GLOSSARY ENTRY (DERIVED FROM QUESTION BELOW) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
10:38 May 1, 2009 |
Latin to English translations [PRO] Art/Literary - Music | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Selected response from: Luis Antonio de Larrauri Local time: 14:48 | ||||||
Grading comment
|
Summary of answers provided | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
5 +1 | minor is proved |
| ||
2 -1 | a/the minor (scale) is shown to be appropriate/fit/serviceable |
|
Discussion entries: 6 | |
---|---|
a/the minor (scale) is shown to be appropriate/fit/serviceable Explanation: I am fairly certain that 'minor' here refers to a minor scale vs. a major one, such as C, in which most modern Western music is composed. Many modern composers and musical theorists, at least prior to the 20th century, looked upon minor scales with disdain, as sounding 'uncouth', 'barbaric', or the like, but in antiquity certainly, and perhaps during the Middle Ages, they were preferred to major scales. (Plato, for example, condemns C major as 'effeminate'.) -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 2 hrs (2009-05-01 13:16:02 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- The following discussion my prove helpful: http://www.chmtl.indiana.edu/tml/15th/UGODEC3B_TEXT.html -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 6 hrs (2009-05-01 16:47:37 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Possibly ‘minor probatur’ does refer to an examination of sorts. According to Lewis & Short (s.v. probo, I et A), the primary meaning of ‘probare’ is ‘to try, test, examine, inspect, judge of anything in respect of its goodness, fitness, etc.’ They cite, e.g., Pliny Sr. (Historia Naturalis, 12.14.32, §65, ‘tus probatur candore’, ‘(the quality of) incense is tested by its brightness’. If ‘probatur’ bears this meaning here, and if ‘minor’ refers to a minor musical scale (or, as I now suspect, to a shorter note), the phrase would mean ‘a minor scale (or ‘shorter note’) is assessed’ by reference to its length. It is perhaps also relevant that the tempo of music is determined by the length of its notes, as classical Greek and Latin poetry are measured by the length of their syllables, in both cases without reference to accent, be the accent tonic or stress. The following passage from Ugolino Urbevetanis’ treatise, to which I’ve provided the link above, may have some bearing upon this interpretation: Maior ex se patet, minor probatur quia semibrevis ex se est nota prolationis, brevis est nota temporis, longa modi minoris et maxima modi maioris. Cum autem non sint plures mensurae, minima ex se non est nota alicuius mensurae, ergo nec est perfecta nec imperfecta, igitur, et cetera. That is to say, in music, as in classical poetry, the tempo may vary from its natural value under certain conditions—in poetry these would be its immediate phonetic environment, which would permit a syllable to be shortened or prolonged according to certain metrical conventions—and thus a ‘short’ (‘brevis’) note (or, in poetry, syllable) might be said to be ‘tested’ regarding its apparent vs. its natural length. |
| |
Login to enter a peer comment (or grade) |
minor is proved Explanation: From what I see on the Internet, it refers to a minor premise. A syllogism has a major and a minor premise, and in this case the minor is proved. Leibniz - Theodicy - [ Traducir esta página ]Again this second minor is proved thus: 2. Prosyllogism. That which is future, that which is foreseen, that which is involved in the causes, ... www.class.uidaho.edu/mickelsen/texts/Leibniz - Theodicy.htm - 29k - Perkin Transactions 1 Articles - [ Traducir esta página ]The structures and relative stereochemistries of all the products, major and minor, is proved by alternative syntheses and/or conversions into known ... xlink.rsc.org/?DOI=P19920003309 - 16k - En caché - Páginas similares de I Fleming - 1992 - Artículos relacionados - Las 2 versiones -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 2 hrs (2009-05-01 13:03:09 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Here there are examples in Latin: capitulum tertium Maior est nota, et minor probatur, quia ista propositio 'Sortes currit' potest esse vera in eodem tempore in quo ista potest esse vera 'Sortes non currit', ... www.unav.es/filosofia/pilzarbe1/medulla_dyalectices/capitul... - 18k - Peter of Candia: II Sent., q. 3, a. 1Consequentia et maior patent et minor probatur, quia quid educitur per productionem ... Sed minor probatur, quia omnia quae possunt ad invicem alterari ... www.ucy.ac.cy/isa/Candia/SentII-3-1.htm - 71k - Cached - Similar pages [DOC] AV In DA I Q3 (1477, B1-50, 11)File Format: Microsoft Word - View as HTML Minor probatur ab Avicenna, primo suae Metaphysicae, capitulo 5o, ubi dicit quod res ... Maior est de se nota; sed minor probatur ex dictis adversariorum. ... www.socsci.kun.nl/~johnvdb/Philosophy_14th_Century/Vargas/Q... - Similar pages -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 3 days20 hrs (2009-05-05 07:14:56 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Cambridge Translations of Renaissance Philosophical Texts: Moral ... - Google Books Resultby Jill Kraye - 1997 - Philosophy - 300 pages The **minor premise** is proved by that fact that the will is not a faculty of apprehension but of desire, and its action is not apprehension but inclination, ... books.google.es/books?isbn=0521426049... I Dial. 4, 6-12The minor [premise] is proved because if anyone is bound explicitly to believe some catholic assertion, he is so bound either (a) because such an assertion ... www.britac.ac.uk/pubS/dialogus/t1d4b1.html - 65k - Cached - Similar pages Full text of "Logic and argument"The hypothetical argument has the ad- vantage of getting the conclusion admitted on the condition that the **minor premise is proved**. It designs, therefore ... www.archive.org/stream/logicargument00hysliala/logicargumen... - 383k - Cached - Similar pages The essential Aquinas: writings on philosophy, religion, and society - Google Books Resultby Thomas, Thomas Aquinas, John Y. B. Hood - 2002 - Religion - 230 pages The **minor premise is proved** thus. A discipline or body of knowledge can be termed "divine" in two ways, and only this discipline or body of knowledge is ... books.google.es/books?isbn=0275978184... |
| |
Grading comment
| ||
Login or register (free and only takes a few minutes) to participate in this question. You will also have access to many other tools and opportunities designed for those who have language-related jobs (or are passionate about them). Participation is free and the site has a strict confidentiality policy. KudoZ™ translation helpThe KudoZ network provides a framework for translators and others to assist each other with translations or explanations of terms and short phrases.
See also: Search millions of term translations Your current localization setting
English
Select a language Close search
|