« first day (5158 days earlier)      last day (14 days later) » 

08:02
Speaking of anime and languages, Nightwish - Nemo unexpectedly came on on YouTube and it mentions "reveal to me my true name". Looking it up, it seems to be a shamanistic tradition but I remember names being a big deal in Spirited Away. Is there anything of a theme about true names in Japanese manga or was that a one-off?
08:13
Or anime, I should say. I can't say I've watched many. It'd be interesting if there was some commonality between traditions about the meaning/power of a name
08:28
It is a bit of a recurring theme, yeah. Not sure if it's a japanese thing or just a fantasy thing though
08:46
That makes sense. I guess it's hard in modern times to really know the origins of certain themes
09:04
@roganjosh lol, I listened to Nemo yesterday. Well, I was talking to a colleague about music and mentione Tarja and he didn't know who she was, so I sent him a couple of songs. Nemo being one of them.
At any rate, I'm not too familiar with Anime (I've not watched enough to form a cohesive picture of common tropes) but I know Spirited Away does deal with that. Also, from what I know, true names are a recurring theme in fantasy. Different cultures have different beliefs around that. Starting with ancient Egyptians. But true name mythos is spread throughout the world. I don't think the Japanese have much of that. But probably some. I'd assume Spirited Away taps into more of the wider folklore.
IIRC, the magic in the Earthsea series was mostly built around true names and names of power. Tapping into the same wider folklore. I don't think it uses specific one. I've read "Wizard of Earthsea" and from what I remember, they would use true names to, say, unlock more healing potential of a herb. In general to compel or alter aspects of things in the world. It's more shamanistic (negotiative) than just straight imposing one's will on the universe (more usual fantasy magic).
It's also been a long time since I read it, so I don't quite remember it well enough. Also, there is way more books
09:35
I find the Japanese culture so difficult to understand, mostly because of the misinformation online. Before my first trip, pretty much everything I read said you wouldn't make actual friends in Japan because they're a very reserved culture. They'll certainly be hospitable and polite but they won't really trust you. Well, I think sitting in a bar until 5am with Aiko on our very first night put a nail in that notion. She went on to take us out around Tokyo a couple of times
When we went to Kyoto, this was the o-miyagi we brought her as a present (sadly that's a scan, she got the original) from the national manga museum
My fortune from Itsukushima was good enough to frame along with it. Poor Anthony's was just horrendous. It took us an hour to work out how to translate it and it was just bad to bad for him; it was quite amusing, but not for him
Yeah, from what I've heard the culture is on the insular side. Which sort of makes sense. Historically, Japan has tried to cut ties with the rest of the world. Also, they are an island with not much influx of people. So, being wary of outsiders is probably more natural than in, say, the US. However, people who've been there all say the "insular nature" is far overblown. Which...also makes sense. Surely, history doesn't have that much of a hold on current culture. And people are, well, people.
I'd love to visit. But I also need probably solid two weeks (jet lag will eat a day or two at least) to have enough time to see the sights. Not just do a whistle stop tour.
09:53
On both occasions I have been, we have made friends in literally every place we went. Just make sure you get the portable wifi and you can download a Japanese keyboard on your phone for google translate so you can just keep passing the phone back and forth
There are devices that run live(-ish?) translation of voice. I think it's something running Android or whatever with just a translation app on it. So, not a phone. Never tried them but might also be an option.
They were crap, honestly. We first started with that
The one thing you need to do is take the English, translate to Japanese, then back to English and there are certain phrases that come across really badly. Two clicks of a button will help you know that it needs rephrasing
But I was in Turkey once and somebody on the airport did the phone trick. Well, it was a customs guy who said I couldn't carry a souvenir on the plane. He asked me what language I prefer, I said "English is fine", then he types on his phone and shows me the translation that the statuette we had in the hand luggage was too big and couldn't legally go on the plane.
Also, I remember the translation had "Horse does not pass" in it, which stuck with me for how funny it was (it was a statuette of a horse).
Equine equality is a controversial topic it seems
Had I not done the translation cycle I would have told them that my mum (I took her for her 60th) was my girlfriend. The sad thing is, I know the word for "mother" but the sentence I was trying to say got really garbled. Always do the switch check!
10:34
@roganjosh Oedipus, is that you :P
10:44
Google has just scraped too much Freud, I guess!
11:23
A true name is a name of a thing or being that expresses, or is somehow identical to, its true nature. The notion that language, or some specific sacred language, refers to things by their true names has been central to philosophical study as well as various traditions of magic, religious invocation and mysticism (mantras) since antiquity. == Philosophical and religious contexts == The true name of the Egyptian sun god Ra was revealed to Isis through an elaborate trick. This gave Isis complete power over Ra and allowed her to put her son Horus on the throne. Socrates in Plato's Cratylus considers...
not exactly a recent trope
11:34
Sure, I didn't think it was a recent trope, I was just curious as to whether it was a kind of "convergent evolution " (to use the term very loosely) between cultures. That page seems to confirm that it is
 
1 hour later…
12:47
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Well...yes. Predates the pyramids. At least.
@roganjosh Yep, must be. Beliefs have form around the world that have the same touching points even if the cultures could have never met. And, sure, they don't have the same beliefs but still broadly similar on certain topics. Another example is nature veneration in various ways. Shamans in America talking to spirits or spirit men in Africa do it. Japanese also have these animistic beliefs. Especially consider kitsune and other creatures that are essentially very special animals.
 
7 hours later…
19:53
hello all, learning some python had a question note worth a question post in so. I have a route in REST based api in flask, which receives json data, essentially string when i read it in my api, I want to parse a date field which comes in a string, if it parses without error, i will read and store it but if it throws error, i want to see, if there is a month/day/year pattern and if yes i want to extract that and store it. any suggestions?

« first day (5158 days earlier)      last day (14 days later) »