' when in 1971 he joined the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. When authorities found some of his weapons stashed in a friend's house, a copy of Forsyth's novel was noticed on his friend's bookshelf, and a Guardian journalist then invented the nickname, as journalists are wont to do. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 03:15, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- There's also the fictionalised Ilich Ramírez Sánchez / Carlos the Jackal from the Jason Bourne novels. PiusImpavidus (talk) 10:44, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
References
[edit]I am on to creating an article on Lu Chun soon. If anyone has got references about him other than those on google, it would be great if you could share them here. Thanks, ExclusiveEditor 🔔 Ping Me! 11:20, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- Did you try the National Central Library of Taiwan? The library has a lot of collection about history of Tang dynasty. If you want to write a research paper for publication purpose, you need to know what have been written by others. Then the National Digital Library of Theses and Dissertation in Taiwan under the central library can be a good starting point. Stanleykswong (talk) 09:16, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Battle of the Granicus
[edit]This month some news broke about identification of the Battle of the Granicus site, stating in particular: "Professor Reyhan Korpe, a historian from Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University (ÇOMÜ) and Scientific Advisor to the “Alexander the Great Cultural Route” project, led the team that uncovered the battlefield". However, per Battle of the Granicus#Location it seems that the exact site has been known since at least Hammond's 1980 article. Am I reading the news correctly that what Korpe's team actually did was mapping Alexander’s journey to the Granicus rather than identifying the battle site per se? Per news, "Starting from Özbek village, Alexander’s army moved through Umurbey and Lapseki before descending into the Biga Plain". Brandmeistertalk 23:38, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
- If Körpe and his team wrote a paper about their discovery, I haven't found it, so I can only go by news articles reporting on their findings. Apparently, Körpe gave a presentation at the Çanakkale Provincial Directorate of Culture and Tourism for an audience of local mayors and district governors,[7] and I think the news reports reflect what he said there. Obviously, the presentation was in Turkish. Turkish news sources, based on an item provided by DHA, quote him as saying, "
Bölgede yaptığımız araştırmalarda antik kaynakları da çok dikkatli okuyarak, yorumlayarak savaşın aşağı yukarı tam olarak nerede olduğunu, hangi köyler arasında olduğunu, ovanın tam olarak neresinde olduğunu bulduk.
" [My underlining] Google Translate turns this into, "During our research in the region, by reading and interpreting ancient sources very carefully, we found out more or less exactly where the war took place, which villages it took place between, and where exactly on the plain it took place." I cannot reconcile "more or less" with "exactly". - The news reports do not reveal the location identified by Körpe, who is certainly aware of Hammond's theory, since he cited the latter's 1980 article in earlier publications. One possibility is that the claim will turn out to have been able to confirm Hammond's theory definitively. Another possibility is that the location they identified is not "more or less exactly" the same as that of Hammond's theory. --Lambiam 02:08, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
January 1
[edit]Has there ever been an incident of a serial killer murdering another serial killer?
[edit]Question as topic. Has this ever happened outside of the movies? 146.90.140.99 (talk) 05:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- This is an interesting question. Just because you can't find any incident, doesn't mean this kind of case never happened (type II error). Stanleykswong (talk) 09:57, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- Apparently yes: Dean Corll was killed by one of his his accomplices, Elmer Wayne Henley. --Antiquary (talk) 12:13, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- Of course it would be more notable if the two were not connected to each other. --142.112.149.206 (talk) 08:22, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- If you're including underworld figures, this happens not infrequently. As an Aussie, a case that springs to mind was Andrew Veniamin murdering Victor Pierce. Both underworld serial murderers. I'm sure there are many similar cases in organised crime. Eliyohub (talk) 08:40, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Aren't hired killers distinct from the usual concept of a serial killer? ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 09:11, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Outside the movies? Sure, on TV. Clarityfiend (talk) 21:09, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- The Dexter character from the multiple Dexter series is based on Pedro Rodrigues Filho, who killed criminals, including murderers. It is necessary to decide how many merders each of those murders did in order to decide if you would want to classify them as serial killers or just general murderers. 68.187.174.155 (talk) 19:04, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
- It sounds like the Death Wish (1974 film) film series might have also drawn inspiration from Filho. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 03:24, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
Another serial killer question
[edit]about 20 years ago, I saw a documentary where it was said that the majority of serial killers kill for sexual gratification, or for some sort of revenge against their upbringing, or because in their head that God (or someone else) told them to kill. But the FBI agent on the documentary said something about how their worst nightmare was an extremely intelligent, methodical killer who was doing what he did to make some sort of grand statement about society/political statement. That this sort of killer was one step ahead of law enforcement and knew all of their methods. Like a Hannibal Lecter type individual. He said that he could count on the fingers of one hand the sort of person who he was talking about, but that these killers were the most difficult of all to catch and by far the most dangerous. Can you tell me any examples of these killers? 146.90.140.99 (talk) 05:49, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- Ted Kaczynski ("the Unabomber") comes to mind. --142.112.149.206 (talk) 07:06, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- I second this. Ted the Unabomber only got finally caught by chance, only after his brother happened to recognise him. Eliyohub (talk) 08:43, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- More than a few killed for money; Michael Swango apparently just for joy. The case of Leopold and Loeb comes to mind, who hoped to demonstrate superior intellect; if they had not bungled their first killing despite spending seven months planning everything, more would surely have followed. --Lambiam 15:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- Joseph Paul Franklin. Prezbo (talk) 13:51, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
Missing fire of London
[edit]British Movietone News covered the burning down of the Crystal Palace in this somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but apparently factual, film. At 00:15 it refers to 'the biggest London blaze since 1892'. What happened in 1892 that could be considered comparable to the Palace's demise, or at least sufficiently well-known to be referred to without further explanation?
