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material world, a view which
Christianity has both been influenced by and supposedly officially rejects as a pernicious heresy. Augustine ultimately decided that good has substance but evil has no substance of its own, and is only void. Faustus was a Manichaean bishop with whom Augustine was acquainted and ultimately disappointed. It would be difficult to overstate the influence of Augustine on Christian thought and European intellectual history in general, so "Confessions" is not some arcane piece of writing. Augustine's Faustus fits the mold of someone whom many Christians would say had been tempted and misled by a competing/corrupting body of occult knowledge; the German Faustus story obviously translated this to contemporary kinds of occult knowledge like astrology and alchemy. This casts doubt on criticisms such as that of atheist thinker Bertrand Russell (in his essay "A Free Man's Worship") that the Faustus story is specifically an attack on science and freedom of mind; certainly in Augustine's Confessions it's a matter of one religion versus another and not an attack on rationality or intellectualism in and of itself. --
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whether Padme is
Gretchen, which speaks to a degree of superficiality in exploring or developing this thought). I went through a number of these links, and although a handful are relatively analytic, the references to Faust are themselves passing allusions. Lucas may claim inspiration from the Faust legend, but it's rather more difficult toI a say that Lucas actually develops or even substantiates this in the film as an allusion. Perhaps the epigraph of the film might be Mark 8:36, but the allusion to Faust seems an inference at best vis-a-vis the film. Returning to Gretchen, perhaps the allusion to Faust might be plausible if Anakin's emotional tie to Padme was written with genuine facility or if we had reason to suspect that it the means of a manipulation arcing further across the prequels.
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the article (and in agreement which what I've read in the literature), the German legends are based on the historical Faust character living in the
Renaissance (15th and 16th century). Therefore, I think that the sentence regarding the bishop (from antiquity) by name of "Faustus" should be removed unless one can also give evidence that this was a source for some of the Faust characters described here. There were many other historical figures named
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bombing in WWII? Or earlier, during one of the
Napoleonic Wars? Depending on where the fragments were discovered, might make it less probable that either Marlowe or Goethe got his hands on it. So long as we are talking about unpreserved works, it makes just as much sense to say that separate versions of the legend of the Doctor of Paris existed, alternately supplying inspiration to Jacob Bidermann to refine his
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yuppie/underground New York and get what he dreams of, go get it - then he traps him. seeing to that the newcomer wakes up next to a woman (a high-class escort, I think) who's just been killed hours after the two made love. Over the course of the film, Alex becomes more and more of a dark mirror of the white-collar man's suppressed or dirty desires, and at the same time his forceful master.
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1455:"Sources of the legend" sections notes an edition of Goethe's version claims Paracelsus was used as a model for the character. This may be true, but we go on to say that "Parcelsus' works were copied by his fellow Rosicrucians and became the foundation of much scientific investigation. The Dictionary of Scientific Biography calls him 'a great doctor, whose influence has been enormous.' "
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tradition sets in around 1590 and is clear that Faust is "Johann Faust". The problem is that no reliable biographical data is available, and it is possible that this was a pseudonym used by more than one person. It is undeniable that occult/magical books have been printed under this name in 1505, so
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thank you for your edit, but I'm not sure that it is appropriate here: The article, as stated in the beginning, is concerned with the "German legendary character". This cannot be the one of
Augustine, at whose time there was no Germany and (for all we know) no German legend about Faust. As stated in
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Chaucer's FRIAR'S TALE from CANTERBURY TALES might be considered another source for the "deal with the devil" idea. A con man befriends a demon and advises him to seize any object that has been cursed by taking "damn it" or "to hell with it" literally. Later, when the con man tries to extort money
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I have tagged this section with {{toomuchtrivia}}, for it just about lists every reference to Faust under the sun. The title, I think, is a signpost for drive-by editors to leave their mark on wikipedia by adding pointless references. It should perhaps be retitled to emphasise stricter criteria. All
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I don't think either should be included. They both use only the basic premise of someone selling their soul and don't refer directly to the Faust myth. This is an often-used narrative structure, there's no need to list every single text that uses it. I've added John
Banville to the list as his novel
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What is the story behind the anonymous account in the form of a chapbook? There aren't any fragments anymore, or can they still be digitized and uploaded to WikiSource? As for the translation, if P.F. Gentleman's work doesn't exist anymore, what year was it most probably destroyed? During Allied
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This article is the weirdest page I've ever seen on
Knowledge (XXG). Every link on the page is an external link, and apparently Knowledge (XXG) cannot inform me on the term Faust or Faustian. At first I thought it was a disambiguation page, but it is not. I question the validity of why this page
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why does it list Oscar Wilde, Klaus Mann, etc... and not The
Picture of Dorian Grey, etc... Even though (in Oscar Wilde's case) it is his only work, it still should not be a link to the author, Oscar Wilde did not make a deal with the devil... Dorian Grey did... not that it's confusing or anything.
