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Illumination

A Wisdom Archive on Illumination

Illumination

A selection of articles related to Illumination

We recommend this article: Illumination - 1, and also this: Illumination - 2.
illumination, Illumination

ARTICLES RELATED TO Illumination

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - School of Paris - Modern School of Paris

The School of Paris describes, not an art movement or a learning institution, but instead is more indicative of the importance of Paris as a center of Western art in the early decades of the 20th century. The group of non-French artists in Paris before World War I, created in the styles of Post-Impressionism, Cubism, Fauvism, and includes artists like Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, Amedeo Modigliani, Piet Mondrian, Pierre Bonnard and Henri Matisse. Many of these same artists, plus Constantin Brancusi, Raoul Dufy and Chaim Sout ...

See also:

School of Paris, School of Paris - Medieval illuminators, School of Paris - Modern School of Paris, School of Paris - Reference

Read more here: » School of Paris: Encyclopedia II - School of Paris - Modern School of Paris

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Phong shading - Phong interpolation

As a rendering method, Phong shading can be regarded as an improved version of Gouraud shading that provides a better approximation to reality by approximating the Phong shading model. The main problem with Gouraud shading is that when a specular highlight occurs near the center of a large triangle, it will usually be missed entirely. This problem is fixed by Phong shading. Some argue that using smaller triangles fixes the problem of Gouraud shading, with respect to specular highlights. Others counter that Phong shading is bett ...

See also:

Phong shading, Phong shading - Phong illumination or reflection model, Phong shading - Phong interpolation

Read more here: » Phong shading: Encyclopedia II - Phong shading - Phong interpolation

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - William Blake - Bibliography

William Blake - Illuminated Books. c.1788: All Religions are One There is No Natural Religion 1789: Songs of Innocence The Book of Thel 1790-1793: The Marriage of Heaven and Hell 1793: Visions of the Daughters of Albion America: a Prophecy 1794: Europe: a Prophecy The First Book of Urizen Songs of Experience (The sequel to ...

See also:

William Blake, William Blake - Early life, William Blake - Childhood and Family, William Blake - Apprenticeship to Basire, William Blake - The Royal Academy, William Blake - Marriage, William Blake - Later life and career, William Blake - Bibliography, William Blake - Illuminated Books

Read more here: » William Blake: Encyclopedia II - William Blake - Bibliography

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - History

Carolingians found a taste for Mediterranean art when Charlemagne set out to rival the splendour of the Lateran in Rome where he had been crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 800. As symbolic representative of Rome (and by title), he sought the renovatio (revival) of Roman culture and learning in the West, and thus became a patron of the arts. He wished to establish himself as the heir to the great rulers of the past, to emulate and symbolically link the artistic achievements of Early Ch ...

See also:

Carolingian art, Carolingian art - History, Carolingian art - Illuminated manuscripts, Carolingian art - Sculpture and metalwork, Carolingian art - Painting, Carolingian art - Mosaics, Carolingian art - Spolia

Read more here: » Carolingian art: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - History

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Jackson Michigan - Economy

Jackson is home to one of the world's largest maximum-security prisons, which provides employment to many Jackson residents, commonly referred to as Jacksonians. The other main employers in the city are CMS Energy, which provides natural gas and electrical services to much of Michigan and has its headquarters in the city, as well as Foote Hospital. Jackson Michigan - Income Tax. The City of Jackson currently assesses a 1% income tax to residents and businesses within the city, and 0.5% for non-residents. The income tax provides $7,000,000 of ...

See also:

Jackson Michigan, Jackson Michigan - Geography, Jackson Michigan - Economy, Jackson Michigan - Income Tax, Jackson Michigan - Coney Island heritage, Jackson Michigan - Sparks Foundation County Park - Illuminated Cascades, Jackson Michigan - Education, Jackson Michigan - Demographics

Read more here: » Jackson Michigan: Encyclopedia II - Jackson Michigan - Economy

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - Sculpture and metalwork

Carolingian sculptors created book covers in carved ivory, with themes largely derived from Late Antiquity paintings. For example the front and back covers of the Lorsch Gospels are of a 6th century Imperial triumph, adapted to the triumph of Christ and the Virgin. Charlemagne revived large-scale bronze casting when he created a foundry at Aachen which cast the doors for his palace chapel, in imitation of Roman design. The finest example of Carolingian goldsmith work was the Golden Altar (824–859) (picture:altar), also known ...