I can see nothing in History of London, List of town and city fires, List of fires or 1892. The London Fire Journal records "May 8, 1892 - Scott's Oyster Bar, Coventry Street. 4 dead.", but also lists later fires with larger death tolls. Does anyone have access to the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society's article Fires in London and the Metropolitan Fire Brigade in 1892? -- Verbarson talkedits 13:48, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- I see the Great Fire of 1892 destroyed half the capital of Newfoundland and Labrador. But comparing that to the Crystal Palace fire, which destroyed only the Crystal Palace, is an odd choice. Card Zero (talk) 14:45, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- It would also be odd to call it a "London blaze". --Lambiam 15:15, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- The closest I found was the 1861 Tooley Street fire. Alansplodge (talk) 16:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- Also a large fire at Wood Street in the City in 1882 (perhaps later mistaken for 1892?). [8] Alansplodge (talk) 16:40, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- I too wonder whether the Movietone newsreader was the victim of a typo. In December 1897 Cripplegate suffered "the greatest fire...that has occurred in the City since the Great Fire of 1666". [9]. --Antiquary (talk) 11:46, 2 January 2025 (UTC) That's also mentioned, I now see, in Verbarson's London Fire Journal link. --Antiquary (talk) 12:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Also a large fire at Wood Street in the City in 1882 (perhaps later mistaken for 1892?). [8] Alansplodge (talk) 16:40, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- The closest I found was the 1861 Tooley Street fire. Alansplodge (talk) 16:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- @Verbarson: Fires in London and the Metropolitan Fire Brigade in 1892 is available on JSTOR as part of the Wikipedia Library. It doesn't give details of any individual fires. DuncanHill (talk) 16:51, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- @DuncanHill:, so it is. The DOI link in that article is broken; I should have been more persistent with the JSTOR search. Thank you. -- Verbarson talkedits 17:15, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
- Unexpectedly, from the Portland Guardian (that's Portland, Victoria): GREAT FIRE IN LIONDON. A great fire is raging in the heart of the London ducks. Dated 26 November 1892. Card Zero (talk) 07:02, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Oh, the poor ducks. --Lambiam 12:05, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- The whole OCR transcript of that blurred newspaper column is hilarious. "The fames have obtained a firm bold", indeed! {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.6.84.253 (talk) 12:07, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Setting aside the unsung history of the passionate ducks of London, what I see in that clipping is:
- 1892 - Australia is still a colony (18+ years to go)
- which is linked to the UK by (i) long-distance shipping, and (ii) telegraph cables
- because of (i), the London docks are economically important
- because of (ii), they get daily updates from London
- Therefore, the state of the London docks (and the possible fate of the Australian ships there) is of greater importance to Australian merchants than it is to most Londoners. So headlines in Portland may not reflect the lesser priority of that news in the UK? -- Verbarson talkedits 17:15, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes, I was highly impressed by the rapidity of the Victorian Victorian telegraph system there. But my money's on Antiquary's theory, above - I think the newsreel announcer's script had 1892 as a typo for 1897. Card Zero (talk) 18:31, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Which I have finally found (in WP) at Timeline of London (19th century)#1890 to 1899 (using the same cite as Antiquary). It does look persuasively big ("The Greatest Fire of Modern Times" - Star), though there were no fatalities. Despite that, an inquest was held. It sounds much more likely than the docks fire to have been memorable in 1936. -- Verbarson talkedits 19:26, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes, I was highly impressed by the rapidity of the Victorian Victorian telegraph system there. But my money's on Antiquary's theory, above - I think the newsreel announcer's script had 1892 as a typo for 1897. Card Zero (talk) 18:31, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
January 4
[edit]historical in the sense that the story of what happened, happened to a different city but was transferred to Jericho?Rich (talk) 05:37, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
- It might be. But then again, it might not be. Following whatever links there are to the subject within the article might be a good start for finding out about whatever theories there might be. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 07:19, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
- To believe that the events in the story are historical, whether for Jericho or another city, amounts to believing in a miracle. Barring miracles, no amount of horn-blowing and shouting can bring defensive walls down.
