this post was submitted on 16 Sep 2024
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Hildegard of Bingen (also known as Hildegarde von Bingen, l. 1098-1179) was a Christian mystic, Benedictine abbess, and polymath proficient in philosophy, musical composition, herbology, medieval literature, cosmology, medicine, biology, theology, and natural history. She refused to be defined by the patriarchal hierarchy of the Church and, although she abided by its strictures, pushed the established boundaries for women.

Along with her impressive body of work and ethereal musical compositions, Hildegard is best known for her spiritual concept of Viriditas – “greenness” - the cosmic life force infusing the natural world. For Hildegard, the Divine manifested itself and was apparent in nature. Nature itself was not the Divine but the natural world gave proof of, existed because of, and glorified God. She is also known for her writings on the concept of Sapientia – Divine Wisdom – specifically immanent Feminine Divine Wisdom which draws close to and nurtures the human soul.

From a young age, she experienced ecstatic visions of light and sound, which she interpreted as messages from God. These visions were authenticated by ecclesiastical authorities, who encouraged her to write her experiences down. She would become famous in her own lifetime for her visions, wisdom, writings, and musical compositions, and her counsel was sought by nobility throughout Europe.

Early Life & Education

Hildegard came from an upper-class German family, the youngest of ten children. She was often ill as a child, afflicted with headaches which accompanied her visions, from around the age of three. Whether her parents consulted physicians about her health issues is unknown, but at the age of seven, they sent her to be enrolled as a novice in the convent of Disibodenberg.

Hildegard was placed under the care of Abbess Jutta von Sponheim (l. 1091-1136), head of the order, an aristocrat and daughter of a count who had chosen the monastic life for herself. Jutta was only six years older than Hildegard in 1105 when the latter entered the convent and the two would become close friends. Jutta taught Hildegard to read and write, how to recite the prayers, and introduced her to music by teaching her to play the psaltery (a stringed instrument like a zither). Jutta may also have instructed the younger girl in Latin (though this claim has been challenged) and encouraged her to read widely.

Hildegard certainly fit this paradigm of the female intellectual, distinguishing herself by her vast learning, devotion to God, and service to others. When Jutta died in 1136, Hildegard, then 38 years old, was unanimously chosen to succeed her.

Works & Beliefs

Hildegard's vision is all-encompassing in scope, far transcending the common vision of the medieval Church while still remaining within the bounds of orthodoxy. She claimed the Divine was as female in spirit as male and that both these elements were essential for wholeness. Her concept of Viriditas elevated the natural world from the Church's view of a fallen realm of Satan to an expression and extension of the Divine. God was revealed in nature, and the grass, flowers, trees, and animals bore witness to the Divine simply by their existence.

Her first major work, the Scivias, relates 26 of her visions in three sections – six visions in the first, seven in the second, thirteen in the third – along with her interpretation and commentary on the nature of the Divine and the role of the Church as an intermediary between God and humanity. She depicts God as a cosmic egg, both male and female, pulsing with love; the male aspect of the Divine is transcendent while the female is immanent. It is this immanence which invites rapport with the Divine.

Hildegard believed that, prior to the Fall of Man, God was worshipped by celestial song which, after the Fall, was approximated by music as humans now heard and understood it. Music, then, was the best expression of one's love for, devotion to, and worship of God. In keeping with this belief, she ends the Scivias with the text of her morality play Ordo Virtutum and her Symphony of Heaven, one of her earliest musical compositions.

Conclusion

Aside from her contributions to theology, philosophy, music, medicine, and the rest, Hildegard invented the constructed script of the Litterae ignotae (alternate alphabet), which she used in her hymns for concise rhyming and, possibly, to lend to her text a sense of another dimension and higher plane. She also invented the Lingua ignota (unknown language), her own philological construct of 23 letters which served to separate and elevate her order from the mundane world.

In spite of her accomplishments and fame, the Church continued to regard women not only as second-class citizens but dangerous temptations and obstacles to virtue. The highly influential Bernard of Clairvaux claimed that a man could not associate with a woman without desiring sex with her and the canonical order of the Premonstratensians banned women from their order claiming to have recognized "that the wickedness of women is greater than all the other wickedness in the world" (Gies, 87). It was precisely this kind of misogynistic mindset that Hildegard struggled against not only within the Church but in medieval society at large.