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As part of the 2006 DCI Season, Phantom
Regiment's show is entitled "Faust" and consists of Scythian Suite by Sergei Prokofiev, Ave Maria by Franz Biebl, Piano Concerto by John Corigliano, and Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 2 ("Resurrection"). Should this be included in the music section as reference
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I vote for excluding both and then some. We need to discern what was merely influenced by Faust and the Faust tales/legends from what is actually an interpretation of the Faust tale. For instance, what does Lost
Highway have to do with Faust? Certainly there's no real soul selling with the main
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Actually I think the most obvious source of the "Faustus" story is in St. Augustine's Confessions, in which Augustine flirts with the religion of Manichaeism before becoming a Catholic Christian. Manichaeism is remembered most often for its belief in a "good" spiritual world at odds with an "evil"
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Not sure how important it is, but as far as I know, Faust was a late medieval - early modern restatement of "the Devil(demon) and the Smith", which as far as I know is the oldest parable in the western indo-european oral history. The green man symbolism is older, but the myth is lost as other than
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I would also like to point out that the whole Faust concept depends on the notion of a demon's having power independent of God. In Dante's theology as expressed in THE DIVINE COMEDY, for example, Satan is helpless and the demons serve God by punishing sinners; under this theology the Faust story
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Faust merits a better entry! I do not have time to make edits at the moment, but this is fair warning: by any scholarly standard, this article in its present state is unacceptable. The lack of historical data, literary research, and overall presentation qualify this entry as one in sore need of
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Discerning some Faustian element in the film is quite something else from claiming that the film interprets the Faust legend or alludes to it. What I find through Google is a handful of people who say that Palpatine plays Mephisto to Anakin's Faust (no one seems to develop this so far as to ask
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clearly borrowed from the Faust/Mephisto motive as well. Rob Lowe's sneaky, charming character Alex invites the young, diffident white-collar manager Michael (James Spader), who has a well-paid junior exec job but barely exists outside of it, to take a tour of the flashy nightlife of late '80s
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It seems to me that Star Wars Ep. III is at least more acceptable than Oscar Wilde's "The Picture of Dorian Grey." As far as I can remember, there are no specifically Faustian references in that work either. He also doesn't even exchange his soul for knowledge, like Anakin. He exchanges it for
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itself), i.e. a person, not a work; the bold-facing is justified bcz Faustian is a Rdr to here, and thus functions as an "alternate title" for the topic, calling for its first mention to be bolded for those entering the article via that Rdr (and thus expecting "Faustian" to appear in bold
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You have to take in to consideration the time period. Nearly everything was related to heaven or hell in some way. So when you come across a man who, in societies eyes, have pledged their lives to sin and almost pride themselves in it, they would think you were in league with the devil.
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Well? Where are they? I can only find one at the bottom. Conjure up some more; use whatever spells and potions necessary. If this fails, well, there is always a friend standing by who might help, in exchange for your soul. The fruit will taste just as sweet with or without this trifle.
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is on the question of historicity and biography; yes, there may or may not have been two "Fausts" and it isn't possible to decide the question with certainty. This doesn't mean it isn't possible to write a coherent article about what is known about the historicity of the person (or
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was "Dr. Faust" with a floruit at that time. ("In the light of records of an activity spanning more than 30 years, it has been suggested that there were two itinerant magicians calling themselves Faustus, one Georg, active ca. 1505 to 1515, and another Johann, active in the
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Maybe it would be worth it to note the similarities between the Book of Job and the story of Faust? They both begin with God and the devil basically making a bet concerning whether a person will have faith in God, more or less. Maybe it's a bit far-fetched. Any thoughts?