- Jericho was destroyed in the 16th century BCE. The first version of the Book of Joshua was written in the late 7th century BCE, so there are 9 centuries between the destruction and the recording of the story. An orally transmitted account, passed on through some thirty generations, might have undergone considerable changes, turning a conquest with conventional war practices, possibly with sound effects meant to install fear in the besieged, into a miraculous event. --Lambiam 10:50, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
- [Edit Conflicts] The sack was described in the Book of Joshua, which however was likely compiled around 640–540 BCE, some six or seven centuries after the supposed Hebrew conquest of Canaan. Some scholars now discount the whole Exodus and Conquest narrative as political lobbying written by Jewish exiles in Babylonia (which the Persians later took over) hoping to be given control over the former territory of Israel as well as being restored to their native Judah.
- The narrative logically explains why a people once 'Egyptian slaves' (like all subjects of the Pharoah) were later free in Canaan, but by then it was likely forgotten that Egypt once controlled almost the entirety of Canaan, from which it withdrew in the Late Bronze Age Collapse. The Hebrew peoples of the (always separate) states of Israel and Judah emerged from Canaanite culture in situ, though minor folk movements (for example, of the Tribe of Levi, who often had Egyptian names) may have had a role. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.6.84.253 (talk) 10:52, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
- I heard the sack of Jericho in book of Joshua was an explanatory myth, not some kind of Exile claim to ownership, which is more logical anyway. If there were a more recent city that was sacked, it would be less than the estimate of 30 geneations of remembrance. I did forget to stress that when I asked if the story could be almost historical that I wasn't suggesting that Jericho's walls were supernaturally destroyed by trumpets. After all, the actual method of conquest in the story could be the connivance of the traitor Rahab.Rich (talk) 02:24, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Oh, certainly the myth likely existed before it was consolidated with others into the written documents, just as stories about the mythical Danel may have been adapted into the fictional Daniel of the supposedly contemporary Book of Daniel describing his exploits in the 6th century BCE court of Nebuchadnezzar II, although scholars generally agree that this was actually written in the period 167–163 BCE. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.6.84.253 (talk) 07:15, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I heard the sack of Jericho in book of Joshua was an explanatory myth, not some kind of Exile claim to ownership, which is more logical anyway. If there were a more recent city that was sacked, it would be less than the estimate of 30 geneations of remembrance. I did forget to stress that when I asked if the story could be almost historical that I wasn't suggesting that Jericho's walls were supernaturally destroyed by trumpets. After all, the actual method of conquest in the story could be the connivance of the traitor Rahab.Rich (talk) 02:24, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- The Israelites partly emerged in situ (though there was also a definite nomad/pastoralist component), especially along the West Bank hill-chain (running in an approximate north-south direction) where the Four-room house took hold among the rural inhabitants there. They were not originally city-dwellers, and their culture could not have been consolidated until the power of the Canaanite cities in that area had declined, and it's not too hard to believe that they sometimes moved against what cities remained, so that part of the conquest narrative is not necessarily a pure myth. Jericho was in the valley (not along the hill-chain), so was not part of the core settled rural agricultural four-room house area, but was inhabited more by pastoralists/animal-herders who became affiliated... AnonMoos (talk) 21:19, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
Accessibility, for URLs in text document
[edit]We've been asked to increase the accessibility of all documents we produce, esp. syllabi. I use WordPerfect, where I don't seem to be able to have a URL with a descriptive text in the way Word allows. 508 is the operative term. I'm trying this out: "Princeton University has some handy tips on what is called “active reading, on this webpage: https://mcgraw.princeton.edu/active-reading-strategies." In other words, descriptive text followed by a bare URL. Is that good for screen readers? Graham87, how does this look/sound to you? Thanks for your help, Drmies (talk) 18:03, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
- @Drmies: I wouldn't make a general rule about that as it's context-dependent ... depending on how many URL's are in a document, reading them might get annoying. In general I'd prefer to read a link with descriptive text rather than a raw URL, because the latter aren't always very human-readable ... but I don't think this is really an accessibility issue; just do what would make sense for a sighted reader here. Graham87 (talk) 00:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Graham87, thanks. There's only one or two in a ten-page document. According to our bosses, this is an accessibility issue--but it seems to me as if someone sounded an alarm and now everyone who doesn't actually know much about the issue is telling us to comply with a set of directives which they haven't given us. Instead, we are directed to some self-help course that involves only Word. It's fun. Drmies (talk) 15:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Stop using WordPerfect and start using Word. --Viennese Waltz 07:05, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I don't know why, but it seems many legal professionals prefer WordPerfect. Stanleykswong (talk) 10:21, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Viennese Waltz, thanks so much for that helpful suggestion. Drmies (talk) 15:27, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I don't know why, but it seems many legal professionals prefer WordPerfect. Stanleykswong (talk) 10:21, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- You