Difference between revisions of "Wizard's Manual"

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In Ireland, for example -- unquestionably one of the earliest widely-literate European societies -- wizards are nonetheless usually "issued" the Manual as discrete pieces of information which then are committed to memory, the way druids and bards handled their own large bodies of data during millennia past. ([[AWAB]]) That said, the slightly crazed technological acquisitiveness and adaptation of the Irish makes it entirely likely that some new young wizard is already carrying a Manual implementation in a cellphone, and receiving updates via [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_message_service SMS].
 
In Ireland, for example -- unquestionably one of the earliest widely-literate European societies -- wizards are nonetheless usually "issued" the Manual as discrete pieces of information which then are committed to memory, the way druids and bards handled their own large bodies of data during millennia past. ([[AWAB]]) That said, the slightly crazed technological acquisitiveness and adaptation of the Irish makes it entirely likely that some new young wizard is already carrying a Manual implementation in a cellphone, and receiving updates via [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_message_service SMS].
  
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Other cultures on Earth with similarly strong traditions of complex verbal information transfer (for example, some African cultures, the Maori, various ''seannachi''-trained Scots Gaelic speakers, and so forth) similarly receive wizardly information as something heard, overheard, or "underheard". Such cultures typically refer to Manual functions as "the Knowledge" or by some similar name. 
  
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Obviously enough
  
 
== The Manual on Earth: technological implementations ==
 
== The Manual on Earth: technological implementations ==

Revision as of 11:46, 15 June 2005

One of many, many names for the basic body of wizardly knowledge made available to all wizards.

(A note to the readership: This Concordance entry will be fairly complex, and is intended to be canonical, so it will more than likely take a couple of weeks from 6/15/05 to complete. Nothing in it should be considered definitive until the "stub" notation disappears. --DianeDuane 07:01, 15 Jun 2005 (EDT))

A brief history

Theories of Manual implementation

Inclusion of information

Authorizations

Contributions, assumptions, and plug-ins

The Manual on Earth: cultural variations

Not everyone on Earth receives their Manual as a book. There are numerous interspecies variations, not to mention cultural variations among humans alone.

In Ireland, for example -- unquestionably one of the earliest widely-literate European societies -- wizards are nonetheless usually "issued" the Manual as discrete pieces of information which then are committed to memory, the way druids and bards handled their own large bodies of data during millennia past. (AWAB) That said, the slightly crazed technological acquisitiveness and adaptation of the Irish makes it entirely likely that some new young wizard is already carrying a Manual implementation in a cellphone, and receiving updates via SMS.

Other cultures on Earth with similarly strong traditions of complex verbal information transfer (for example, some African cultures, the Maori, various seannachi-trained Scots Gaelic speakers, and so forth) similarly receive wizardly information as something heard, overheard, or "underheard". Such cultures typically refer to Manual functions as "the Knowledge" or by some similar name.

Obviously enough

The Manual on Earth: technological implementations

Other pertinent entries: CATNYP: WizPod.

Manual-equivalents on other worlds

The ethical divide

"Spin-off" Manual functions

Miscellanea

Footnotes

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