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2009 - 10 = 1999

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the pythagorean theorem and the tetractys of the decad

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1974 (MCMLXXIV) was a common year that started on a Tuesday. In the Gregorian calendar, it was the 1974th year of the Common Era or of Anno Domini; the 974th year of the 2nd millennium and the 5th of the 1970s decad

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According to the ICS timescale, time divisions are as follows:

Age (1 million years, 1000 Millennia).
Epoch (10 million years, 10 Ages).
Era (100 million years, 10 Epochs).
Eon (500 million years, 5 Eras.

But, the ICS timescale does not use lustrum, decades, centuries or millennia. Calendar subdivisions use them and according to it, nothing follows millennium. Anything longer than 1 millennium is just referred to as Millennia (Plural form of Millennium).

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A variable range of resistors built inside a box that can be varied as per our convenient. For example a set of kilo ohm resistors will be there,if u want 3 kilo ohm resistor then using the knob u can change the resistor value to your desired value. similarly there will be another set of resistors in mega ohm etc

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The book is listed as Fiction.

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One decade equals ten years.

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Formed in Surrey England back in 1991 after the spilt of Ian & Stuarts successful touring band Eye To Eye. Ian had a string of songs from an old lyric book just waiting to be recorded, although Stuart is usually a drummer he's also a very fine keyboard player with loads of new songs and ideas plus Karl his own home recording studio, the 3 of them locked themselves away and started to create several songs to go towards an album, in that time they were joined by a brilliant keyboard player Dave Sparrow who helped form some of their early songs their manager at that time Iain Pitwell even put in some backing vocals to the recordings also brought along Chris West from London boy band 'Big Fun' to complete the line up, the band also rehearsed with a lead vocalist Caroline White before Tina came along... That's where it almost ended it took 10 years to get back in the studio (hence the name Decade) Karl now a big time producer to the stars co own's his own professional studio saved some spare time to put the whole project back together again this time with his wife Tina on lead vocals the 4 members of Prime Time produced this magnificent debut album you won't be disappointed it has everything

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Fashion doesn't need a reason other than someone thinking "hey, this looks cool".

As to why THAT happens, well, you might as well ask why some people prefer a certain color, a certain soda or a certain whatever.

They were part of the whole shift in society from men wearing the tight fitted clothes to wearing long/baggy clothes. Blame hip/hop, blame fashion, blame it on Michael Jordan pulling his down, blame expanding waistlines in baby boomers, blame it on whatever you want, but the case is that in the 1980's and before, athletic shorts were SHORT! Look at ANY basketball game from before 1990, and you will see that the guys were all wearing "short-shorts". I even saw these short-shorts here in the Midwest as far late as 1994. After that, they seemed to vanish. There was a trend in the late 80's for the Bermuda knee-length shorts to become the norm, and now I've noticed a trend 20 years later for the shorter shorts. Look at the new Jack in the box smoothie commercial. Yes, they are trying to be funny, but that jogger is wearing short-shorts!

We will see them come back eventually. It may be another 10 years before they fully catch on like they were pre-1990, but mark my words, they WILL come back.

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Just perhaps:

era, epoch, eon

but those are less numerically inclined

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Ingredients

  • 1 cup butter or margarine, softened
  • 1 1/2 cups sugar
  • 4 eggs
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 cup buttermilk
  • 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate mini-morsels, divided
  • 2 bars sweet baking chocolate, melted and cooled
  • 1/3 cup chocolate syrup
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 4 ounces white chocolate, chopped
  • 2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons shortening, divided
  • Chocolate and white chocolate leaves (opti
  • Cream butter in a large mixing bowl; gradually add sugar, beating well at medium speed of an electric mixer. Add eggs, one at a time, beating after each addition.
  • Dissolve soda in buttermilk, stirring well. Add to creamed mixture alternately with flour, beginning and ending with flour. Add 1 cup mini morsels, melted chocolate, chocolate syrup, and vinilla, stirring just until blended. (Do Not overbeat)
  • Spoon batter into a heavily greased and floured 10-inch Bundt pan. Bake at 300 for 1 hour and 25 minutes or until cake springs back when touched. Invert cake immediately onto a serving plate, and let cool completely.

Combine 4 ounces chopped white chocolate and 2 tablespoons shortening in top of a double broiler; bring water to a boil. Reduce heat to low; cook until mixture is melted and smooth. Remove from heat. Drizzle melted white white chocolate mixture ocer cooled cake. Melt remaining 1/2 cup mini-morsels and 2 teaspoons shortening in a small saucepan over low heat, and let cool; drizzle over white chocolate. If desired, garnish with chocolate and white chocolate leaves.

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Ingredients

  • 1 9 unbaked pie shell
  • 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1/4 cup butter or margarine
  • 1 can Eagle Brand Creamy Chocolate Sweetened
  • Condensed Milk 1/2 cup biscuit baking mix
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1 cup chopped nuts
  • vanilla ice cream

Preheat oven to 375F. Bake pastry shell 10 minutes; remove from oven. Reduce oven temperature to 325F. In sausepcan over low heat, melt chips with butter or margarine. In mixer bowl, beat chocolate mixture with condensed milk, bisucit mix, eggs and vanilla until smooth. Add nuts. Pour into pastry shell. Bake 35-40 minutes or until center is set. Serve warm or at room temperature with vanilla ice cream. Refrigerate leftovers.