can create a hyperlink to a file using WordPerfect. First, you select text or a graphic you want to create a hyperlink. Then you click “Tools”, select “Hyperlink” and then type a path or document you want to link to. Stanleykswong (talk) 10:18, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Stanleykswong, that sounds like it might work: thank you. Drmies (talk) 15:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Do web browsers display WordPerfect documents? I don't think I have a WordPerfect viewing app installed on my platform (macOS). Does anyone have a URL of a WordPerfect document handy? --Lambiam 14:56, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- User:Lambiam, WP translates easily to PDF and to Word. I use PDFs in my LMS. Drmies (talk) 15:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- You can see why WordPerfect is popular in legal circles at WordPerfect#Key characteristics (fourth bullet point) and WordPerfect#Faithful customers. 2A00:23A8:1:D801:8C31:BAC2:88CF:A92B (talk) 16:48, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I don't have the feeling this answers my question. Would I have to find and install an app that translates .wpd documents to .pdf or .doc documents? Would I then be able to tell my browser to use this app? The question is informative, not meant to bash a product that I have zero familiarity with. --Lambiam 17:05, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I've opened early WordPerfect (WP 5.1) documents using both Word and Firefox without any need for a third party translator. The only trick was changing the file extension to .WPD so that my computer could create the file association more easily. In the old days, file extensions were not so rigorously restrictive and many files ended up with extensions like .01 or .v4 or whatever. Matt Deres (talk) 17:39, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I cannot check if it would work for me, for lack of access to any WordPerfect document of any age. --Lambiam 21:22, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Here's a bunch of them, in the DOJ archives. Card Zero (talk) 00:25, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- Thanks, finally an answer. When I click on a .wpd link, the file is downloaded. I can then open and view it with LibreOffice. (I can also open it with OpenOffice, but then I get to see garbage like ╖#<m\r╛∞¼_4YÖ¤ⁿVíüd╤?Y.) --Lambiam 14:44, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- Here's a bunch of them, in the DOJ archives. Card Zero (talk) 00:25, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- I cannot check if it would work for me, for lack of access to any WordPerfect document of any age. --Lambiam 21:22, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I've opened early WordPerfect (WP 5.1) documents using both Word and Firefox without any need for a third party translator. The only trick was changing the file extension to .WPD so that my computer could create the file association more easily. In the old days, file extensions were not so rigorously restrictive and many files ended up with extensions like .01 or .v4 or whatever. Matt Deres (talk) 17:39, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes, web browsers do display WordPerfect documents. If you google “wpd online viewer”, you will find a lot of them. Stanleykswong (talk) 23:04, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- When I google [“wpd online viewer”], I get two hits, one to this page and one to a site where you can upload a WPD document in order to be able to view it online. What happens when you view an html page with something like <a href="file:///my-document.wpd">Looky here!</a> embedded? --Lambiam 13:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes, you're right. Only Docx2doc (https://www.docx2doc.com/convert) and Jumpshare provide online viewers now. However, there are still other offline alternative, such as Cisdem (https://www.cisdem.com/document-reader-mac.html) and Apache. Stanleykswong (talk) 09:46, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- Some other text editors, such as TextMaker, can open and view WPD files. However, after editing, the WPD files can only be saved as other formats, such as docx or doc. Stanleykswong (talk) 09:49, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- When I google [“wpd online viewer”], I get two hits, one to this page and one to a site where you can upload a WPD document in order to be able to view it online. What happens when you view an html page with something like <a href="file:///my-document.wpd">Looky here!</a> embedded? --Lambiam 13:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- User:Lambiam, WP translates easily to PDF and to Word. I use PDFs in my LMS. Drmies (talk) 15:34, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
One more thing that just came up--we got rapped on the fingers though the mandatory "training" didn't touch on it. We've been told that hyphens are bad. The internet tells me that screenreaders have trouble with hyphenated words, but does this apply also to date ranges? Graham87, does yours get this right, "Spring Break: 17-21 March"? For now I'm going with "Spring Break, 17 to 21 March", but it just doesn't look good to my traditional eyes. And on top of that I have to use sans serif fonts... Drmies (talk) 17:44, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- To give another example, I have to redo this: "Final grades are computed along the following scale: A: 90-100; B+: 87-89; B: 80-86; C+: 77-79; C: 70-76; D+: 67-69; D: 60-66; F: Below 60." Drmies (talk) 17:49, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- @Drmies: Under its default setting my screen reader does read out the hyphens, but I have my punctuation set lower than normal because I don't like hearing too much information so it doesn't for me. The other major Windows screen reader, NVDA, also reads them out by default. Graham87 (talk) 01:05, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Thanks Graham87--I appreciate your expertise. Drmies (talk) 01:14, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- As recently discussed on the Help or Teahouse desk, a date or other range should technically use an unspaced En Dash, not a hyphen (according to most manuals of style, including our own), but I doubt that screen readers would notice the difference. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.6.84.253 (talk) 08:23, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Thanks Graham87--I appreciate your expertise. Drmies (talk) 01:14, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- @Drmies: Under its default setting my screen reader does read out the hyphens, but I have my punctuation set lower than normal because I don't like hearing too much information so it doesn't for me. The other major Windows screen reader, NVDA, also reads them out by default. Graham87 (talk) 01:05, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