See also:

Carolingian art, Carolingian art - History, Carolingian art - Illuminated manuscripts, Carolingian art - Sculpture and metalwork, Carolingian art - Painting, Carolingian art - Mosaics, Carolingian art - Spolia

Read more here: » Carolingian art: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - Sculpture and metalwork

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - Painting

We know from written sources of frescos in churches and palaces, although most have not survived. Charlemagne's Aachen palace contained a wall painting of the Liberal Arts, as well as narrative scenes from his war in Spain. The palace of Louis the Pious at Ingelheim contained historical images from antiquity to the time of Charlemagne, and the palace church contained typological scenes of the Old and New Testaments juxtaposition ed next to one another. Fragmentary paintings have survived at Auxerre, Coblenz, Lorsch, Cologne, Fulda, Corvey, Trier, Mustair, M ...

See also:

Carolingian art, Carolingian art - History, Carolingian art - Illuminated manuscripts, Carolingian art - Sculpture and metalwork, Carolingian art - Painting, Carolingian art - Mosaics, Carolingian art - Spolia

Read more here: » Carolingian art: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - Painting

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - Spolia

Spolia is the Latin term for "spoils" and is used to refer to the taking or appropriation of ancient monumental or other art works for new uses or locations. We know that many marbles and columns were brought from Rome northward during this period. Perhaps the most famous example of Carolingian spolia is the tale of an equestrian statue. In Rome, Charlemagne had seen the bronze equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius in the Lateran Palace. It was the only surviving statue of a pre-Christian Roman Emperor because it was mistakenly ...

See also:

Carolingian art, Carolingian art - History, Carolingian art - Illuminated manuscripts, Carolingian art - Sculpture and metalwork, Carolingian art - Painting, Carolingian art - Mosaics, Carolingian art - Spolia

Read more here: » Carolingian art: Encyclopedia II - Carolingian art - Spolia

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Illuminati - Origins

Since Illuminati literally means 'enlightened ones' in Latin, it is natural that several unrelated historical groups have identified themselves as Illuminati. Often, this was due to claims of possessing gnostic texts or other arcane information not generally available. The designation illuminati was also in use from the 14th century by the Brethren of the Free Spirit, and in the 15th century was assumed by other enthusiasts who claimed that the illuminating light came, not by being communicated from an authoritative but secret source, but from within, the result of exal ...

See also:

Illuminati, Illuminati - Origins, Illuminati - Alumbrados of Spain, Illuminati - Illuminés of France, Illuminati - Rosicrucians, Illuminati - Martinists, Illuminati - The Bavarian Illuminati, Illuminati - History, Illuminati - Cultural effect, Illuminati - The Illuminati in popular culture

Read more here: » Illuminati: Encyclopedia II - Illuminati - Origins

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - William Blake - Early life

William Blake - Childhood and Family. Blake was born at 28a Broad Street, Golden Square, London into a middle-class family. He was one of four children (an older brother died in infancy). His father was a hosier. They are believed to have belonged to a radical religious sect called Dissenters; however, the exact identity of the sect is a mystery. The Bible was an early and profound influence on Blake, and would remain a crucia ...

See also:

William Blake, William Blake - Early life, William Blake - Childhood and Family, William Blake - Apprenticeship to Basire, William Blake - The Royal Academy, William Blake - Marriage, William Blake - Later life and career, William Blake - Bibliography, William Blake - Illuminated Books

Read more here: » William Blake: Encyclopedia II - William Blake - Early life

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Accommodation religion - In the Bible and in human language

Throughout the history of the Christian church, it has been generally held that the Bible - both the Old Testament and the New Testament - were divinely inspired. The principle of Accommodation allows for both the ability of the Bible to communicate objective spiritual truths about the nature of God, as well as the ability of the human authors to act as God's means by which this is to be communicated to mankind. While it is true that the authors themselves were limited and prone to mistakes, Accommodation allows for the perfect and truthful God to work in and through his human agents ...

See also:

Accommodation religion, Accommodation religion - In the Bible and in human language, Accommodation religion - Illumination, Accommodation religion - In the Person and work of Jesus Christ, Accommodation religion - In the Person and work of the Holy Spirit, Accommodation religion - In the sacraments, Accommodation religion - Protestantism, Accommodation religion - In the preaching of the Gospel

Read more here: » Accommodation religion: Encyclopedia II - Accommodation religion - In the Bible and in human language

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - William Blake - Later life and career

Blake's marriage to Catherine remained a close and devoted one until his death. There were early problems, however, such as Catherine's illiteracy and the couple's failure to produce children. At one point, in accordance with the beliefs of the Swedenborgian Society, Blake suggested bringing in a concubine. Catherine was distressed at the idea, and he dropped it. Later in his life Blake sold a great number of works, particularly his Bible illustrations, to Thomas Butts, a patron who saw Blake more as a friend in need than an artist. About 18 ...