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There is no way to fully prove who the best is but from a lot of opinions and stats and leadership Peyton Manning is probably the best QB of the decade because on top 100 greatest players he is already the #3 QB on there behind Johnny Unitas And Joe Montana and soon will become better and the best QB of alltime!!!!!

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The cast of Drag-On Dragoon 3 - 2013 includes: Chafurin as Octa Kazuhiko Inoue as Decad Shizuka Ito as Five Mamiko Noto as Three Mitsuki Saiga as Dito Chiwa Saito as Two Ayana Taketatsu as Four Rie Tanaka as One Maaya Uchida as Zero

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 3 words with the pattern --CAD. That is, five letter words with 3rd letter C and 4th letter A and 5th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:

cycad

decad

nicad

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 6 words with the pattern D-CA-. That is, five letter words with 1st letter D and 3rd letter C and 4th letter A. In alphabetical order, they are:

decad

decaf

decal

decay

ducal

ducat

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 10 words with the pattern DEC--. That is, five letter words with 1st letter D and 2nd letter E and 3rd letter C. In alphabetical order, they are:

decad

decaf

decal

decay

decko

decks

decor

decos

decoy

decry

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern DECAD--. That is, seven letter words with 1st letter D and 2nd letter E and 3rd letter C and 4th letter A and 5th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:

decadal

decades

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 19 words with the pattern DE-A-. That is, five letter words with 1st letter D and 2nd letter E and 4th letter A. In alphabetical order, they are:

debag

debar

decad

decaf

decal

decay

dedal

defat

degas

delay

deman

denar

denay

derat

deray

devas

dewan

dewar

dewax

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 58 words with the pattern -EC--. That is, five letter words with 2nd letter E and 3rd letter C. In alphabetical order, they are:

aecia

becap

becke

becks

cecal

cecum

decad

decaf

decal

decay

decko

decks

decor

decos

decoy

decry

fecal

feces

fecht

fecit

fecks

gecko

gecks

hecht

hecks

kecks

leccy

mecca

mecks

necks

pecan

pechs

pecke

pecks

pecky

recal

recap

recce

recco

reccy

recit

recks

recon

recta

recti

recto

recur

recut

secco

sechs

sects

techs

techy

tecta

wecht

yecch

yechs

yechy

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 373 words with the pattern --C--. That is, five letter words with 3rd letter C. In alphabetical order, they are:

abcee

accas

accoy

aecia

alcid

alcos

ancho

ancle

ancon

arced

arcus

ascot

ascus

bacca

bacco

baccy

bacha

bachs

backs

bacon

becap

becke

becks

biccy

bicep

bices

bocca

bocce

bocci

boche

bocks

buchu

bucko

bucks

bucku

cacao

cacas

cache

cacky

cacti

cecal

cecum

cocas

cocci

cocco

cocks

cocky

cocoa

cocos

cycad

cycas

cycle

cyclo

daces

dacha

dacks

decad

decaf

decal

decay

decko

decks

decor

decos

decoy

decry

diced

dicer

dices

dicey

dicht

dicks

dicky

dicot

dicta

dicts

dicty

docht

docks

docos

ducal

ducat

duces

duchy

ducks

ducky

ducts

elchi

emcee

escar

escot

excel

faced

facer

faces

facet

facia

facts

fecal

feces

fecht

fecit

fecks

fices

fiche

fichu

ficin

ficos

ficus

focal

focus

fucks

fucus

fyces

gecko

gecks

gucks

gucky

hacek

hacks

hecht

hecks

hicks

hocks

hocus

hucks

incle

incog

incur

incus

incut

itchy

jacal

jacks

jacky

jocko

jocks

jucos

kacha

kecks

kicks

kicky

laced

lacer

laces

lacet

lacey

lacks

leccy

lichi

licht

licit

licks

local

lochs

locks

locos

locum

locus

luces

lucid

lucks

lucky

lucre

lycea

lycee

lycra

macaw

maced

macer

maces

mache

machi

macho

machs

macks

macle

macon

macro

mecca

mecks

micas

miche

micht

micks

micky

micos

micra

micro

mocha

mochs

mochy

mocks

mucho

mucic

mucid

mucin

mucks

mucky

mucor

mucro

mucus

nache

nacho

nacre

necks

nicad

nicer

niche

nicht

nicks

nicky

nicol

nocks

nucha

occam

occur

oncer

onces

oncet

oncus

orcas

orcin

oscar

oucht

owche

pacas

paced

pacer

paces

pacey

pacha

packs

pacos

pacta

pacts

pecan

pechs

pecke

pecks

pecky

pical

picas

piccy

picks

picky

picot

picra

picul

pocks

pocky

pucan

pucer

puces

pucka

pucks

raced

racer

races

rache

racks

racon

recal

recap

recce

recco

reccy

recit

recks

recon

recta

recti

recto

recur

recut

riced

ricer

rices

ricey

richt

ricin

ricks

rocks

rocky

ruche

rucks

sacks

sacra

secco

sechs

sects

shchi

sices

sicht

sicko

sicks

socas

socko

socks

socle

succi

sucks

sucky

sucre

sycee

syces

tacan

taces

tacet

tache

tacho

tachs

tacit

tacks

tacky

tacos

tacts

techs

techy

tecta

tical

ticca

ticed

tices

tichy

ticks

ticky

tocks

tocky

tocos

tucks

ulcer

uncap

unces

uncia

uncle

uncos

uncoy

uncus

uncut

vacua

vicar

viced

vices

vichy

vocab

vocal

voces

wacke

wacko

wacks

wacky

wecht

wicca

wicks

wicky

wocks

yacca

yacht

yacka

yacks

yecch

yechs

yechy

yocks

yucas

yucca

yucch

yucko

yucks

yucky

zacks

zocco

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Kazuhiko Inoue has: Played Anthony in "Kyandi Kyandi" in 1976. Played Goro Shirogane in "Chogattai majutsu robot Ginguiser" in 1977. Played Ken Scott in "Captain Future" in 1978. Played Mechaman No. 44 in "Captain Future Kareinaru Taiyoukei Race" in 1978. Played Sensei (1980-1984) in "Doraemon" in 1979. Played Gilbert in "Akage no An" in 1979. Performed in "Urusei yatsura" in 1981. Played Ton-chan in "Urusei yatsura" in 1981. Played Tsubame in "Urusei yatsura" in 1981. Played Tsubame Ozuno in "Urusei yatsura" in 1981. Played Hatari Naburu in "Densetsu-kyoshin ideon: Sesshoku-hen" in 1982. Played Carlos Santana in "Captain Tsubasa" in 1983. Played Shingo Tashibana in "Eien no Once More" in 1984. Played Wataru Nachi in "Yoroshiku meka dokku" in 1984. Played Akira Toyoda in "Run wa kaze no naka" in 1985. Played Akio Nitta in "Tatchi" in 1985. Played Koujirou in "Showa Ahozoshi Akanuke Ichiban" in 1985. Played Justy Kaizard in "Jasuti" in 1985. Played Sho in "Ninja Senshi Tobikage" in 1985. Played Saiki Haruka in "Tobira o akete" in 1986. Played Ryou Matsumoto in "Urban Square" in 1986. Played Glam in "Megazone 23 II" in 1986. Played Torai in "Za samurai" in 1987. Played Tetsu Manai in "The Incredible Gokai Video Junk Boy" in 1987. Played Bauer in "Rhea Gall Force" in 1989. Played Shuranosuke Sakaki in "Shuranosuke Zanmaken: Shikamamon no Otoko" in 1990. Played Bauer in "Gall Force: Shin seiki hen" in 1991. Played Hasukawa Kazuhiro in "Koko wa Greenwood" in 1991. Played Tsubame in "Urusei Yatsura: Reikon to deito" in 1991. Played Hayate in "Akai Hayate" in 1992. Played Mamoru Kusanagi in "Blue Seed" in 1994. Played Bob in "Zeiramu 2" in 1994. Played Genichirou Haneoka in "Kaitou Saint Tail" in 1995. Played Klarth F. Lester in "Tales of Phantasia" in 1995. Played Ash Barnbelt, Jie Revors in "Star Ocean" in 1996. Played Inspector Ninzaburo Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan" in 1996. Played Buckingham in "Ankoku Shinden Takegami" in 1997. Played Eiri Yuki in "Gravitation: Lyrics of Love" in 1999. Played Eiri Yuki in "Gravitation" in 1999. Played Kyosuke Kazato in "Meitantei Conan: Hitomi no naka no ansatsusha" in 2000. Played Nefee Nereis in "Seikai no senki" in 2000. Played Ryukotsusei in "Inuyasha" in 2000. Played Count Collection (japanese version) in "Mon Colle Knights" in 2001. Played Kazuhiko Inoue in "Pocket Monster Crystal: Raikou Ikazuchi no Densetsu" in 2001. Played Shadkins in "Cowboy Bebop: Tengoku no tobira" in 2001. Played Inspector Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Tengoku no countdown" in 2001. Played Inspector Ninzaburo Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: 16 yougi" in 2002. Played Lazy-sensei in "Jungle Wa Itsumo Hale Nochi Guu Deluxe" in 2002. Played Kakashi Hatake in "Naruto" in 2002. Played Narumi Kiyotaka in "Spiral: Suiri no kizuna" in 2002. Played Aion in "Chrono Crusade" in 2003. Played Inspector Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Meikyuu no crossroad" in 2003. Played Dingo Egret in "Anubis: Zone of the Enders" in 2003. Played Inspector Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Ginyoku no kijutsushi" in 2004. Played Tachibana no Tomomasa in "Harukanaru toki no naka de: Hachiyoushou" in 2004. Played Reiji Arisu in "Namuko kurosu Kapukon" in 2005. Played Inspector Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Suiheisenjyou no sutorateeji" in 2005. Played Prince Eric in "Kingdom Hearts II" in 2005. Played Inspector Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Tanteitachi no requiem" in 2006. Played Additional Voices in "Seiken densetsu 4" in 2006. Played Kazkis in "Ergo Proxy" in 2006. Played Kakashi Hatake in "Batoru Sutajiamu D.O.N." in 2006. Played Kanryu Panchinko ten Owner in "Oroshitate Musical Nerima Daikon Brothers" in 2006. Played Gadfort in "Shining Force EXA" in 2007. Played William in "Romio x Jurietto" in 2007. Played Seppl Kleiber in "Mana kemia: Gakuen no renkinjutsushi tachi" in 2007. Played Inspector Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Konpeki no hitsugi" in 2007. Played Additional Voices in "Operation Darkness" in 2007. Performed in "Yotsunoha Dai 1 wa" in 2008. Performed in "Yotsunoha Dai 2 wa" in 2008. Performed in "Porufi no nagai tabi" in 2008. Played You Miyagi in "Junjou Romantica" in 2008. Played Hugo Housman in "Seiken no burakkusumisu" in 2009. Performed in "Naruto Shippuden the Movie: The Will of Fire" in 2009. Played The Prophet (segment "The Duel") in "Halo Legends" in 2010. Played Shuichiro Keido in "Giruti Kuraun" in 2011. Played Ryuji Morisaki in "Hoshi o ou kodomo" in 2011. Played Kakashi Hatake in "Gekijouban Naruto: Buraddo purizun" in 2011. Played Bado in "Kiba: Ankoku kishi gaiden" in 2011. Played Flit Asuno in "Mobile Suit Gundam AGE" in 2011. Played Ninzaburou Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Juichi-ninme no Striker" in 2012. Played Truth in "Eureka Seven: Ao" in 2012. Played Kakashi Hatake in "Naruto SD: Rock Lee no Seishun Full-Power Ninden" in 2012. Played Kakashi Hatake in "Road to Ninja: Naruto the Movie" in 2012. Played Decad in "Drag-On Dragoon 3" in 2013. Played Kakashi Hatake in "Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 3" in 2013. Played Daisei Suzuhara in "RDG: Red Data Girl" in 2013. Played Ninzabura Shiratori in "Meitantei Conan: Ijigen no sunaipa" in 2014.

