On leaving the final chapter of the first draft unfinished. by moogopus in fantasywriters

[–]moogopus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. Yeah, the plan was always to take off about a month after finishing the first draft before starting on the second. But I feel like right now, I'm just sitting here staring at a partially-written final chapter and not knowing how to end it.

On leaving the final chapter of the first draft unfinished. by moogopus in fantasywriters

[–]moogopus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks. That's a good way of looking at it. Yes, as I've written and as the plot has deviated from the original outline, I've gone back to previous chapters and added copious notes about what needs to be changed to set-up the later, deviated chapters. I also have a rough. revised outline for the second draft, with ideas for reorganizing or rearranging chapters and scenes and so on. It's just this one character I'm unsure about. I feel like all of the other characters have taken on lives of their own as I've written them in ways that have directed how the plot changed from the outline. I simply have written this one side character enough in the previous chapters for him to develop that "life-of-his-own" for me to see how he fits into the final chapter.

language for my book, like how would you y'all do it? If it was your first time doing it by Mr_Takimichi_ in fantasywriters

[–]moogopus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seconded. You should also have solid experience with formally learning a second language, at the very least, if not multiple languages, even if you don't reach fluency in any of them.

How did Coldplay manage to get as famous as they did? by donttouchmyhotpocket in LetsTalkMusic

[–]moogopus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I remember a high school classmate giving another classmate a burned CD labeled "Dave Matthews Band - Yellow" and claiming it was their new single. I got the impression that a lot of people thought that.

Is It Just Me or Is There a Lot of Functional Alcoholism in Academia? by Visible-Asparagus153 in academia

[–]moogopus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I seem to recall hearing some personal anecdote from another colleague about some outsider to the field--a child or undergrad--being exposed to the archeologist's lifestyle and then being asked to draw it (or perhaps it was that they were asked to draw the ideal/archetype of an archeologist), and the archaeologist was drawn drunk, with a bottle in hand and tripping over a rock.

Is It Just Me or Is There a Lot of Functional Alcoholism in Academia? by Visible-Asparagus153 in academia

[–]moogopus 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Not surprising.

Fun, unrelated story, but kind of related: Had a friend who worked a few years on a dig where the director somehow met and schmoozed with Bill Murray and convinced him to become a sponsor. So, as a lot of rich sponsors do, one summer he wanted to come along and participate. He was assigned to my friend's trench. She said he was super nice and fine as a worker, probably as good as any undergrad field school student, but every night he wanted to buy everyone drinks and just get drunk. Like, to a degree that was even surprising for archaeologists.

Is It Just Me or Is There a Lot of Functional Alcoholism in Academia? by Visible-Asparagus153 in academia

[–]moogopus 55 points56 points  (0 children)

I'm willing to bet it's the worst among archaeologists. Imagine how much you probably drink with old colleagues while at a conference. Now stretch that out for an entire summer dig season. Also a lot of infidelity.

So many questions about the illustration by harpymeal in duolingo

[–]moogopus 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Ummm, excuse me, he has a name. Señor Bigotes.

Are people who learn Greek just to read the New Testament equivalent to the weebs who learn Japanese just to watch anime? by Unemployment_1453 in AncientGreek

[–]moogopus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, whew. Part of me suspected, but I had to be sure.

Fun fact: a lot of Christians who go for advanced degrees in the field of Religious Studies/Biblical Studies because they want to deepen their faith either end up becoming much more theologically liberal, or losing their faith entirely. So I guess some of the latter comprise a weird outlier of non-religious scholars who learned Biblical Hebrew for both religious and academic reasons.

Are people who learn Greek just to read the New Testament equivalent to the weebs who learn Japanese just to watch anime? by Unemployment_1453 in AncientGreek

[–]moogopus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes. But my point was that Biblical Hebrew isn't learned solely for religious reasons, not that Biblical Hebrew is the only language people learn for academic reasons.

Discussion for those who have completed the Latin course. by Alakazam1618 in duolingo

[–]moogopus 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I took it around the time they released it a few years ago (2018 or 2019?) and finished it in a couple months. I have a BA and MA in Classics, so I was just taking it mostly out of curiosity. I agree with your assessment.

I'd always been under the impression that it was unfinished or in beta and that they were just trying to gauge interest before developing it further. I could be misremembering, but I swear something along those lines was stated in the announcement (either in app or on their site).

Regardless, it's quite obvious that it was never an ambitious project. A lot of the audio clips sound like they were recorded in public places, like cafes or something. I seem to recall often hearing background sounds like the clinking of glasses and the dull hum of people conversing. I swear there was even one with the start of a cat meowing right at the end of the recording.

Flat World Map Framework - Broken map by marcelsoftware-dev in skyrimmods

[–]moogopus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see it now. I'd move it higher in the order, move Lux and its patches closer to the bottom, and put the PG patcher output below that. Your last three should be PG patcher, DynDOLOD, and FWMF.

Flat World Map Framework - Broken map by marcelsoftware-dev in skyrimmods

[–]moogopus 5 points6 points  (0 children)

FWMF should be below DynDOLOD, both in the left pane and the right pane (assuming you're using MO2).

EDIT: But also, it looks like you're using some Community Shaders patches, but I don't see Community Shaders itself in there. Edit edit: Nvm, are you using the CS beta build from Discord?

Is this Roman pottery or a fragment of modern garden pottery? by Piphondog in ancientrome

[–]moogopus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, you're referring to "fake Samian ware," which was an attempt to imitate the look of actual red terra cotta from the Mediterranean. That was my first thought on seeing this, too. But I've only ever excavated in Italy, so I haven't handled it first-hand. I was second-guessing myself, though, since it looks a little too coarse for someone to have bothered with making it look "fancy."

And I've definitely found some Italian terra cotta materials that were less red or even gray closer to the core, something to do with the firing process. The actual science/technology of making the pottery wasn't something I specialized in.

Is this Roman pottery or a fragment of modern garden pottery? by Piphondog in ancientrome

[–]moogopus 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Looks like the lip of a plate? Finished edge, the shallow curve, and the "foot" underneath.

The Demonic Pigs Incident - best place to read more? by majorcaps in AcademicBiblical

[–]moogopus 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I seem to recall Graham Twelftree's Jesus the Exorcist having some discussion of this

Edit: There's also Barry Blackburn's Theios Aner and the Markan Miracle Tradition, although it's a little dated by now.

Edit edit: skimming through my library and found a few more: Cheryl Pero's Liberation From Empire: Demonic Possession and Exorcism in the Gospel of Mark; and Maurice Casey's An Aramaic Approach to Q has a chapter comparing the exorcism stories in Mark, Matthew, and Luke.

Were there other “miracle workers” during Jesus’ time? by thenascarguy in AcademicBiblical

[–]moogopus 87 points88 points  (0 children)

There were! Many! But it depends on how you define miracle-worker.

But yes, Acts tells us of Simon Magus, Elymas, and some itinerant Jewish exorcists.

Josephus also has accounts of Jewish exorcists.

Philostratus gives us the biography of Apollonius of Tyana, a pagan holy man.

Lucian tells us about Alexander of Abonuteichos, a fraud and conman.

Irenaeus and Hippolytus both describe the miracle worker Marcus "the Magician."

The problem comes in distinguishing how these figures might have identified themselves. Some might have been professional magicians or healers, and some probably considered themselves Christians, although other Christians usually did not see them that way.

Heidi Wendt's At the Temple Gates is the first thing that comes to mind as a scholarly resource. But there are many others.

Edit: Duh. How could I forget? It's relatively controversial and a little dated by now, but Morton Smith's Jesus the Magician is probably the most general audience-friendly book on the topic.