See also:

William Blake, William Blake - Early life, William Blake - Childhood and Family, William Blake - Apprenticeship to Basire, William Blake - The Royal Academy, William Blake - Marriage, William Blake - Later life and career, William Blake - Bibliography, William Blake - Illuminated Books

Read more here: » William Blake: Encyclopedia II - William Blake - Later life and career

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Illuminati - The Bavarian Illuminati

Illuminati - History. A movement of freethinkers that were the most radical offshoot of The Enlightenment — whose adherents were given the name Illuminati (but who called themselves "Perfectibilists") — was founded on May 1, 1776 by Jesuit-taught Adam Weishaupt (d. 1830), who was the first lay professor of canon law. The group has also been called the Illuminati Order, the Order of t ...

See also:

Illuminati, Illuminati - Origins, Illuminati - Alumbrados of Spain, Illuminati - Illuminés of France, Illuminati - Rosicrucians, Illuminati - Martinists, Illuminati - The Bavarian Illuminati, Illuminati - History, Illuminati - Cultural effect, Illuminati - The Illuminati in popular culture

Read more here: » Illuminati: Encyclopedia II - Illuminati - The Bavarian Illuminati

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Case studies

Studies were done between 1924 and around 1933. Roethlisberger & Dickson give a great amount of detail, and little interpretation. Mayo gives a shorter account, including the interpretation which has been so influential: essentially, that it was feeling they were being closely attended to that was the cause of the improvements in performance. The Hawthorne effect comes from management re ...

See also:

Hawthorne effect, Hawthorne effect - Definitions, Hawthorne effect - Case studies, Hawthorne effect - Illumination experiments, Hawthorne effect - Relay assembly experiments, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the literature?, Hawthorne effect - Summary view of Hawthorne, Hawthorne effect - Jastrow's effect of expectancy on punched card workers, Hawthorne effect - Teacher effects, Hawthorne effect - Science studies

Read more here: » Hawthorne effect: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Case studies

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Case studies

Studies were done between 1924 and around 1933. Roethlisberger and Dickson give a great amount of detail, but little interpretation. Mayo gives a shorter account, including the interpretation which has been so influential: that it was feeling they were being closely attended to that was the cause of the improvements in performance. Originally Hawthorne effect research was a series of studies on the productivity of workers manipulated various conditions (pay, light levels, rest breaks, etc.) but each change resulted on average over tim ...

See also:

Hawthorne effect, Hawthorne effect - Definitions, Hawthorne effect - Case studies, Hawthorne effect - Illumination experiments, Hawthorne effect - Relay assembly experiments, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the literature?, Hawthorne effect - Summary view of Hawthorne, Hawthorne effect - Jastrow's effect of expectancy on punched card workers, Hawthorne effect - Teacher effects, Hawthorne effect - Science studies

Read more here: » Hawthorne effect: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Case studies

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Migration Period art - Migration art

Migration Period art - Polychrome style. See also: Visigothic art During the 2nd century the Goths of southern Russia discovered a new found taste for gold figurines and objects inlaid with precious stones. This style was borrowed from Scythians and the Sarmatians, had some Roman influences, and was also popular with the Huns. Perhaps the most famous examples are found in the 4th century Pietrossa Treasure (Petrossa) in Romania, which includes a great gold eagle brooch (picture). The eagle motif der ...

See also:

Migration Period art, Migration Period art - Background, Migration Period art - Migration art, Migration Period art - Polychrome style, Migration Period art - Animal style, Migration Period art - Christian influence, Migration Period art - Hiberno-Saxon art, Migration Period art - History, Migration Period art - Illuminated manuscripts, Migration Period art - Metalworking, Migration Period art - Stone sculpture

Read more here: » Migration Period art: Encyclopedia II - Migration Period art - Migration art

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Migration Period art - Background

In the 3rd century the Roman Empire almost collapsed and its army was becoming increasingly Germanic in make-up, so that in the 4th century when Huns pushed nomadic German tribes westward, they spilled across the Empire's borders and began to settle there. The Visigoths settled in Italy and then Spain, in the north the Franks settled in to Gaul and western Germany, and in the 5th century Scandinavians such as the Angles, Saxons and Jutes invaded Britain. By the close of the 6th century the Western Roman Empire was almost completely replaced with smaller less poli ...

See also:

Migration Period art, Migration Period art - Background, Migration Period art - Migration art, Migration Period art - Polychrome style, Migration Period art - Animal style, Migration Period art - Christian influence, Migration Period art - Hiberno-Saxon art, Migration Period art - History, Migration Period art - Illuminated manuscripts, Migration Period art - Metalworking, Migration Period art - Stone sculpture

Read more here: » Migration Period art: Encyclopedia II - Migration Period art - Background

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the literature?