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Ezra Pound has written:

'Ezra Pound papers' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Culture, Literature, Practical Politics, Economics, History

'Cantares Completos'

'America, Roosevelt, and the causes of the present war' -- subject(s): Economic policy, Economic aspects of World War, 1939-1945, Economic aspects, World War, 1939-1945

'Le nuvole di Pisa' -- subject(s): Miniature books, Translations into Italian, Specimens

'H.S. Mauberley'

'Ezra Pound's Chinese friends' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Friends and associates, Knowledge, American poetry, Chinese influences, American Poets

'Culture'

'Epstein, Belgion and meaning'

'Ezra Pound reading his poetry'

'Ezra Pound' -- subject(s): Sources, Knowledge, History

'ABC of economics' -- subject(s): Economics

'From Simplicities' -- subject(s): Bureaucracy

'Certain radio speeches of Ezra Pound'

'Selected Prose 1965'

'The fifth decad of cantos'

'Certain Noble Plays Of Japan'

'A draft of XXX cantos'

'Guide to kulchur'

'ABC of reading' -- subject(s): Books and reading

'Social credit, an impact' -- subject(s): Social credit

'Imagist Poetry'

'On arriving and not arriving'

'Radiodiscorsi (Girasole Documenti)'

'Correspondence To the Editor of \\' -- subject(s): Economics, Knowledge

'Poems 1918-21' -- subject(s): Accessible book

'Lesebuch'

'La muraglia infinita'

'Les Ur-Cantos'

'Dk-some letters of Ezra Pound' -- subject(s): Correspondence, American Poets

'Ezra and Dorothy Pound' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Prisoners of war, Authors' spouses, World War, 1939-1945, American Prisoners and prisons, American Poets

'Selected Poems'

'Drafts and fragments of Cantos cx-cxviii'

'Iconografia italiana di Ezra Pound'

'Section'

'Gaudier-Brzeska, a memoir' -- subject(s): Gaudier-Brezeska, Henri 1891-1915

'Patria Mia'

'Social credit' -- subject(s): Money, Social credit

'Je rassemble les membres d'Osiris'

'Homage to Sextus Propertius' -- subject(s): Adaptations, Poetry, Latin Elegiac poetry, Latin Love poetry, Man-woman relationships, Translations, Facsimiles, American Manuscripts, American Poets, Manuscripts, Biography

'Letters, 1907-1941, edited by D.D. Paige'

'Selected poems, 1908-1959'

'Thrones'

'Musical supplement' -- subject(s): Music, Knowledge

'Statues of gods'

'Two cantos' -- subject(s): Interviews

'Introduzione alla natura economica degli S.U.A' -- subject(s): Economic conditions

