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spam- meta program
 

offline mermaidman on 2009-10-10 04:25 [#02335192]
Points: 8301 Status: Regular



this guy is great, whoever he is
meta program


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2009-10-10 07:09 [#02335200]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



a digital Matrioska i would say, (nickname for Matrena,
from the latin Mater, Mother)



 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2009-10-10 07:11 [#02335201]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



'Matrix' for the brits

'Pyramid' for the ancients


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2009-10-10 07:12 [#02335202]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



i din't listen to the music sorry, i'm up for a language
trip today.


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2009-10-10 08:50 [#02335219]
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how about mother + nature

The word nature comes from the Latin word, natura,
meaning birth or character (see nature (innate)). In English
its first recorded use, in the sense of the entirety of the
phenomena of the world, was very late in history in 1662;
however natura, and the personification of Mother Nature,
was widely popular in the Middle Ages and can be traced to
Ancient Greece in origin; though Earth or Eorthe in the Old
English period may have been personified as a goddess.
Likewise the Norse also had a goddess called Jord Earth. The
pre-Socratic philosophers of Greece had invented nature when
they abstracted the entirety of phenomena of the world into
a single name and spoken of as a single object: physis.
Later Greek thinkers such as Aristotle were not as entirely
inclusive, excluding the stars and moon, the "supernatural",
from nature. Thus from this Aristotelian view -- nature
existing inside a larger framework and not inclusive of
everything -- nature became a personified deity, and it is
from this we have the origins of a mythological goddess
nature. Later medieval Christian thinkers did not see nature
as inclusive of everything, but thought that she was created
by God, her place lay on earth, below the heavens and moon.
Nature lay somewhere in the middle, with agents above her
(angels) and below her (demons and hell). For the medieval
mind she was only a personification, not a goddess. The
modern concept of nature, all inclusive of all phenomenon,
has returned to its original pre-Socratic roots, no longer a
personification or deity except in a rhetorical sense, a bow
to her illustrious traditions



 

offline mermaidman on 2009-10-10 09:06 [#02335223]
Points: 8301 Status: Regular



i didn't read man, sorry.


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2009-10-10 09:12 [#02335225]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



sorry i make you lush


 

offline mermaidman on 2009-10-10 09:14 [#02335227]
Points: 8301 Status: Regular



sorry i make you blush


 

offline atwood from The Library (United Kingdom) on 2009-10-10 09:18 [#02335229]
Points: 2236 Status: Regular | Followup to mohamed: #02335202 | Show recordbag



LAZY_TITLE
useful resource.


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2009-10-10 09:25 [#02335230]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Followup to atwood: #02335229 | Show recordbag



woah that just made me shush. thanks :)


 

offline atwood from The Library (United Kingdom) on 2009-10-10 09:29 [#02335232]
Points: 2236 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



More than welcome x


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2009-10-10 09:46 [#02335234]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



gotta add mine there LAZY_TITLE


 

offline atwood from The Library (United Kingdom) on 2009-10-10 10:00 [#02335236]
Points: 2236 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Wow.
I pronounce it OR-tek-er.



 


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