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alchemist. His claims were generally fantastical and based more on philosophy and superstition than science, not unlike the Daoist "alchemists." He is especially notable for claiming spirits and artificial humans could be created by putting horse shit in jars.
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I don't the article means to suggest that the bit about diabolic soul commerce actually happened to an historical figure - it's just that Faust-the-character's roots do seem to lie in a real person, so in that sense the tale does indeed have some basis in history.
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Starring Catherine Mary Stewart and George Gilmour. Director: Menahem Golan. Faust story. German production by Golan/Globus. Distributed by MGM Home Entertainment as DVD with PG Rating and released 2004.08.24 Old Testament movie in a disco-musical format.
2014:"faustus1 faustus , a, um, adj. for favostus, from faveo; lit., favorable; hence, I.of favorable or fortunate omen, fortunate, favorable, auspicious, prosperous, lucky (rare but class.; cf.: “felix, fortunatus, beatus, prosperus, dexter, secundus):"
995:(1587) you may be right. That would certainly tend to connect the Faustian legend very closely to that of the legend of Cenodoxus, and the story's divergence would naturally follow the division in Germany between the Catholics and the Protestants.
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While I'm not sure if Fust is indeed a source of the Faust legend, I am very sure that I can find multiple reliable sources claiming that, so I added it. If you're sure that I'm wrong and have sources to back it up, feel free to change it.
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makes it clear "the plant" will grant Seymour whatever he wants, if Seymour gets him human blood. In the heavily edited theatrical version, Seymour and Audrey barely escape, but in the film's original version, both are eaten by the plant.
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The Peter Cook and Dudley moore film "Bedazzled" (1968) was essentially a comic retelling of the faust legend. is this worth inclusion? i find it more noteworthy than the fact in Ghostrider nicholas cage briefly reads the book
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Okay my ex believes himself to be Mephestophilos or however ya'll spell that....what the crap? What is the story behind mephesto. He think's he's some kind of demon here to bring the world back to which it came from. --K-os
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about who Augustine writes to the legendary character and could not find any. Since the name Faustus is not that rare and no relation besides the name was provided, I have removed the sentence again from the main article.
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Kamelot currently shows up twice in the 'popular music' section. Is there any valid reason why it's listed twice? I don't konw which one should stay, but at least I fixed the formatting on the links in both of them.
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and not fit for this venue. Unless there are notable verifiable sources which make this comparison, and such a viewpoint accepted by a majority or significant minority. See if you can find anything. -
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to whom this may concern: salutations, i am interested in the works of anna bijns; to be specific, her dutch faust play. can anyone tell me how and where i might find this script work?? sincerely, steve
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elves and faires etc. I think it's important for the Faust story, because it demonstrates that the faustian Archetype is essentially eternal. (Forge as fires of hell etc. Metalworking = magic.) --
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has an episode which may be about this subject (if not moving this note to the appropriate talk page earns cookies). You can add it to "External links" by pasting * {{In Our Time|Faust|p004y2bt}}.
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The professional writer who is my humanities consultant joins me in considering "adaptations" a better word than "appropriations" to describe works inspired by an earlier work. Other opinions?
1996:--11614soup 13:22, 14 February 2018 (UTC) I would counter that all these Germans read Augustine's confessions and could certainly decided to create a song called sympathy for the Faustus.
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You just cannot seriously say that a tale of selling one's soul to the devil 'has some base in history' any more than 'ascending to heaven on the back of an eagle' has some basis in
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characters in Master and Margarita, but there are bargains made with the devil, and I feel that's wholly absent in Lost Highway, and quite tenuous in Heart of Darkness. 24 Jun 2006
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The name of Faust's first love in the play is Margarethe wich is commonly nicknamed Gretchen. Like Bob for Robert. I think it would be more appropriate to use her christian name.
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Lucas said in the Ep. III DVD commentary that Anakin "makes a deal with the Devil." That's pretty much it. If people see that as a reference to Faust then, sure, include it.
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Amazing, ended up here on the same day with the same thought. Reformatting to a disambig. page would probably be the easiest way to clean this up, assuming it isn't deleted.
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The album "Beethoven's Last Night" by Trans-Siberian Orchestra tells a story that is clearly largely based on Faust, so shouldn't it be added to the "Music" section?
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Soul Cartel is a manwha highly and obviously influenced by Faustian stories two of the main characters are none other than a reborn Faust and Mephistopheles.