'A lume spento 1908-1958'

'Translations'

'\\' -- subject(s): Radio addresses, debates, Propaganda, World War, 1939-1945

'Letters to Ibbotson, 1935-1952' -- subject(s): Correspondence, American Poets

'The Pisan cantos' -- subject(s): Translations into German

'A lume spento' -- subject(s): Poetry

'Cantos malatestiani'

'Personae - Los Poemas Breves'

'Personae of Ezra Pound'

'Uwe Dick liest Jossif Brodskij und Ezra Pound; Dagmar Nick liest Alexander Lernet-Holenia'

'Polite Essays'

'Guide to Kulchur (New Directions Paperbook, Ndp257)'

'Cantares Completos / The Cantos'

'Carte italiane 1930-1944' -- subject(s): Intellectual life

'Plays modelled on the Noh'

'Redondillas'

'Tre cantos'

'Pound/Williams' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Critics, American Poets

'At the Circulo de Recreo with Ezra Pound' -- subject(s): Correspondence, American Poets

'An autobiographical outline' -- subject(s): Chronology, American Authors, Biography

'Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (The Collected Works of Ezra Pound - 74 Volumes)'

'Venezia nei Cantos'

'The Confucian Odes'

'Pound/Joyce; the letters of Ezra Pound to James Joyce' -- subject(s): Correspondence, American Poets, Critics

'Canto cx'

'Cathay'

'Confucius to Cummings:Poetry A'

'Instigations of Ezra Pound' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Chinese language, English literature, French poetry, Greek language, Greek literature, History and criticism, Translating, Translations, Writing

'Lustra of Ezra Pound, with earlier poems'

'Collected shorter poems'

'Personae' -- subject(s): Accessible book

'Impact' -- subject(s): Civilization

'Cantos LII-LXXI'

'Ezra Pound Reads Selected Cantos and Others'

'Lustra'

'Drafts & fragments of Cantos 110-117'

'Selected cantos of Ezra Pound' -- subject(s): American poetry

'Active anthology' -- subject(s): American poetry, Imagist poetry

'The great digest of Confucius' -- subject(s): Translations into English, Chinese classics

'Camoes'

'A walking tour in southern France' -- subject(s): Troubadours, Walking, Description and travel, Diaries, Literary landmarks, Travel, American Poets

'Confucius: the Unwobbling pivot & the Great digest' -- subject(s): Translations into English, Chinese classics, Chinese language, Chinese poetry, History and criticism, Writing

'The letters of Ezra Pound'

'The coward surrealists' -- subject(s): Surrealism

'Make it new' -- subject(s): Literature, History and criticism

'\\'

'Ezra Pound Reads'

'Exultations of Ezra Pound'

'Eleven new cantos'

'Selected poems of Ezra Pound'

'Exultations (The Collected Works of Ezra Pound - 74 Volumes)'

'The classic Noh theatre of Japan'

'Aforismi e detti memorabili'

'Poems' -- subject(s): Accessible book, American poetry, Greek poetry, Translations from English, Translations into Greek, Translations into Portuguese

'Lettres de Paris' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Intellectual life, Critics, American Poets

'Shih-ching'

'Selected cantos of Ezra Pound'

'Seventy cantos'

'Correspondence To the Editor of \\'

'The translations of Ezra Pound'

'Les Cantos'

'Spirit of Romance, The (The Collected Works of Ezra Pound - 74 Volumes)'

'Personae, the collected poems of Ezra Pound'

'A draft of 30 cantos'

'Pavannes and divagations'

'Henri Gaudier-Brzeska'

'Guide to kulchur /cEzra Pound'

'Canto 90'

'The letters of Ezra Pound, 1907-1941' -- subject(s): Correspondence, American Poets

'Selected cantos'

'Confucius' -- subject(s): Translations into English, Chinese classics, Chinese Philosophy, Chinese language, Chinese, English literature, Chinese poetry, Philosophy, History and criticism, Translations from Chinese, Writing

'Ignite! Ignite!'

'Voices and Visions-Ezra Pound (Voices & Visions)'

'Jefferson Y/O Mussolini'

'Love poems of Ancient Egypt' -- subject(s): Egyptian poetry, Translations into English, Translations into Arabic, Love poetry, English poetry, Translations from Egyptian

'Ends & Beginnings (City Lights Review)'

