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.

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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

  • First Rabbit Festival

    Today was this year’s First Rabbit Festival at Shirahata-san. Because it is held on the first day of the rabbit in March, I always have to ask when it is. (I’m sure I’ve mentioned it before, but the animals of the Chinese zodiac are used for days as well as years.) Fortunately, I could attend…

  • New Flat

    Yesterday we handed over the money and became the owners of our new flat. Well, new to us; it’s actually twice the age of the current one, and very close to it. So, why are we moving? The new flat has an extra room. We had to go to Yokohama to borrow a room in…

  • Becoming a Civil Servant

    Yesterday I received a letter from the mayor of Kawasaki, informing me that I had been selected to serve as a representative on the eighth session of the Kawasaki Representative Assembly for Foreign Residents. My term of office starts in April, and runs for two years, until March 2012. Apparently, while I am a representative,…

  • New Immigration System

    Japan is changing its immigration system (probably). The law was passed last July, and within three years of that it will be brought into force by cabinet order. There is an article on the Japanese Immigration website about it, which is my source for what I’m writing here. That article is in Japanese, and has…

  • Shrine Shinto Confronts Internationalisation, Part One

    Last Sunday (February 21st, just in case this draft takes longer than anticipated and I forget to edit the beginning) I attended a small symposium at Kokugakuin University on the subject “Shrine Shinto Confronts Internationalisation”. I found out about it because Professor Havens, one of the participants, posted about it on the English-language Shinto mailing…

  • Mortgage

    Today I signed the contract for my mortgage. Apart from well and truly confirming that I am now middle-aged, why is this significant? Well, I got it from a big Japanese bank (Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (MUFG), one of the three megabanks), I’m foreign, and I don’t have permanent residence. According to received wisdom in…

  • Kamimeguro Hikawa Shrine

    Kamimeguro Hikawa Shrine is a fairly ordinary urban shrine, its precincts sandwiched between high buildings and lacking in old, impressive trees. “Kamimeguro” is the name of the area, and the “kami” just means “upper”; it is, apparently, not connected to the word for Shinto kami, although quite a lot of people have thought it was.…

  • Interview

    On Sunday, I was interviewed for the Kawasaki City Representative Assembly for Foreign Residents. In the past, the normal situation has apparently been that they have had trouble finding enough people, but this time they had around fifty applicants, and the assembly has a maximum membership of about twenty five. Thus, I suppose, the need…

  • Mitake Shrine, Miyamasu

    The first actual shrine that I passed walking along the ÅŒyama Kaidō was Mitake (mee-ta-kay) Shrine, on Miyamasu Hill in Shibuya. This is the main road on the opposite side of the station from the famous junction with the enormous screens that it almost always used as an establishing shot of Tokyo in foreign films.…

  • Toyokawa Inari Tokyo Betsuin

    The first shrine I visited on my walk along the ÅŒyama Kaidō last month was not, in fact, a shrine at all, at least not strictly speaking. Toyokawa Inari Tokyo Betsuin is formally a Zen Buddhist temple. It is also, very clearly, an Inari establishment, and Inari is almost always a Shinto kami. So, what’s…