| Title: | * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * | 
| Notice: | Conference has been write-locked. Use new version. | 
| Moderator: | DYPSS1::SCHAFER | 
| Created: | Thu Feb 20 1986 | 
| Last Modified: | Mon Aug 29 1994 | 
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 | 
| Number of topics: | 2852 | 
| Total number of notes: | 33157 | 
    		From an article in a computer music mag:
    
        A hundred and fifty years before Beethoven was born, an
    	English essayist, Roger Bacon, wrote a futuristic story called
    	"The New Atlantis".  Describing life in this ideal world, the
    	inhabitant of New Atlantis says:
    
    	"...We also have sound-houses, where we practice and 
    	demonstrate all sounds and their generation.  We have 
    	harmonies which you have not, of quarter sounds and lesser
    	...diverse instruments of Musick likewise to you unknown, 
    	some sweeter than you... with Bells and Rings that are
    	dainty and sweet, we represent small souncs as well as
    	Great and Deepe ... we make diverse Tremblings and Warblings
    	of sound.  We have certain helps, which, set to the ears,
    	doe further hearing greatly.  We have strange and artificial
    	echoes, reflecting the voice many times... and means to convey
    	sound in trunks and pipes, in strange lines and distances..."
    
    		It sounds authentic.  Does anyone know for sure?
    	P.S. later: encyclopedia says bacon is even earlier, 
    		middle ages, was the futurist nut of his time,
    		quite remarkable.  no mention of "new atlantis", tho.
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2035.1 | SALSA::MOELLER | Never say 'forget it' to a computer. | Wed Jul 05 1989 15:10 | 3 | |
|     yes, I've seen this passage before.  It be authentic.
    
    karl
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| 2035.2 | Encyclopedia on Bacon | CONFG5::FALOR | Mon Jul 24 1989 10:21 | 24 | |
|     	I checked the library.  Only an encylclopedia had something on
    	Roger Bacon.
    
    	Born around 1220, died 1292.  A (the) major medieval exponent
    	of experimental science.  He was the first European to describe 
    	in detail the process of making gunpowder, and he proposed
    	flying machines and motorized ships and carriages.  He won
    	a place in popular literature as a kind of wonder worker.
    	Born into a wealthy family.  He devoted himself wholeheartedly
    	to the cultivation of those new branches of learning to which
    	he was introduced at Oxford--languages, optics, and alchemy--
    	and to further studies in astronomy and mathematics.  He 
    	seriously studied the problem of lying in a machine with flapping
    	wings (ornicopter?).  He described spectacles, which soon came
    	into use.  He wrote several encyclopediae of known, proven
    	knowledge for the pope and general use.  He was not a humble
    	mad, very outspoken and hypercritical of all establishments.
    	Later, as a friar, he was condemned to prison by his fellow
    	Franciscans because of dertain "suspected novelties" in his
    	teaching, but was probably issued because of his bitter attacks
    	on  the theologians and scholars of his day.  Though he was
    	widely regarded as extremely talented, it seems he thought
    	himself much more than that, and let everyone know it.
    
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