Even so, the significance of her work was recognized by the Church and she was singled out as a woman of note. Her cause of death is unknown but she died, most likely of natural causes, in 1179. Attempts to canonize her stalled until 2012 when she was recognized as a saint through the process of Equivalent Canonization and was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church by Pope Benedict XVI. Her famous visions are today interpreted as symptoms of a migraine sufferer but this has in no way detracted from her reputation.

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago (5 children)

It's fucking crazy we let the emperor of japan live and stay in power lmao

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[–] Wmill@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago (4 children)

no-copyright I think if the JP voice actor for sonic Junichi throws in english every now again I think the english voice actors should throw in Japanese. There is something lost when the dub is in pure english, those little moments of a different language are fun and when sonic drops them it's usually means something serious is going on very-smart

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[–] Wmill@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago

Noticing the cake thing on my name, originally joined because I wanted to distract myself when my dog died in 2019. Been some time so it hurts less but still miss him. Molino de Viento you were a real one trump-feed

[–] Hohsia@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The average person in my life seems unable to understand that my boss can be a good guy outside of work but that doesn’t mean I won’t hate his guts (he is my boss and I have to watch him get paid much more for doing far less).

[–] Frank@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago

Many people seem unable to understand that, like, structural violence exists independently of whether someone is "nice" or not.

[–] AmericaDelendaEst@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago (15 children)

Today I learned, or I assume I learned since idfk if this is actually what happened, that apparently if you try to thicken an overly acidic sauce with corn starch it just won't fucking work, it'll just separate and form a scummy foam

I was making tofu piccata and I had the most expertly dredged and deep fried tofu ready to go, it was beautiful, but the sauce got so fucked.

I'm pretty sure it's because i followed the recipe without thinking and actually 4.5 cups of lemon juice for 9 cups of vegetable stock (and like a pound of margarine) is just way too fucking much lemon juice. I should have used like, a cup, max. But i didn't, I did what the stupid paper told me to do, and so not only was the sauce almost intolerably lemony but when I tried to thicken it it just literally did not fucking work. I was so confused because I added a LOT of corn starch, and it was still runny and shit, until I ended up skimming the shit off the top like twice and realized that the foam probably WAS the corn starch

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago

Yes I work at Amazon's orphan making division, yes I call anyone to the left of Kissinger a tankie as an insult, but I play the soviet anthem on spotify sometimes and think that we should build more luxury condos so I'm pretty much a communist

[–] Grownbravy@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago

Lots of offline stuff be happening, gonna be a fun week

[–] Wmill@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago

Outside of getting a sick twist of watching youtubers suffer from challenge runs I really like watching them since they open up a lot of stuff I didn't know about my favorite games. It's either then using their speedrun knowledge to get through it or stuff they notice that I find interesting. I'm talking about no analog stick challenge or no jump challenges that take ages to complete but you see all the weird stuff they pull of to make it happen.

[–] Tomboymoder@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago

Nice Mega.
My Catholic ass approves. mario-thumbs-up

[–] Sleve_McDichael@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago

The Wheel of Posts turns, and Threads come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Thread that gave it birth comes again. In one Thread, called the Mega Thread by some, a Thread yet to come, a Thread long past, a wind rose in Chapo Dot Chat. The wind was not the beginning. There are neither beginnings nor endings to the turning of the Wheel of Posts. But it was a beginning.

[–] FunkyStuff@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago

The post I commented it under got deleted so I'll just repost this here with no context

[–] stigsbandit34z@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago

Logged into linkedin and was greeted with a reel

a-guy

[–] Grownbravy@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago

Waiting here for the client, seeing the eldery asian people of this neighborhood doing their morning tai chi in a basketball court, not for nothing but they’re doing way better than their suburban counter parts locked away from everything and each other by the tyranny of car travel.

[–] operacion_ogro@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

I just bought an identical phone case to the one I bought three and a half years ago and it costs 50% more lmao kitty-cri

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[–] VHS@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago

NY Post is making Goebbels proud with the sensationalist right-wing bullshit they're always pushing

[–] Zorothamya@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago (3 children)

I love the hexbear logo. I want an enamel pin of it. Hexbear merch when?

