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All articles filed in Podcast transcripts

Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJanuary 12, 2018January 12, 2018

Dolores (Notre-Dame des Sept Douleurs)

This post went live before I intended it to, so I’ll briefly outline what I want this for. In Heirs To Merlin, it starts the Corruption of House Tytalus with a fallen covenant in Cornwall. I need to address that, and my first question was: given that demons lack any virtue, and thus cannot plan,…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJanuary 5, 2018October 1, 2017

Dunsany: The City on Mallington Moor

Dunsany’s work here describes a regio. It might be Faerie in origin, but could also be a covenant which has encircled itself with a spell like The Shrouded Glen. In this post, Dunsany’s words are in black, my interjections in green. Besides the old shepherd at Lingwold whose habits render him unreliable I am probably…

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Click here for transcripts for the podcast episodes published in December 2017

Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsDecember 28, 2017December 14, 2017

Jaynes’s bicameral mind in Mythic Europe

So, fans of Westworld can skip this next 15 seconds, but when discussing philosophy and Mythic Europe, I need to lay out the ground.  In 1976 Jaynes published a book called The Origins of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind. It was popular in the science fiction community. The core premise is that before…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsDecember 21, 2017December 30, 2017

Wittgenstein’s Lion as a model for the Blatant Gift

Wittgenstein is one of my favorite philosophers, regardless of what his philosophy actually was. At one point, he thought the primary task of philosophers was to stand in the corner of other people’s lectures and yell ‘Semantics!”at them whenever they suggested  metaphysics was worth considering. Maybe you need to be me to think that’s really,…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsDecember 14, 2017October 6, 2017

Was phyllo pastry invented by the Order of Hermes?

Phyllo pastry (or Filo to our American friends) has a disputed origin. The name means “leaf” pastry, which I’ll come back to later. If you accept that the earliest modern dish using it is baklava, it first appears in the Thirteenth Century, in the the Eastern Roman Empire. Baklava is basically interlayered flaky pastry and nuts,…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsDecember 7, 2017October 1, 2017

Dunsany: How Nuth would have practiced his art upon the gnoles

Let’s just jump into it:   Despite the advertisements of rival firms, it is probable that every tradesman knows that nobody in business at the present time has a position equal to that of Mr. Nuth. To those outside the magic circle of business, his name is scarcely known; he does not need to advertise,…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsNovember 23, 2017September 22, 2017

The Trophaeum of Granatum of Tytalus

A trophaeum is a monument to military victory. For example, if you killed a hundred enemy warriors and piled their armaments together, that hill would be a trophaeum. I’m struck that in the modern Order, there are no trophaea to the Schism War. It may be that the Guernicus demand for Damnatio Memoriae, which led…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsNovember 20, 2017November 23, 2017

Cornwall: Industries

Polwhele doesn’t give a lot of information here: the chapters are perhaps meant to be read in the context of equivalents from the previous era. This feels like a weak chapter. Time to drop this Polwhele guy and find something a bit more detailed. Agriculture A lot of “in kind” rent is paid: money rents…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsNovember 19, 2017November 23, 2017

Cornwall: Military Architecture

Polwhele says that if a castle existed before the Normans, it’s in his previous book.  I’m not saying I now jovially hate him, but he is putting extra weight on the side of the scale that says I need to go back and read his first volume. Honestly I don’t want to, because it’s slightly…

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