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Anyone here interested in Theology, Metaphysics, Spirituality, Divine Metaphysics, Meditation, The Art of Warfare, Celestial Mechanics, Ancient History, Occult Studies, the Esoteric, or any other branch of knowledge?
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I'm actualy interested in this stuff. My character is a dumping ground for various aspects of myself. But for me to go into detail about that, it would be best for a seperate thread to be created, and I dont really want to do that right now.
Lin, what drove you to the study of linguistics? When someone taps into a particular branch of Knowledge, I find that there is usualy a root reason that fuels that drive and immersion. I'm curious as to what the root reason for you was.
I'm not sure why I'm posting, even. Mild case of "someone on the internet is wrong" syndrome.
Message #17059 Sent By: Oleis Received On: 1/03/2014/17:24
"If it makes you feel better, just checking your artifact list threatens to crash my mudlet."
I have a book in my library that is a particular favorite of mine, called The Great Transformation, by Karen Armstrong. In one portion of the book, she touches on how the Aryans considered Language in itself a "Divine" aspect of reality. Basicly the spoken word was a God. This carried on into the Brahmin Hindu faith, during it's early forms, when Aryan cattle raiders and warriors led a combined invasion/migration from their steppe homes into India. One of their rituals was for two individuals to sit opposite of one another, and speak back and forth to one another. They would speak to one another about the mystery of the Universe, and as each individual spoke their turn, they would have to compact and shorten their explanation. Eventualy, each person was brought down to Silence, and they basked in the personification of the Mystery of Time and Space, which was the Silence that was generated by their failure to sum it all up.
"To be awkward or unkempt, to talk or move wrongly is to be a dangerous giant, a destroyer of worlds...any accurately improper move can poke through the thin sleeve of immediate reality." - Erving Goffman
If you are interested in the mechanics of relationships, and so on, you might be interested in the concept of Esprit De Corp. It holds alot of sway and power within military spheres of influence, but can be applied to the civilian sector as well.
Sun Tzu's Art of Warfare is an outstanding book, and you are not wrong to apply it to your life in things not related to direct combat or the application of combative groups (such as an Army). Alot of the lessons in The Art Of War can not only be applied to warfare, but also day to day life. I have a copy of it that includes alot of commentary and in-depth looks into what Sun Tzu was actualy writing and musing about. Alot of peace doves (anyone that shuns violance or conflict of any type), tend to write the book off as not worth the effort of reading, but there is more to gain from Sun Tzu's text than just proper ways to execute the art of war.
If you like The Art Of War, you might also like The Prince and Other Writings by Niccolo Machiavelli.
Anyone here interested in Music Theory? Or just the general study of Music all around?
I've kind of been interested in linguistics for a while, but when I read about the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis that kind of blew my mind.
Anyone here on the forums ever had a moment of Synesthesia?
I would be paying if it did count.
"The smell of dusty fur, sweet smoke, waiting and patience, a thing that time cannot kill. The moth that candles won't burn."
As much as possible. Do you think it is possible for music to be wielded in the same manner as language? Using music as a means to translate empathy and mental disposition on a much higher scale than verbal/word communication would be able to achieve?
"The smell of dusty fur, sweet smoke, waiting and patience, a thing that time cannot kill. The moth that candles won't burn."
I was highly confused when you more or less described a Bard (any Human that dedicates their lives to a geographical location, and the music and knowledge that is inherent in it's indigenous population). I personally had come to the conclusion that the last Bardic Tradition had died with the Old World due to the rise of the Modern Era, making the need for a walking sponge of knowledge to no longer need it's place among humans.
I did some research and digging around, and I came across a caste of West African Bards called Griot, the same people you described above. These individuals are highly structured around Endogamy when it comes to interactions between segments of the human population and geographical regions, in regards to marriage, clan bonds, or "blood and soil" matters. This group of humans are true Bards in every sense of the word, preserving the practice of merging strong musical traditions with the pursuit of knowledge. I will admit, that I was more than a little disbelieving when you described a caste of Bards within West African society, and instead of putting down what you shared, once my research was complete, I instead opted to have my mind blown. These Griot's are remnants of the Old World, preserving an archaic caste of humans that I truly hope never fades away from the Earth.