Canterbury scrying engine: Difference between revisions

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== In the News ==
== In the News ==


<gallery mode="traditional" widths="200px" heights="200px">
<gallery>
Rotoscope.png|Artist-Engineer [[Don Tasmian]] using rotoscope as [[scrying engine]] emulator.
File:Don Tasmian calibrating a Rotoscope scrying engine.png|Artist-Engineer [[Don Tasmian]] using rotoscope as [[scrying engine]] emulator.
File:Hamangia-figures-Lorenz-attractor.jpg|link=Hamangia scrying engine|[[Hamangia scrying engine]] (c. 5250-4550 BC).
File:Hamangia-figures-Lorenz-attractor.jpg|link=Hamangia scrying engine|[[Hamangia scrying engine]] (c. 5250-4550 BC).
File:Thought camera.jpg|link=Scrying engine|A [[Scrying engine]] is any [[Engine (nonfiction)|engine]] which causes or facilitates [[Scrying (nonfiction)|scrying]].
File:Thought camera.jpg|link=Scrying engine|A [[Scrying engine]] is any [[Engine (nonfiction)|engine]] which causes or facilitates [[Scrying (nonfiction)|scrying]].

Revision as of 11:11, 2 April 2017

Simple display of the Mandelbrot set using the statue of Lanfranc as computational focal object.

The Canterbury scrying engine is a scrying engine built into Canterbury Cathedral.

The Canterbury scrying engine is relatively simple, but can perform reliable calculations across a wide range of time and space.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference