enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Homunculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homunculus

    The homunculus is commonly used today in scientific disciplines such as psychology as a teaching or memory tool to describe the distorted scale model of a human drawn or sculpted to reflect the relative space human body parts occupy on the somatosensory cortex (the sensory homunculus) and the motor cortex (the motor homunculus).

  3. The Password Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Password_Game

    Because of two other rules, the player is required to insert an egg emoji named Paul, and once it hatches, it is replaced by a chicken emoji. The player then must keep it fed using caterpillar emojis that must be replenished over time. [13] [14] If it starves, the player overfeeds it, or the Paul emoji is deleted in any way, the game ends.

  4. Filius philosophorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filius_philosophorum

    Filius philosophorum. The conception of the philosophical child, allegorized as the conception of Orion by three fathers. The filius philosophorum (Latin for "the philosophers' child", i.e. made by the true students of philosophy) is a symbol in alchemy. In some texts it is equated with the philosopher's stone (lapis philosophorum), but in ...

  5. Doodle God - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doodle_God

    January 27, 2017 [10] Genre (s) Puzzle. Mode (s) Single player. Doodle God is a puzzle video game developed by American game developer [11] JoyBits and originally released for iOS and Adobe Flash. It released around the same time as another similar browser game Little Alchemy, both of which share gameplay inspired by a DOS game Alchemy from 1997.

  6. Philosopher's stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosopher's_stone

    For many centuries, it was the most sought-after goal in alchemy. The philosopher's stone was the central symbol of the mystical terminology of alchemy, symbolizing perfection at its finest, divine illumination, and heavenly bliss. Efforts to discover the philosopher's stone were known as the Magnum Opus ("Great Work"). [3]

  7. Ouroboros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouroboros

    Ouroboros. An ouroboros in a 1478 drawing in an alchemical tract [1] The ouroboros or uroboros (/ ˌjʊərəˈbɒrəs /; [2] / ˌʊərəˈbɒrəs / [3]) is an ancient symbol depicting a serpent or dragon [4] eating its own tail. The ouroboros entered Western tradition via ancient Egyptian iconography and the Greek magical tradition.

  8. Aludel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aludel

    Aludel. An aludel (Arabic: ﺍﻟﻮﺛﻞ al-ūṯal from Greek αἰθαλίων aithaliōn, 'smoky, sooty, burnt-colored') [1][2] is a subliming pot used in alchemy. The term refers to a range of earthen tubes, or pots without bottoms, fitted one over another, and diminishing as they advance towards the top.

  9. Basilisk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basilisk

    The Venerable Bede was the first to attest to the legend of the birth of a basilisk from an egg by an old cockerel; other authors added the condition of Sirius being ascendant. Alexander Neckam (died 1217) was the first to say that not the glare but the "air corruption" was the killing tool of the basilisk, a theory developed a century later by ...