2035:"In relig. lang., linguis, rarely linguā, ore, etc., to speak good words or to abstain from evil words (the Greek εὐφημεῖν); hence, to keep still, be silent"
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This isn't a bad idea, though I'm only familiar with Marlowe's version, so I really can't do this. Perhaps we should plan such a section before adding it.
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I.to be favorable, to be well disposed or inclined towards, to favor, promote, befriend, countenance, protect (class.; syn.: studeo, foveo, diligo, amo)."
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Faustus was a rather wide-spead Roman name, because it means "favorable, fortunate, auspicious, prosperous, lucky". The feminine version of the name is
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I would side more with explaining the reference rather than excluding particular works since I don't see an objective criteria for inclusion. —
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1293:--a sentence in this says "Mephisto and God collaborate in exactly the same way that Jahvé and Satan do at the beginning of the Book of Job."
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I would suggest adding a novel to the list of works based on the Faust legend: Loving Mephistopheles by Miranda Miller( Peter Owen 2007).
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eternal beauty. We should either include both or exclude both, but to prefer the Wilde over Ep. III seems like mere literary snobbery. -
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imply a situation in which an ambitious person surrenders moral integrity in order to achieve power and success for a delimited term.
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Shouldn't this page include a summary of the legend or of its main varients? If anyone knows the story could they please add it?
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Since the Faustian legend probably descended to us from an earlier, unpreserved Latin document predating the anonymously written
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Mefisto is based on Faust. If a citation is needed, it is described as a reworking of Faust on the back cover of the book.
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The PBS kids show Wishbone displays the story of Faust in one episode "Fleabitten Bargain", please add it if you like...
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If you have a 3rd-party source that compares the two, it would be a candidate to add to the article. Otherwise, it is
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The "Johannes Fust" thing is just an obscure 1980s academic idea of who else may have influenced the later tradition.
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It has been included but someone was under the impression that it was original music. I have corrected that error.
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Portuguese metal band Moonspell has a song called "Mephisto". "I can teach you wonders if you give me your soul."
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from an innocent woman, she curses him, and the demon seizes the con man's soul, following the man's own advice.
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Is there a reason the books aren't listed there? (this is all in reference to the end of the first paragraph). --
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The comic book V for Vendetta, by Alan Moore and David Lloyd, makes reference to Faust and the "deal" he made.
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Has this not been thought of? Here is an article that touches on the film as having a faustian plotline:
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Has this not been thought of? Here is an article that touches on the film as having a faustian plotline:
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In German, Faust means "fist". There is no discussion of what, if any, meaning or symbolism is implied.
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Simply performing the music of another composer adds nothing to the historical understanding of Faust.
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge (XXG). If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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1708:'s wording provides actual verification, but i'm more concerned about the formatting for the moment:
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The names derive from the verb "faveo": "I favour", "I support", "I encourage", "I indulge". See:
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Are there any sources for the suggestion that Mephisto comes from "me Phisto philos", or is this
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562:. If you would like to participate, you may edit the article attached to this page, or visit the
2027:"faveo făvĕo , fāvi, fautum, 2, v. n. perh. root φαϝ-, φάος, φῶς, light, safety; cf. also foveo,
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in the lead section -- even tho i'm inclined to argue it should thus be worked into in the lead
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Lucifer Let's make a deal Make Maria g miramonte. in love with me. Make sure she never ever
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http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=faveo&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0059
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could never have occurred. Evidentally new ideas arose between Dante's time and Chaucer's.
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The trick is to consult literature on the question, and then cite what you found. It's easy.
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https://collinwatchesmovies.wordpress.com/2016/06/09/the-imaginarium-of-doctor-parnassus/
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https://collinwatchesmovies.wordpress.com/2016/06/09/the-imaginarium-of-doctor-parnassus/
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http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0059:entry=faustus1
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The name is probably unrelated to the German for "fist". It is rather, a Latin name,
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I just discovered that the article for "Beethoven's Last Night" on Knowledge (XXG) (
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Though 19th century etymologists noticed three meanings of faveo in Latin texts.:
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I can confirm that the plot contains many similarities to that of Faust's, mainly
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The next review is "The Devil and Max Devlin," the previous one is "Bedazzled."