January 5
[edit]How to search for awkwardly named topics
[edit]On and off I've been looking for good sources for the concepts of general union and trade union federation so as to improve the articles, but every time I try I only get one or two somewhat helpful results. Many of the results are not of material about the concepts of general union or trade union federations, but often about a specific instance of them, and as a result hard to gleen a lot from about the broader concept. Typcially this is because of issues such as many general unions being named as such (for example Transport & General Workers' Union). I'm aware of the search trick that'd be something like "general union" -Transport & General Workers' Union
but I've found it largely cumbersome and ineffective, often seeming to filter out any potential material all together
Thought I'd ask because I'd like to improve those articles, and this is an issue I'm sure would come up again for me otherwise on other articles Bejakyo (talk) 13:22, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Do any of the articles listed at Unionism help? Blueboar (talk) 14:35, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- If you search for ["a trade union federation" -"is a trade union federation"], most hits will not be about a specific instance. --Lambiam 14:43, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
January 6
[edit]I asked about this at the article talk page and WikiProject Palestine, no response. Maybe it's not a question Wikipedia can answer, but I'm curious and it would improve the article. Prezbo (talk) 09:13, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- It's acronym (or an abbreviation) for the four principles enumerated in the article. Like how the Bill of Rights is the first ten amendments to the US Constitution. Abductive (reasoning) 13:16, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- Thawabit is short for alThawabit alWataniat alFilastinia, the "Palestinian National Constants". Thawabit is the plural of thabit, "something permanent or invariable; constant". --Lambiam 13:36, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- What I'm saying is that I'm not sure the article is correct. The sourcing is thin, reference are paywalled, offline, or dead, and Google isn't helpful. Other scholarly and activist sources give different versions of the Thawabet, e.g.This one adds the release of Palestinian prisoners, this one adds that Palestine is indivisible. The article says that these principles were formulated by the PLO in 1977 but doesn't link to a primary source (like the Bill of Rights). I don't know if you're a subject matter expert here, I'm not--actually trying to figure this out. Prezbo (talk) 13:39, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I was able to access the paywalled articles through the Wikipedia library, which adds a little more clarity. Prezbo (talk) 10:18, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- According to this source, a fifth principle was added in 2012: "the objection to recognize the State of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people". However, I cannot find this in the cited source --Lambiam 13:29, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I checked the Arabic Wikipedia article before I responded above, and they list the same four principles. Abductive (reasoning) 13:41, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- That appears to be a translation of the English article, so this doesn't mean much to me. Prezbo (talk) 13:44, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I've poked around a little, and there doesn't appear to have been any change. Abductive (reasoning) 13:59, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- The list in the book I linked to above is not the same as that in our article. The book does not include a "right to resistance", but demands the release by Israel of all Palestinian prisoners. It would be good to have a sourced, authoritative version, in particular the actual 1977 formulation by the PLO. Of course, nothing is so changeable as political principles, so one should expect non-trivial amendments made in the course of time. --Lambiam 14:21, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- That book is incorrect. Abductive (reasoning) 21:07, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- How do you know? --Lambiam 00:04, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- That book is incorrect. Abductive (reasoning) 21:07, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- The list in the book I linked to above is not the same as that in our article. The book does not include a "right to resistance", but demands the release by Israel of all Palestinian prisoners. It would be good to have a sourced, authoritative version, in particular the actual 1977 formulation by the PLO. Of course, nothing is so changeable as political principles, so one should expect non-trivial amendments made in the course of time. --Lambiam 14:21, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I've poked around a little, and there doesn't appear to have been any change. Abductive (reasoning) 13:59, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- The text does not explicitly say, "among others", but the use of بها بما في ذلك suggests that this list of four principles is not exhaustive. --Lambiam 00:27, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- That appears to be a translation of the English article, so this doesn't mean much to me. Prezbo (talk) 13:44, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I checked the Arabic Wikipedia article before I responded above, and they list the same four principles. Abductive (reasoning) 13:41, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
January 7
[edit]Is there such a thing as a joke type index?