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Pythagoras of Samos (Greek: Ὁ Πυθαγόρας ὁ Σάμιος, O Pūthagoras o Samios, "Pythagoras the Samian", or simply Ὁ Πυθαγόρας; born between 580 and 572 BC, died between 500 and 490 BC) was an Ionian Greek mathematician and founder of the religious movement called Pythagoreanism. He is often revered as a great mathematician, mystic and scientist; however some have questioned the scope of his contributions to mathematics and natural philosophy. Herodotus referred to him as "the most able philosopher among the Greeks". His name led him to be associated with Pythian Apollo; Aristippus explained his name by saying, "He spoke (agor-) the truth no less than did the Pythian (Pyth-)," and Iamblichus tells the story that the Pythia prophesied that his pregnant mother would give birth to a man supremely beautiful, wise, and beneficial to humankind.[1] He is best known for the Pythagorean theorem, which bears his name. Known as "the father of numbers", Pythagoras made influential contributions to philosophy and religious teaching in the late 6th century BC. Because legend and obfuscation cloud his work even more than with the other pre-Socratics, one can say little with confidence about his life and teachings. We do know that Pythagoras and his students believed that everything was related to mathematics and that numbers were the ultimate reality and, through mathematics, everything could be predicted and measured in rhythmic patterns or cycles. According to Iamblichus of Chalcis, Pythagoras once said that "number is the ruler of forms and ideas and the cause of gods and daemons." He was the first man to call himself a philosopher, or lover of wisdom,[2] and Pythagorean ideas exercised a marked influence on Plato. Unfortunately, very little is known about Pythagoras because none of his writings have survived. Many of the accomplishments credited to Pythagoras may actually have been accomplishments of his colleagues and successors. Pythagoras was born on Samos, a Greek island in the eastern Aegean, off the coast of Asia Minor. He was born to Pythais (his mother, a native of Samos) and Mnesarchus (his father, a Phoenician merchant from Tyre). As a young man, he left his native city for Croton, Calabria, in Southern Italy, to escape the tyrannical government of Polycrates. According to Iamblichus, Thales, impressed with his abilities, advised Pythagoras to head to Memphis in Egypt and study with the priests there who were renowned for their wisdom. He was also discipled in the temples of Tyre and Byblos in Phoenicia. It may have been in Egypt where he learned some geometric principles which eventually inspired his formulation of the theorem that is now called by his name. This possible inspiration is presented as an extraordinaire problem in the Berlin Papyrus. Upon his migration from Samos to Croton, Calabria, Italy, Pythagoras established a secret religious society very similar to (and possibly influenced by) the earlier Orphic cult. Pythagoras undertook a reform of the cultural life of Croton, urging the citizens to follow virtue and form an elite circle of followers around himself called Pythagoreans. Very strict rules of conduct governed this cultural center. He opened his school to both male and female students uniformly. Those who joined the inner circle of Pythagoras's society called themselves the Mathematikoi. They lived at the school, owned no personal possessions and were required to assume a mainly vegetarian diet (meat that could be sacrificed was allowed to be eaten). Other students who lived in neighboring areas were also permitted to attend Pythagoras's school. Known as Akousmatikoi, these students were permitted to eat meat and own personal belongings. Richard Blackmore, in his book The Lay Monastery (1714), saw in the religious observances of the Pythagoreans, "the first instance recorded in history of a monastic life." According to Iamblichus, the Pythagoreans followed a structured life of religious teaching, common meals, exercise, reading and philosophical study. Music featured as an essential organizing factor of this life: the disciples would sing hymns to Apollo together regularly; they used the lyre to cure illness of the soul or body; poetry recitations occurred before and after sleep to aid the memory. Flavius Josephus, in his polemical Against Apion, in defence of Judaism against Greek philosophy, mentions that according to Hermippus of Smyrna, Pythagoras was familiar with Jewish beliefs, incorporating some of them in his own philosophy. Towards the end of his life he fled to Metapontum because of a plot against him and his followers by a noble of Croton named Cylon. He died in Metapontum around 90 years old from unknown causes. Bertrand Russell, in A History of Western Philosophy, contended that the influence of Pythagoras on Plato and others was so great that he should be considered the most influential of all western philosophy.The so-called Pythagoreans, who were the first to take up mathematics, not only advanced this subject, but saturated with it, they fancied that the principles of mathematics were the principles of all things. -Aristotle, Metaphysics 1-5 , cc. 350 BC The organization was in some ways a school, in some ways a brotherhood, and in some ways a monastery. It was based upon the religious teachings of Pythagoras and was very secretive. At first, the school was highly concerned with the morality of society. Members were required to live ethically, love one another, share political beliefs, practice pacifism, and devote themselves to the mathematics of nature. Pythagoras's followers were commonly called "Pythagoreans". They are generally accepted as philosophical mathematicians who had an influence on the beginning of axiomatic geometry, which after two hundred years of development was written down by Euclid in The Elements. The Pythagoreans observed a rule of silence called echemythia, the breaking of which was punishable by death. This was because the Pythagoreans believed that a man's words were usually careless and misrepresented him and that when someone was "in doubt as to what he should say, he should always remain silent". Another rule that they had was to help a man "in raising a burden, but do not assist him in laying it down, for it is a great sin to encourage indolence", and they said "departing from your house, turn not back, for the furies will be your attendants"; this axiom reminded them that it was better to learn none of the truth about mathematics, God, and the universe at all than to learn a little without learning all. (The Secret Teachings of All Ages by Manly P. Hall). In his biography of Pythagoras (written seven centuries after Pythagoras's time), Porphyry stated that this silence was "of no ordinary kind." The Pythagoreans were divided into an inner circle called the mathematikoi("mathematicians") and an outer circle called the akousmatikoi ("listeners"). Porphyry wrote "the mathematikoi learned the more detailed and exactly elaborated version of this knowledge, the akousmatikoi(were) those who had heard only the summary headings of his (Pythagoras's) writings, without the more exact exposition." According to Iamblichus, the akousmatikoi were the exoteric disciples who listened to lectures that Pythagoras gave out loud from behind a veil. The akousmatikoi were not allowed to see Pythagoras and they were not taught the inner secrets of the cult. Instead they were taught laws of behavior and morality in the form of cryptic, brief sayings that had hidden meanings. The akousmatikoi recognized the mathematikoi as real Pythagoreans, but not vice versa. After the murder of a number of the mathematikoi by the cohorts of Cylon, a resentful disciple, the two groups split from each other entirely, with Pythagoras's wife Theano and their two daughters leading the mathematikoi. Theano, daughter of the Orphic initiate Brontinus, was a mathematician in her own right. She is credited with having written treatises on mathematics, physics, medicine, and child psychology, although nothing of her writing survives. Her most important work is said to have been a treatise on the philosophical principle of the golden mean. In a time when women were usually considered property and relegated to the role of housekeeper or spouse, Pythagoras allowed women to function on equal terms in his society.[3] The Pythagorean society is associated with prohibitions such as not to step over a crossbar, and not to eat beans. These rules seem like primitive superstition, similar to "walking under a ladder brings bad luck". The abusive epithet mystikos logos ("mystical speech") was hurled at Pythagoras even in ancient times to discredit him. The prohibition on beans could be linked to favism, which is relatively widespread around the Mediterranean. The key here is that akousmatameans "rules", so that the superstitious taboos primarily applied to the akousmatikoi, and many of the rules were probably invented after Pythagoras's death and independent from the mathematikoi (arguably the real preservers of the Pythagorean tradition). The mathematikoi placed greater emphasis on inner understanding than did the akousmatikoi, even to the extent of dispensing with certain rules and ritual practices. For the mathematikoi, being a Pythagorean was a question of innate quality and inner understanding. There was also another way of dealing with the akousmata - by allegorizing them. We have a few examples of this, one being Aristotle's explanations of them: "'step not over a balance', i.e. be not covetous; 'poke not the fire with a sword', i.e. do not vex with sharp words a man swollen with anger, 'eat not heart', i.e. do not vex yourself with grief," etc. We have evidence for Pythagoreans allegorizing in this way at least as far back as the early fifth century BC. This suggests that the strange sayings were riddles for the initiated. The Pythagoreans are known for their theory of the transmigration of souls, and also for their theory that numbers constitute the true nature of things. They performed purification rites and followed and developed various rules of living which they believed would enable their soul to achieve a higher rank among the gods. Much of their mysticism concerning the soul seem inseparable from the Orphic tradition. The Orphics advocated various purificatory rites and practices as well as incubatory rites of descent into the underworld. Pythagoras is also closely linked with Pherecydes of Syros, the man ancient commentators tend to credit as the first Greek to teach a transmigration of souls. Ancient commentators agree that Pherekydes was Pythagoras's most intimate teacher. Pherekydes expounded his teaching on the soul in terms of a pentemychos ("five-nooks", or "five hidden cavities") - the most likely origin of the Pythagorean use of the pentagram, used by them as a symbol of recognition among members and as a symbol of inner health (ugieia). The Pythagorean theorem: The sum of the areas of the two squares on the legs (a and b) equals the area of the square on the hypotenuse (c).