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[–] viva_la_juche@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Ive been touching grass all week and just found out about the trump shooter? Did he even open fire I’ve seen conflicting things that SS got him before he was able to but others that he missed

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[–] miz@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I think I need a break I'm just yelling at people now. time to go do some manual labor shoveling compost

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[–] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Suddenly I thought there was a monstrous hail storm. I went to my sliding glass doors and I could barely see outside. But it turned out it wasn't hail at all. It just heavy rain with insane winds throwing the dropets at my house. Holy shit is it windy. I've never experienced wind that strong ever.

Ninja edit. In just a few minutes the wind died down to a normal windy level and the rain was falling down normally. Then sun came out to create a sun shower. Now it's hardly raining at all.

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[–] ashinadash@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago

I have hot takes that people could destroy me over but "popular game bad" aint it

[–] Goblinmancer@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago

Gamers hate veilguard for not being le grimdark medieval setting even though its set in magic land, every fantasy game should look like generic medieval europe #1000, todd howard vindicated.

[–] someone@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago (2 children)

So after getting No Man's Sky last week for Switch, I've put in a frankly ridiculous amount of time into it. A few thoughts from a casual who hasn't played a PC game except for occasional Minecraft and KSP in 10+ years.

The whole philosophy of the game seems to be "think before acting". I really like this. I feel less like an angry shooty soldier boy, and more like a calm and collected professional Starfleet officer.

I am going into this absolutely blind, using strictly the in-game help. I am not googling for anything. I am not watching any youtube videos. I'm okay with making mistakes because the universe is so vast I know I'll find a new opportunity down the road where I can learn from those prior mistakes.

It scratches so many gaming-style itches so well. I can go from Minecraft style base building, to STALKER style venturing into dark places on foot weapon-ready, to Privateer-style space combat seamlessly. It all feels like it flows from one situation to the next naturally. I've heard the original release was a broken buggy disaster, but this particular release feels so polished. There's some annoying loading times during various warps and teleports, but I'm okay with that, because otherwise it runs smooth and fast.

The graphics are noticably simpler than I've seen in screenshots for other versions, but at no point did I feel they're too simple. The devs did the best they could with the Switch hardware and it shows. It's akin to the magic that the devs of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom devs pulled off. It should not be possible to do what they did on this aging hardware, but they made it work. The moderately simpler graphics come across as more "stylized" than "low-res" which is a vibe I dig.

Fantastic motion controls on the Switch, among the best I've ever tried. I normally loathe both FPS and third-person games on thumbstick gamepads, but the devs did a great job here.

The "nanites have the blueprints, just provide the materials" tech/inventory mechanic took me awhile to figure out instead of just buying parts like in so many prior Privateer-alikes, but once I did, I adored the elegance of it. And it makes total sense in a nanotech-everywhere world.

I'm not asking for confirmation on my theories here because I don't want the game spoiled, but I've got some thoughts that I just want to type out. Please don't spoil anything!I don't think this "universe" that my fictional character is in is "original" in the context of the game. I think it's completely artificial inside the game context. Whether a lab creation or a computer simulation, I'm not sure yet.

I'm leaning towards computer simulation because of all the real-world human cultural references (Atlas, Euclid, etc), despite humans apparently not being a part of this universe at all. All tech seems perfectly human-scale. Multi-tools that humans can physically handle, ship cockpits made for humanoid species. The whole suspiciously-convenient Space Anomaly station. All those eery "malfunctioning" planets. But there's so much reality-warping weirdness going on that I could buy "artificial universe being messed with by outside humanoid scientists" theory too.

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[–] MF_COOM@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago (1 children)
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[–] Frank@hexbear.net 9 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Chums I have to beat Malenia.

I issued the challenge. She accepted. I cannot leave because it would be rude. She's the most respected souls boss maybe ever. It doesn't matter that she's not real and doesn't have feelings. I would feel like a dishonorable cad.

So I have to keep fighting her until I win and holy shit Fam I am not winning.

gargantuan-bronze-lenin-head

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