[edit]Has anyone produced an index of joke types and schemata (schemes?) along the lines of the Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index for folk tales? More generally what kind of studies of the structure of jokes and humor are available? Has anyone come up with an A.I. that can generate new jokes? 178.51.8.23 (talk) 18:15, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- For starters, there's Index of joke types. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 21:14, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
- AI generated jokes have been around for years. Just Google for it. They range from weird to meh. Shantavira|feed me 10:38, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Gershon Legman made an attempt of sorts in his two joke collections, but it was kind of a half-assed approach: there are a bunch of indices printed on pages, but no key tying them together per se. His interest was in the core of the subject of the joke, so he might have said, for example, that these jokes were all based on unresolved Oedipal drives while those jokes were based on hatred of the mother (he was a capital "F" Freudian). The link Bugs shared is more about the formats of the jokes themselves, though some are also differentiated by their subject (albeit in a more superficial way than Legman attempted). Matt Deres (talk) 21:15, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Arthur Koestler has attempted to develop a theory of humour (as well as art and discovery), first in Insight and Outlook (1949) and slightly elaborated further in The Act of Creation (1964). He did, however, not develop a typology of jokes. IMO Victor Raskin's script-based semantic theory of humor presented in Semantic Mechanisms of Humor (1985) is essentially the same as Koestler's, but Raskin does not reference Koestler in the book. For an extensive overview of theories of humour see Contemporary Linguistic Theories of Humour. --Lambiam 00:51, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
January 8
[edit]The Nest magazine, UK, 1920s
[edit]I have a copy of The Grocer's Window Book. London: The Nest Magazine. 1922., "arranged by The Editor of The Nest". The address of The Nest Magazine is given as 15 Arthur Street, London, EC4. It contains suggestions for arranging window displays in an attractive manner to attract customers into independent grocer's shops. I would be interested to know more about The Nest. I suspect it may have something to do with Nestles Milk, as 1) the back cover is a full-page advertisement for Nestles and Ideal Milk, and there are several other adverts for Nestles products in the book, and 2) one of the suggested window displays involves spelling out "IDEAL" with tins of Ideal Milk. Thank you, DuncanHill (talk) 02:13, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
Nest, 1922. M.—1st. 6d. Nestle and Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk Co., 15 Arthur Street, E.c.4
[10] according to Willing's press guide and advertisers directory and handbook. I also found it in The Newspaper press directory and advertisers' guide, which merely confirms the address and the price of sixpence. Both of these were for the year 1922, which suggests to me that the magazine might not have survived into 1923. M signifies monthly, and 1st probably means published on the 1st of the month. Card Zero (talk) 19:37, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
Historical U.S. population data by age (year 1968)
[edit]In the year 1968, what percentage of the United States population was under 25 years old? I am wondering about this because I am watching the movie Wild in the Streets, and want to know if a percentage claimed in the film was pulled out of a hat or was based in fact. 2601:18A:C500:E830:CE4:140C:29E5:594F (talk) 04:17, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- What percentage did they give? ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 05:14, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- 52% (it's on the movie poster). Card Zero (talk) 16:11, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Tabel No. 6 in the 1971 US Census Report (p. 8) gives, for 1960, 80093 Kpeople age 0–24 on a total population of 180007 Kpeople, corresponding to 44.5%, and, for 1970, 94095 Kpeople age 0–24 on a total population of 204265 Kpeople, corresponding to 46.1%. Interpolation results in an estimate of 45.8% for 1968. --Lambiam 12:36, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Who are Kpeople? ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 23:48, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Reverse engineering and a spot of maths: k = kilo = 1 000 = 1 thousand. Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM (talk) 10:49, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- So, Kpeople means 1 thousandpeople. ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 18:07, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Reverse engineering and a spot of maths: k = kilo = 1 000 = 1 thousand. Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM (talk) 10:49, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Who are Kpeople? ←Baseball Bugs What's up, Doc? carrots→ 23:48, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
Countries with greatest land mass
[edit]Can someone please fill in these blanks? Thank you.
1. Currently, the USA ranks as number _____ among countries with the greatest land mass.
2. If the USA were to "annex" or "acquire" both Canada and Greenland, the USA would rank as number _____ among countries with the greatest land mass.