Since the fourth century AD, Pythagoras has commonly been given credit for discovering the Pythagorean theorem, a theorem in geometry that states that in a right-angled triangle the square of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle), c, is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides, band a-that is, a2 + b2 = c2. While the theorem that now bears his name was known and previously utilized by the Babylonians and Indians, he, or his students, are often said to have constructed the first proof. It must, however, be stressed that the way in which the Babylonians handled Pythagorean numbers, implies that they knew that the principle was generally applicable, and knew some kind of proof, which has not yet been found in the (still largely unpublished) cuneiform sources.[5] Because of the secretive nature of his school and the custom of its students to attribute everything to their teacher, there is no evidence that Pythagoras himself worked on or proved this theorem. For that matter, there is no evidence that he worked on any mathematical or meta-mathematical problems. Some attribute it as a carefully constructed myth by followers of Plato over two centuries after the death of Pythagoras, mainly to bolster the case for Platonic meta-physics, which resonate well with the ideas they attributed to Pythagoras. This attribution has stuck, down the centuries up to modern times.[6] The earliest known mention of Pythagoras's name in connection with the theorem occurred five centuries after his death, in the writings of Cicero and Plutarch. Today, Pythagoras is revered as a prophet by the Ahl al-Tawhid or Druze faith along with his fellow Greek, Plato. But Pythagoras also had his critics, such as Heraclitus who said that "much learning does not teach wisdom; otherwise it would have taught Hesiod and Pythagoras, and again Xenophanes and Hecataeus".[7] Pythagoras' religious and scientific views were, in his opinion, inseparably interconnected. Religiously, Pythagoras was a believer of metempsychosis. He believed in transmigration, or the reincarnation of the soul again and again into the bodies of humans, animals, or vegetables until it became moral. His ideas of reincarnation were influenced by ancient Greek religion. He was one of the first to propose that the thought processes and the soul were located in the brain and not the heart. He himself claimed to have lived four lives that he could remember in detail, and heard the cry of his dead friend in the bark of a dog. One of Pythagoras' beliefs was that the essence of being is number. Thus, being relies on stability of all things that create the universe. Things like health relied on a stable proportion of elements; too much or too little of one thing causes an imbalance that makes a being unhealthy. Pythagoras viewed thinking as the calculating with the idea numbers. When combined with the Folk theories, the philosophy evolves into a belief that Knowledge of the essence of being can be found in the form of numbers. If this is taken a step further, one can say that because mathematics is an unseen essence, the essence of being is an unseen characteristic that can be encountered by the study of mathematics. No texts by Pythagoras survive, although forgeries under his name - a few of which remain extant - did circulate in antiquity. Critical ancient sources like Aristotle and Aristoxenus cast doubt on these writings. Ancient Pythagoreans usually quoted their master's doctrines with the phrase autos ephe ("he himself said") - emphasizing the essentially oral nature of his teaching. Pythagoras appears as a character in the last book of Ovid's Metamorphoses, where Ovid has him expound upon his philosophical viewpoints. Pythagoras has been quoted as saying, "No man is free who cannot command himself." There is another side to Pythagoras, as he became the subject of elaborate legends surrounding his historic persona. Aristotle described Pythagoras as a wonder-worker and somewhat of a supernatural figure, attributing to him such aspects as a golden thigh, which was a sign of divinity. According to Aristotle and others' accounts, some ancients believed that he had the ability to travel through space and time, and to communicate with animals and plants.[8] An extract from Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable's entry entitled "Golden Thigh": Pythagoras is said to have had a golden thigh, which he showed to Abaris, the Hyperborean priest, and exhibited in the Olympic games.[9] Another legend, also taken from Brewer's Dictionary, describes his writing on the moon: Pythagoras asserted he could write on the moon. His plan of operation was to write on a looking-glass in blood, and place it opposite the moon, when the inscription would appear photographed or reflected on the moon's disc.[10]

