David Chart’s Blog

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  • Glosses and Commentaries

    I have just published a new RPG work. Glosses and Commentaries is a short supplement for Ars Magica Definitive Edition, released under the Ars Magica Open License. It is available for purchase on DriveThruRPG and on Patreon.

    In the medieval period, certain authors and texts were regarded as authorities on a particular subject (Aristotle, in particular). A lot of effort was devoted to glossing these texts, which meant adding information on the page to make the book easier to understand, and a lot of people wrote commentaries on them. This is not, however, something that the current Ars Magica rules really support — you might as well write a book as a completely original project.

    This may reflect contemporary thinking about the importance of complete originality, or it may just be a matter of trying not to make the rules too complex. I know that I was thinking the latter, but I may have been influenced by the former. Covenants includes some brief rules for commentaries and glosses, but they do not really encourage their creation.

    These rules do. The main tool they use for this is reducing the Source Quality of a book that is not a commentary, and has not been glossed. This makes the book worse as a source for study. The Source Quality of any book can be improved by glossing, up to the quality of a book under the standard rules, and a commentary can start with the same quality, if the author has access to at least six commentaries on the same work, as well as the work itself.

    While these rules do not specify authorities, they naturally create them, and the supplement includes an example, Bonisagus’s original text on Magic Theory. Bonisagus was, in this example, a good teacher and writer (as he really needs to be, given his historical role), but later glossators have made even better versions of the text available. Similarly, people have written many commentaries on his text, and so if a maga wants to write a book about Magic Theory, it is probably best to write it as a commentary on Bonisagus’s work, because it is easiest to get access to other commentaries on that book. Thus, the glossed version of Bonisagus’s book is an excellent text on Magic Theory, and most of the other good texts available on the subject are commentaries on it. This makes Bonisagus an authority, without including rules for it.

    It also makes it possible for a maga to turn her own work into an authority. Write a book, and then convince other magi to gloss it and write commentaries. Then have the glossed version and commentaries copied, and distribute them throughout the Order. It would be expensive, but it is another way for a maga to secure her legacy.

    If you want to try this out in your own sagas, the supplement is available for purchase on DriveThruRPG and on Patreon.

News Archive

My Writing

Fiction

I have written some fiction.

Academic

I have published a few peer-reviewed academic works, on philosophy and Japanese history.

Roleplaying Games

I have written for roleplaying games.

Mimusubi

Mimusubi is my project for non-fiction writing about Shinto. It has its own website.

Recent Blog Posts

  • Blog Move

    I’ve moved my blog from a subdirectory to be the main page of my website. I’ve done this because I only really update the blog these days. There should be links to all parts of my website in the right-hand sidebar, under the adverts, and any old links to my blog should be automatically redirected…

  • Merry Christmas!

    It’s 8am, and Mayuki is still asleep. There’s no snow on the ground, but looking out of the window I have a beautiful view of the snow on Mt Fuji. In Japan, where almost no-one is a Christian, everyone wishes you a Merry Christmas (but it’s a normal working day). So, Merry Christmas!

  • New Job

    At the beginning of this month, I started a new job. Actually, I started working on it some time before that, but I started getting paid, and going into the office, at the beginning of this month. Yes, I have an office and a salary. Yet another piece of irrefutable evidence that I have entered…

  • Proposals on Surveys and Pensions

    Oh dear, it really has been too long since I posted to this blog. I’ve just started a new job, at the Japan Institute of Logic, so I’ve been extremely busy. I may have to start tweeting, since they’re supposed to be really short. Anyway, today we had another meeting of the Kawasaki Representative Assembly…

  • Flash Player 11 EULA MIA

    So, the Flash plugin for Safari is telling me that there is a new version available, Flash 11. When I download the software and launch the installer, the first screen, naturally, tells me to click to say that I’ve read the EULA, and provides a link to the EULA. At the moment, that link is…

  • Visit Tohoku! Hiraizumi

    Last weekend, we went on another trip to Tohoku, this time to Hiraizumi, in Iwate Prefecture. Hiraizumi was the base of a powerful regional family in the twelfth century, and is particularly famous for its Buddhist temples and gardens. Indeed, in June those sites were registered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, a bit of…

  • Hayashi Razan’s “Honchō Jinja Kō” — Shinto Texts Course 7

    The summer holiday is over, and yesterday the Shinto Texts course at Kokugakuin University started again, with a lecture on Hayashi Razan’s Honchō Jinja Kō. I am confident that very few of my readers will have heard of either the author or the text, but both were of great significance in the history of Shinto,…

  • Shirahata Hachiman Daijin Festival

    The annual Grand Festival of Shirahata Hachiman Daijin, our local shrine, was held last weekend. The festival itself is on the Sunday, and on the previous day, the Saturday, there is a children’s mikoshi procession. A mikoshi is a portable shrine, based on the palanquins in which the nobility were carried in Heian times (about…

  • Thinking About the Report

    This session of the Kawasaki Foreigners’ Assembly is coming to an end. We still have about six months to go, but that’s only four normal meetings, so we have to get started on deciding our final report and suggestions to the city government. In Sunday’s session, the Life and Society Subcommittee did manage to get…

  • Visit Tohoku! Aizu

    I’ve been to Tohoku again, this time on a family trip in the middle of July. We spent two nights and three days in the Aizu region of Fukushima Prefecture. Yes, that is the Fukushima Prefecture that has the broken nuclear power station. However, it’s one of the largest prefectures in Japan, and the Aizu…