ARS plusplus - ARS plusplus Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 History 2 ARS++ explained by its name 3 See also History ARS++ has been developed in 2002 for the book Undiluted Programming (a description of the book is available on page [1]) to demonstrate ARS based programming in a real world context. ARS++ is used in the book to implement an A++ interpreter and an XML Database System. Even the implementation of ARS++ in C was used to demonstrate ARS based programming. Principally the programming language Scheme would have been perfectly alright to be used for these demonstration programs if Scheme would include primitives supporting network programming, database programming plus a few others required in this context. The definition of the programming language Scheme does not include those primitives.
Ars Magica - Ars Magica Ars Magica is a roleplaying game set in Mythic Europe, an idealised version of Europe around 1300 AD. Player characters play either wizards (magi, sing: magus (male), maga (female)) or companions (comites, sing. comes). The basic premise is that wizards did live in the Middle Ages, and clustered in specific citadels (called covenants), often built in places of power. Companions are selected skilled warriors and rangers which help wizards run these covenants. The game system is rather innovative, with everything based on d10. The core of the system (not surprisingly) is the magic system: one or more of five actions (create, command, perceive, change, destroy) are combined with multiple objects (fire, water, air, earth, plant, mind, images, animals, magic force....) to achieve countless effects..
Ars Electronica Center - Ars Electronica Center The Ars Electronica Center is situated in Linz at the northern side of the Danube on the opposite side of the city hall of Linz. It has been built on the right side of the Nibelungenbrücke and is as well known as AEC- the abbreviation of Ars Electronica Center. It is also called the "Museum of the future" and can be seen as one of the most important sights of Linz because the most modern techniques on the Technology sector are shown to the visitors of the museum. The museum has got six floors full of results of creative work from hi-tech freaks all over the world. The top of the AEC is called the "Sky Media Loft" in which is mainly used.
Ars Goetia - Ars Goetia The Ars Goetia (The Art of the Goetia), sometimes erroneously called Goetia, is the first part of The Lesser Key of Solomon. It contains a detailed description of the seventy-two demons that supposedly King Solomon invoked, confined into a bronze vessel sealed by magic symbols, and when he needed obliged to work for him. The Ars Goetia assigns a number in rank, a title of nobility in the infernal hierarchy (those titles are the same that human monarchies used and still use, but unknown in King Solomon's times), and sometimes the title of President to the mentioned demons. It also establishes that each demon has his own signature in the form of a seal and provides the drawings of those seals of the demons..
Ars Theurgia Goetia - Ars Theurgia Goetia The Ars Theurgia Goetia (The theurgia [a type of ritual to invoke ghosts or spirits] to Practise the Goetia), second part of The Lesser Key of Solomon, explains the names, characteristics and seals of the 31 aerial spirits (called chiefs, emperors, kings and princes) that King Solomon invoked and confined, the protections against them, the names of their servant spirits, called dukes, the conjurations to invoke them, and their nature, that is both good and evil. Their sole objective is to discover and show hidden things, the secrets of any person, and obtain, carry and do anything asked to them meanwhile they are contained in any of the four elements (Earth, Fire, Air and Water) These spirits are given in a complex order.
Ars Paulina - Ars Paulina The Ars Paulina (The Art of Paul) is the third part of The Lesser Key of Solomon. According to the legend, this art was discovered by the Apostle Paul, but in the book is mentioned as the Pauline Art of King Solomon. The Ars Paulina was already known since the Middle Age. It is divided in two chapters in this book. The first chapter refers on how to deal with the angels of the several hours of the day (meaning day and night), to their seals, their nature, their servants (called Dukes), the relation of these angels with the seven planets known at that time, the proper astrological aspects to invoke them, their names (in a couple of cases coinciding with two of the.
Ars Almadel - Ars Almadel The Ars Almadel (The Art of the Almadel) is the fourth part of The Lesser Key of Solomon. It tells how to made the almadel, which is a wax tablet with protective symbols drawn on it. On it are placed four candles. This chapter has the instructions concerning the colours, materials and rituals necessary for the construction of the almadel and the candles. The Ars Almadel also tells about the angels that are to be invoked, and explains that only reasonable and just things that are needed must be asked to them, and how the conjuration has to be made. It also mentions twelve princes ruling with them. The dates and astrological aspects that have to be considered most convenient to invoke the angels.
Ars Notoria - Ars Notoria The Ars Notoria (The Notable Art) is the fifth and last part of The Lesser Key of Solomon. It was indeed a grimoire known since the Middle Age. The book asserts that this art was revealed by the Creator by means of an angel to King Solomon. It contains a collection of prayers (some of them divided in several parts) mixed with kabbalistic and magical words in several languages (i.e. Hebrew, Greek, etc., and some inventions), how the prayers must be said, and the relation that these rituals have to the understanding of all sciences. It mentions the aspects of the Moon in relation with the prayers. It also says that the prayers act as an invocation to God's angels. According to the book,.
Ars based programming - Ars based programming ARS based programming is built on three principles; Abstraction, Reference and Synthesis. These principles can be seen as a generalized form of the basic operations of the Lambda Calculus. All essential features of a programming language can be derived from ARS even the three major programming paradigms: functional programming, object-oriented programming and imperative programming. The programming language A++ is a demonstration that based on ARS programming patterns can be developed that are very powerful providing a solid base for solving common programming problems. ARS based programming as covered in the book Programmierung pur (Undiluted Programming or Barebones Programming) published in German under the ISBN 3-87820-108-7 (the English rights are available now!) is facilitated by three tools: A++, ARS++, and ARSAPI. A++, a minimal.