The experiments were quite well enough done to establish that there were large effects due to causal factors other than the simple physical ones the experiments had originally been designed to study. The output ("dependent") variables were human work, and we can expect that educational effects to be similar (but it is not so obvious that medical effects would be). The experiments stand as a warning about simple experiments on human participants as if they were only material systems. There is less certainty about the nature of the surprise factor, other than it certainly depended on the ...

See also:

Hawthorne effect, Hawthorne effect - Definitions, Hawthorne effect - Case studies, Hawthorne effect - Illumination experiments, Hawthorne effect - Relay assembly experiments, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the literature?, Hawthorne effect - Summary view of Hawthorne, Hawthorne effect - Jastrow's effect of expectancy on punched card workers, Hawthorne effect - Teacher effects, Hawthorne effect - Science studies

Read more here: » Hawthorne effect: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the literature?

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?

Candice Gleim says: Broad experimental effects and their classifications can be found in Campbell, D. T., & Stanley, J. C. (1966). Experimental and quasi-experimental designs for research. Chicago: Rand McNally. and Cook, T.D., & Campbell, D.T. (1979), Quasi-Experimentation : Design and Analysis Issues. Houghton Mifflin Co. A summary is provided at http://www.valdosta.peachnet.edu/~whuitt/psy702/intro/valdgn.html and a newer versi ...

See also:

Hawthorne effect, Hawthorne effect - Definitions, Hawthorne effect - Case studies, Hawthorne effect - Illumination experiments, Hawthorne effect - Relay assembly experiments, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the literature?, Hawthorne effect - Summary view of Hawthorne, Hawthorne effect - Jastrow's effect of expectancy on punched card workers, Hawthorne effect - Teacher effects, Hawthorne effect - Science studies

Read more here: » Hawthorne effect: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?

Candice Gleim says: Broad experimental effects and their classifications can be found in Campbell, D. T., & Stanley, J. C. (1966). Experimental and quasi-experimental designs for research. Chicago: Rand McNally. and Cook, T. D., & Campbell, D. T. (1979), Quasi-Experimentation: Design and Analysis Issues. Houghton Mifflin Co. A summary is provided at http://www.valdosta.peachnet.edu/~whuitt/psy702/intro/valdgn.html and a newer versi ...

See also:

Hawthorne effect, Hawthorne effect - Definitions, Hawthorne effect - Case studies, Hawthorne effect - Illumination experiments, Hawthorne effect - Relay assembly experiments, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?, Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the literature?, Hawthorne effect - Summary view of Hawthorne, Hawthorne effect - Jastrow's effect of expectancy on punched card workers, Hawthorne effect - Teacher effects, Hawthorne effect - Science studies

Read more here: » Hawthorne effect: Encyclopedia II - Hawthorne effect - Can we trust the research?

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Laser applications - Military

Laser applications - Defensive applications. Recently, some progress has been made in the use of the laser as a directed energy weapon, mostly in defensive applications. By using a chemical laser, one in which the laser operation is powered by an energetic chemical reaction, the requirement for generating and storing a large amount of electrical energy (which directly or indirectly is used to power most high-power lasers) is removed. This makes the laser system much more compact, and easier to transport. O ...

See also:

Laser applications, Laser applications - Scientific, Laser applications - Spectroscopy, Laser applications - Lunar laser ranging, Laser applications - Photochemistry, Laser applications - Laser cooling, Laser applications - Nuclear fusion, Laser applications - As a finderscope for amateur telescopes, Laser applications - Microscopy, Laser applications - Military, Laser applications - Defensive applications, Laser applications - Strategic Defense Initiative, Laser applications - Laser sight, Laser applications - Illuminator, Laser applications - Rangefinder, Laser applications - Target designator, Laser applications - Death ray, Laser applications - Medical, Laser applications - Industrial & commercial

Read more here: » Laser applications: Encyclopedia II - Laser applications - Military

Illumination: Encyclopedia II - Wagon-wheel effect - Wagon-wheel effect under stroboscopic conditions

A movie camera typically operates at 24 frames per second, and standard television operates at 29.97 or 25 frames per second. A stroboscope can typically have its frequency set to any value. Artificial lighting that is temporally modulated when powered by alternating current, such as gas discharge lamps (including neon, mercury vapor, sodium vapor and fluorescent tubes), flicker at twice the frequency of the power line (for example 120 times per second on a 60 cycle line). In each cycle of current the power peaks twice (once with positive vo ...

See also:

Wagon-wheel effect, Wagon-wheel effect - Wagon-wheel effect under stroboscopic conditions, Wagon-wheel effect - Wagon-wheel effect under continuous illumination

Read more here: » Wagon-wheel effect: Encyclopedia II - Wagon-wheel effect - Wagon-wheel effect under stroboscopic conditions




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