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== eventname ==
== eventname ==
For readability, we also use an "eventname" in this Wiki, like in the page name of the events: "[[The Zen Manifesto ~ 01]]". This is derived from the first edition book-title, or an abbreviated version thereof. Eventnames may change if it is found that the first edition book name should be changed.  
For readability, we also use an "eventname" in this Wiki, like in the page name of the events: "[[The Zen Manifesto ~ 01]]". This is derived from the first edition book-title, or an abbreviated version thereof. Eventnames may change if it is found that the first edition book name should be changed.  
== Not translated yet ==
This Hindi discourse, letter or manuscript has not been translated yet into English or any other language.


== timecode ==
== timecode ==

Revision as of 07:34, 13 February 2018

This glossary is an alphabetic list of concepts used in the Wiki, with definitions.

am om pm xm

Abbreviations for an approximate time of day:

  • am = ante meridiem: before noon
  • pm = post meridiem: after noon

The discourses of Osho often happened in the morning, starting about 8am (here called am), and in the early evening, starting at 7pm or 8pm (pm).

This pattern held for more than 98% of his discourses. For the events at other times, the makers of the CD-ROM invented two more approximate times:

  • om = some time later in the morning or in the afternoon
  • xm = later at night

These codes are in use in the timecode.

See also: archivecode.

archivecode

A code, used in the CD-ROM to give the date and approximate time of Osho's discourses, and thereby also uniquely identify that discourse.

e.g. I Am the Gate, lecture 1 is 7104140, i.e. 1971 April 14 morning,
The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from Oneself, lecture 11 is 8904105, i.e. 1989 April 10 evening
The last digit represents the time of day, where morning = 0 ("am") and evening = 5 ("pm").
More rarely used are these last digits:
3 : later in the morning or afternoon ("om")
7 : later at night (also designated by ("xm")

Although the archivecode was intended to be used as a key value to identify all discourses, this does not work where date and time of events are unknown. That was already apparent on the CD-ROM, and is even more problematic when one tries to identify the Hindi discourses. For purposes of unique identification the ShortTitle / eventcode is better suited.

Another problem is that the ArchiveCode uses zeros when no data is known, also for the last position, which makes "am" ambiguous.

See also: am om pm xm and timecode

eventcode

A short code, like SADHANA01 or ZENMAN01, to uniquely identify all events where Osho was present: discourses, darshans, interviews, satsangs, and also letters that are known to be published. And meditations he led.

Similar codes were introduced on the CD-ROM, which uses a "MiniTitle" to identify all English discourse-series/first-edition-books (and some translations from Hindi), and a "ShortTitle" to identify all their chapters. (In our system, MiniTitle is not used to designate book-editions, only to designate discourse-series.)

The eventcode in this Wiki is an adapted version of that ShortTitle, to designate all events, including Hindi-spoken discourses. It is the intention to not change these eventcodes, so they can be used as a database-key.

Events where Osho is leading a meditation get a letter "M" after the number. If the meditation was immediately after a discourse, both get the same number, but the meditation with an M.

eventname

For readability, we also use an "eventname" in this Wiki, like in the page name of the events: "The Zen Manifesto ~ 01". This is derived from the first edition book-title, or an abbreviated version thereof. Eventnames may change if it is found that the first edition book name should be changed.

Not translated yet

This Hindi discourse, letter or manuscript has not been translated yet into English or any other language.

timecode

A code to represent the date and time of events (like discourses, interviews, satsangs etc.), in so far as known.

Like the archivecode, it consist of a date (YY.MM.DD) followed by a time designation. Where data is unknown, it is left as a "-" hyphen. Some examples:

timecode meaning
69.11.02 1969, Nov 2, time of day unknown
(There can be more of these, when the order is not known)
69.11.02.am 1969, Nov 2, morning
(There can be more of these, when the order is not known)
69.11.02.am.(1) same, first event of that morning
69.11.02.am.(2) same, second event of that morning
69.11.02.(1) 1969, Nov 2, time of day unknown, first event of that day
69.11.02.pm.19:00 1969, Nov 2, at 19:00h (7 pm)
69.11.-- Some time in Nov, 1969
(There can be more of these, when the order is not known)
69.--.-- Some time in 1969
69.--.--.am Some time in 1969, in the morning
*60 ~ 69 Some time in the sixties (* designates uncertainty over the year)
*69 ~ 73 Earliest in 1969, latest in 1973

See also: am om pm xm