Thanks. 32.209.69.24 (talk) 05:20, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- See List of countries and dependencies by area, which gives a nuanced answer to your first question, and the answer to your second question is obvious from the data in the article.-Gadfium (talk) 05:24, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- 4 and 1. But the chance of Trump to annex Canada is close to zero. Stanleykswong (talk) 09:58, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Also the US somehow annexing Greenland is infinitely improbable. It's part of the European Union. Alansplodge (talk) 12:59, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- Trump's presidential term is four years and the process of discussion would take longer than that. Stanleykswong (talk) 14:20, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- No it isn't. —Tamfang (talk) 00:16, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes it is effectively: Greenland and the European Union says "all citizens of the Realm of Denmark residing in Greenland (Greenlandic nationals) are EU citizens". Alansplodge (talk) 14:16, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- But Denmark is a NATO member. The US invading Greenland will trigger NATO Article 5. --Lambiam 11:14, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Also, US is a member of NATO. The situation will be very complicated. Stanleykswong (talk) 11:37, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- But Denmark is a NATO member. The US invading Greenland will trigger NATO Article 5. --Lambiam 11:14, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Also the US somehow annexing Greenland is infinitely improbable. It's part of the European Union. Alansplodge (talk) 12:59, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
January 11
[edit]JeJu AirFlight 2216
[edit]Is this the beginning of a new conspiracy theory? On 11 January, the Aviation and Railway Accident Investigation Board stated that both the CVR and FDR had stopped recording four minutes before the aircraft crashed.[79]
Why would the flight recorder stop recording after the bird strike? Don't they have backup battery for flight recorders? Ohanian (talk) 09:59, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- Do you mean JeJu Air Flight 2216? Stanleykswong (talk) 14:27, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes, you are right, flight 2216 not 2219. I have updated the title. Ohanian (talk) 14:51, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
It says on wikipedia that "With the reduced power requirements of solid-state recorders, it is now practical to incorporate a battery in the units, so that recording can continue until flight termination, even if the aircraft electrical system fails. ". So how can the CVR stop recording the pilot's voices??? Ohanian (talk) 10:11, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- The aircraft type was launched in 1994, this particular aircraft entered service in 2009. It may have had an older type of recorder.
- I too am puzzled by some aspects of this crash, but I'm sure the investigators will enlighten us when they're ready. PiusImpavidus (talk) 11:41, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- Having looked into this briefly, it sounds like an independent power supply for the CVR (generally called a Recorder Independent Power Supply/RIPS) was only mandated for aircraft manufacturer from 2010 in the US [11] [12]. I doubt anyone else required them before. [13] So not particularly surprising if this aircraft didn't have one. I think, but am not sure, that even in the US older aircraft aren't required to be retrofitted with these newer recorders. (See e.g. [14] [15] [16].) In fact, the only regulator I could find with such a mandate is the Canadian one and that isn't until 2026 at the earliest [17]. Of course even if the FAA did require it, it's a moot point unless it was required for any aircraft flying to the US and this aircraft was flying to the US. I doubt it was required in South Korea given that it doesn't seem to be required in that many other places. There is a lot of confusing discussion about what the backup system if any on this aircraft would have been like [18] [19] [20]. The most I gathered from these discussions is that because the aircraft was such an old design where nearly everything was mechanical, a backup power supply wasn't particularly important in its design. The only expert commentary in RS I could find was in Reuters [21] "
a former transport ministry accident investigator, said the discovery of the missing data from the budget airline's Boeing 737-800 jet's crucial final minutes was surprising and suggests all power, including backup, may have been cut, which is rare.