One of Pythagoras's major accomplishments was the discovery that music was based on proportional intervals of the numbers one through four. He believed that the number system, and therefore the universe system, was based on the sum of these numbers: ten. Pythagoreans swore by the Tetrachtys of the Decad, or ten, rather than by the gods. Odd numbers were masculine and even were feminine. He discovered the theory of mathematical proportions, constructed from three to five geometrical solids. One member of his order, Hippasos, also discovered Irrational Numbers, but the idea was unthinkable to Pythagoras, and according to legend, Hippasos was executed. Pythagoras (or the Pythagoreans) also discovered square numbers. They found that if one took, for example, four small stones and arranged them into a square, each side of the square was not only equivalent to the other, but that when the two sides were multiplied together, they equaled the sum total of stones in the square arrangement, hence the name "Square Root"[11]. He was one of the first to think that the earth was round, that all planets have an axis, and that all the planets travel around one central point. He originally identified that point as Earth, but later renounced it for the idea that the planets revolve around a central "fire" that he never identified as the sun. He also believed that the moon was another planet that he called a "counter-Earth" - furthering his belief in the Limited-Unlimited. Pythagoras or in a broader sense, the Pythagoreans, allegedly exercised an important influence on the work of Plato. According to R. M. Hare, his influence consists of three points: a) the platonic Republic might be related to the idea of "a tightly organized community of like-minded thinkers", like the one established by Pythagoras in Croton. b) there is evidence that Plato possibly took from Pythagoras the idea that mathematics and, generally speaking, abstract thinking is a secure basis for philosophical thinking as well as "for substantial theses in science and morals". c) Plato and Pythagoras shared a "mystical approach to the soul and its place in the material world". It is probable that both have been influenced by Orphism.[12] Plato's harmonics were clearly influenced by the work of Archytas, a genuine Pythagorean of the third generation, who made important contributions to geometry, reflected in Book VIII of Euclid's Elements. In the legends of ancient Rome, Numa Pompilius, the second King of Rome, is said to have studied under Pythagoras. This is unlikely, since the commonly accepted dates for the two lives do not overlap. Pythagoras started a secret society called the Pythagorean brotherhood devoted to the study of mathematics. This had a great effect on future esoteric traditions, such as Rosicrucianism and Freemasonry, both of which were occult groups dedicated to the study of mathematics and both of which claimed to have evolved out of the Pythagorean brotherhood. The mystical and occult qualities of Pythagorean mathematics are discussed in a chapter of Manly P. Hall's The Secret Teachings of All Agesentitled "Pythagorean Mathematics". Pythagorean theory was tremendously influential on later numerology, which was extremely popular throughout the Middle East in the ancient world. The 8th-century Muslim alchemist Jabir ibn Hayyan grounded his work in an elaborate numerology greatly influenced by Pythagorean theory

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