Kimaris - widely known as the 66th daimon of the third part of the Lemegeton (popularly known as the Ars Goetia). He is described as a goodly warrior riding a black horse, and his resume includes the ability to locate lost or hidden treasures, teach trivium (grammar, logic and rhetoric) and make a man into a warrior of his own likeness. He holds the rank of marquis, and is served by 20 legions. He also rules over all the spirits of Africa. Much the same description is found in the earlier text of Johann Weyer's catalog of demons, Pseudomonarchia Daemonum (published 1563). Earlier still is the Munich Handbook of Necromancy: Clm 849 (published by Richard Kieckhefer, as Forbidden Rites: a necromancer's manual of the 15th century 1998) which lists an entity named Tuvries.
Vepar - breed in them, but if requested by the conjurer he can heal them immediately. Vepar is depicted as a mermaid. Other spellings: Separ, Vephar. See also The Lesser Key of Solomon, Ars Goetia..
Jakob Bernoulli - Mathematics in 1687. He corresponded with Gottfried Leibniz, and thus learnt calculus, and collaborated with his brother Johann. His early papers on transcendental curves (1696) and isoperimetry (1700, 1701) are early examples of its application. His masterwork was Ars Conjectandi of 1713, a groundbreaking work on probability theory. The terms Bernoulli trial, Bernoulli Theorem, and Bernoulli Numbers result from this work, and are named after him.\n.
Joachim du Bellay - perferment through his kinsman the Cardinal Jean du Bellay. At Poitiers he came in contact with the humanist Marc Antoine Muret, and, with Jean Salmon Macrin. (1490-1557), a Latin poet famous in his day. There too he probably met Jacques Peletier du Mans, who had published a translation of the Ars Poetica of Horace, with a preface in which much of the programme advocated later by the Pléiade is to be found in outline. It was probably in 1547 that du Bellay met Ronsard in an inn on the way to Poitiers, an event which may justly be regarded as the starting-point of the French school of Renaissance poetry. The two had much in common, and immediately became fast friends. Du Bellay returned with Ronsard to Paris to join the circle.
John Conington - and the third soon after his death. Goldwin Smith was compelled to withdraw from the work at an early stage, and in the last volume his place was taken by Henry Nettleship. In 1866 Conington published his most famous work, the translation of the Aeneid of Virgil into the octosyllabic metre of Sir Scott. John Dryden's version is the work of a stronger artist; but Conington's is more faithful, preserves the general effect of the original, and stands as an independent poem. That the measure chosen does not reproduce the majestic sweep of the Virgilian verse is a fault in the conception and not in the execution. Conington died at Boston. His edition of Persius with a commentary and a spirited prose translation was published posthumously in 1872. In the same.
Johann Carl Otto Ribbeck - tragic and comic fragments (3rd ed., 1897). As a textual critic he was distinguished by considerable rashness, and never hesitated to alter, rearrange or reject as spurious what failed to reach his standard of excellence. These tendencies are strikingly shown in his editions of the Epistles and Ars Poetica of Horace (1869), the Satires of Juvenal (1859) and in the supplementary essay Der echte und unechte Juvenal (1865). In later years, however, he became much more conservative. His edition of Virgil (2nd ed., 1894-1895), although only critical, is a work of great erudition, especially the Prolegomena. His biography of Ritschl (1879-1881) is one of the best works of its kind. The influence of his tutor may be seen in Ribbeck's critical edition of the Miles Gioriosus of Plautus, and Beitrage zur.
Jonathan Tweet - was involved in the development of the role-playing games Ars Magica, Everway, Over the Edge and the third edition of Dungeons and Dragons. This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by fixing it..
Internet art - the same time: Superbad (Ben Benjamin), Snarg, Zuper (Michael Samyn), and I/O/D (Collective) to name but a few. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 History and context 2 Artists and projects 3 References History and context Internet art is rooted in a variety of artistic traditions and movements. Some Internet art projects are particularly related to conceptual art, Fluxus, pop art and performance art. Internet art is also historically related to the interdisciplinary field of technology-centered or electronic art which has developed since the 1970s in research institutes and specialized art centers throughout Europe, Japan and the United States - outside the regular, "non-technological" museum and gallery circuit. Examples are the Ars Electronica Festival in Linz, early network radio experiments at ORF Kunstradio, and Paris-based IRCAM, a research center for electronic music..
Vine (demon) - name seems to be the Latin word 'vinea', vine, that is also the name given to an ancient war machine made of wooden and covered with leather and branches, used to overthrow walls. Other spellings: Viné, Vinea. See also The Lesser Key of Solomon, Ars Goetia..
Ipos - with a the head of a lion, the tail of a hare, and the feet of a goose, less frequently in the same shape but with the body of a lion, and rarely as a vulture. Other spellings: Aiperos, Ayperos, Ayporos, Ipes. See also The Lesser Key of Solomon, Ars Goetia..
Haagenti - a big bull with the wings of a griffin, changing into a man under request of the conjurer. See also The Lesser Key of Solomon, Ars Goetia..