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and cannot be added, no matter how interesting or insightful it might be :) --
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I think more than a few people have seen clear influence of the Faust tale on
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You could run on for several pages with these. To give an obvious example...
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1308:--according to this, the Prologue in Heaven is "modeled on the Book of Job"
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225:-related subjects. Please participate by editing the article, and help us
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What the hell is the "deal" that is being referred to? ...... smart ass
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dedicated to improving Knowledge (XXG)'s coverage of the topics of
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that was me that said that... Sorry, forgot to sign in before. --
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Wtf? Myths as memes? What is that comment doing in this piece?
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should be the main article about the (modern) literary character
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Death Note seems to borrow heavily from the plot, and imagery.
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What is Faust's first name? There is another article about
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http://www.slantmagazine.com/Film/film_review.asp?ID=1208
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as it did for Goethe to come along and draft his Faust.
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is the work, but the context implies the intent that "
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Crap with some reference, however important, to Faust
219:, a project to improve Knowledge (XXG)'s articles on
1635:development and rewriting. Anyone care to step up?
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1720:the namesake of the medieval book (and to the book
2073:"Faustian" stories that aren't explicit retellings
777:is on record in an interview admitting as such. -
1926:https://en.wikipedia.org/Beethoven%27s_Last_Night
1375:http://en.wikipedia.org/List_of_Wishbone_episodes
1395:http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080380/usercomments
1737:, and also deserves no italics. Thus i edit to
2209:Knowledge (XXG) level-4 vital articles in Arts
1081:Works which retell or allude to the Faust tale
338:. This project provides a central approach to
1702:A more ambitious editor could verify whether
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1716:Faust" (i've added the emphasis) refers to
1619:Someone vandalized it a few minutes ago. —
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1092:Fancruft and Drive-by-editing Wikiproject
126:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Christianity
1809:"Appropriations" of the ("real"?) Faust
1794:(11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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1685:In the 1st 'graph of the lead, we said
1119:I don't know, but the play is entitled
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2199:Knowledge (XXG) vital articles in Arts
2194:Knowledge (XXG) level-4 vital articles
2038:As a sign of approval: "To applaud".
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1975:I've looked for references that link
1943:"Faustus" in Augustines "Confessions"
370:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Mythology
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2224:Top-importance Christianity articles
1466:I recommend deleting this sentence.
576:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Folklore
455:This article is within the scope of
247:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Religion
211:This article is within the scope of
106:This article is within the scope of
2133:The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
2099:The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
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1671:http://en.wikipedia.org/Soul_Cartel
1582:Attention Knowledge (XXG) Editor(s)
475:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Germany
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1681:"Faustian" (or "Faustian bargain")
1049:on the part of whoever added it? —
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2254:Top-importance Mythology articles
2229:WikiProject Christianity articles
1866:The way this should work is that
1850:This article is just broken. The
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1027:16:25, 10 November 2009 (UTC)
579:Template:WikiProject Folklore
469:and see a list of open tasks.
332:This article is supported by
250:Template:WikiProject Religion
120:and see a list of open tasks.
2269:WikiProject Germany articles
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1970:17:02, 30 January 2018 (UTC)
1656:00:26, 30 October 2013 (UTC)
1624:00:18, 9 December 2012 (UTC)
1611:23:28, 8 December 2012 (UTC)
1597:23:20, 8 December 2012 (UTC)
1369:Faust in episode of Wishbone
1061:11:15, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
1000:Drum Corps inclusion (Music)
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934:06:06, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
890:11:20, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
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478:Template:WikiProject Germany
2174:07:35, 20 August 2023 (UTC)
1446:2009 August 07, 06:20 (UTC)
1410:19:22, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
1364:17:47, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
906:Reference in V for Vendetta
629:comment added by ] (] • ])
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1345:2008 July 19, 07:48 (UTC)
1311:I hope these are any good
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673:00:49, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
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1451:Paracelsus notes dubious
1090:and we can assign it to
793:17:55, 29 May 2005 (UTC)
782:04:38, 29 May 2005 (UTC)
360:standards, or visit the
237:standards, or visit the
109:WikiProject Christianity
2094:13:17, 7 May 2018 (UTC)
2068:13:17, 7 May 2018 (UTC)
2048:07:24, 9 May 2018 (UTC)
1791:Encyclopædia Britannica
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1776:Walter Alison Phillips
1977:Faustus the Manichean
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