" Note that the RIPS only have to work for 10 minutes, I think the timeline of this suggests power should not have been lost for 10 minutes at the 4 minutes point, but it's not something I looked in to. BTW, I think this is sort of explained in some of the other sources but if not see [22]. Having a RIPS is a little more complicated than just having a box with a battery. There's no point recording nothing so you need to ensure that the RIPS is connected to/powering mics in the cabin. Nil Einne (talk) 01:28, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Having looked into this briefly, it sounds like an independent power supply for the CVR (generally called a Recorder Independent Power Supply/RIPS) was only mandated for aircraft manufacturer from 2010 in the US [11] [12]. I doubt anyone else required them before. [13] So not particularly surprising if this aircraft didn't have one. I think, but am not sure, that even in the US older aircraft aren't required to be retrofitted with these newer recorders. (See e.g. [14] [15] [16].) In fact, the only regulator I could find with such a mandate is the Canadian one and that isn't until 2026 at the earliest [17]. Of course even if the FAA did require it, it's a moot point unless it was required for any aircraft flying to the US and this aircraft was flying to the US. I doubt it was required in South Korea given that it doesn't seem to be required in that many other places. There is a lot of confusing discussion about what the backup system if any on this aircraft would have been like [18] [19] [20]. The most I gathered from these discussions is that because the aircraft was such an old design where nearly everything was mechanical, a backup power supply wasn't particularly important in its design. The only expert commentary in RS I could find was in Reuters [21] "
- The aircraft made 13 flights in 48 hours, meaning less than 3.7 hours per flight. Is it too much? Its last flight from Bangkok to Korea had a normal flight time for slightly more than 5 hours. Does it mean the pilots had to rush through preflight checks? Stanleykswong (talk) 15:31, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- With this kind of schedule, it is questionable that the aircraft is well-maintained. Stanleykswong (talk) 15:32, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
The OP seems to be obsessed with creating a new conspiracy theory out of very little real information, and even less expertise. Perhaps a new hobby is in order? DOR (ex-HK) (talk) 19:37, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
Just for info, the article is Jeju Air Flight 2216. This question has not yet been raised at the Talk page there. Thanks. Martinevans123 (talk) 19:42, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- ...nor should it be, per WP:TALK. Shantavira|feed me 10:03, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- I disagree. It's quite a critical aspect in the investigation of the accident. Not sure it's some kind of "conspiracy", however. Martinevans123 (talk) 10:18, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- But I suggest it should only be raised if, and to the extent that, it is mentioned in Reliable sources, not OR speculated about by/in the Wikipedia article or (at length) the Talk page. On the Talk page it might be appropriate to ask if there are Reliable sources discussing it. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.8.29.20 (talk) 10:53, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Quite. Martinevans123 (talk) 10:54, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Have now posed the question there. Martinevans123 (talk) 12:07, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- But I suggest it should only be raised if, and to the extent that, it is mentioned in Reliable sources, not OR speculated about by/in the Wikipedia article or (at length) the Talk page. On the Talk page it might be appropriate to ask if there are Reliable sources discussing it. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.8.29.20 (talk) 10:53, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- I disagree. It's quite a critical aspect in the investigation of the accident. Not sure it's some kind of "conspiracy", however. Martinevans123 (talk) 10:18, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
Fortune 500
[edit]Is there any site where one can view complete Fortune 500 and Fortune Global 500 for free? These indices are so widely used so is there such a site? --40bus (talk) 20:05, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- You can view the complete list here: https://fortune.com/ranking/global500/ Stanleykswong (talk) 21:50, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
January 12
[edit]Questions
[edit]- Why did the United Kingdom not seek euro adoption when it was in EU?
- Why did Russia, Belarus and Ukraine not join EU during Eastern Enlargement in 2004, unlike many other former Eastern Bloc countries?
- Why is Russia not in NATO?
- If all African countries are in AU, why are all European countries not in EU?
- Why Faroe Islands and Greenland have not become sovereign states yet?
- Can non-sovereign states or country subdivisions have embassies?
- Why French overseas departments have not become sovereign states yet? --40bus (talk) 13:35, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- I see that UCL offer a course on Modern European History & Politics. Had you considered that, perhaps? Martinevans123 (talk) 13:43, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- See: United Kingdom and the euro
- Russia, Belarus and Ukraine do not meet the criteria for joining the European Union
- If you google "Nato's primary purpose", you will know.
- The two do not have logical connection.
- They are too small to be an independent country
- Non-sovereign states or countries, for example Wales and Scotland, are countries within a sovereign state. They don't have embassies of their own.
- Unlike the British territories, all people living in the French territories are fully enfranchised and can vote for the French national assembly, so they are fully represented in the French democracy and do not have the need of becoming a sovereign state.
- Stanleykswong (talk) 15:16, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- I see that UCL offer a course on Modern European History & Politics. Had you considered that, perhaps? Martinevans123 (talk) 13:43, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Too many questions all at once… but to address the first with an overly simplistic answer: The British preferred the Pound. It had been one of the strongest currencies in the world for generations, and keeping it was a matter of national pride. Blueboar (talk) 14:03, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- 1. See United Kingdom and the euro
- 2. "... geopolitical considerations, such as preserving Russia’s status as a former imperial power, is more important to Moscow than economic issues when it comes to foreign policy. Russia’s sees [in 2004] relations with the EU to be much less important than bilateral relations with the EU member-states that carry the most political weight, namely France, Germany and, to some extent, Britain. Russia thus clearly emphasizes politics over economics. While NATO enlargement was seen by Moscow to be a very important event, Russia barely noticed the enlargement of the EU on May 1." Russia and the European Union (May 2004). See also Russia–European Union relations.
- 3. See Russia–NATO relations.
- Alansplodge (talk) 14:10, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Someone's bored again and expecting us to entertain them. Nanonic (talk) 15:59, 12 January 2025 (UTC)