How prototypes appear as Subsections

Using ^include("notename", bstSub)^

How do the various BoxPress prototypes look when compiled together? This page exports the nine content prototypes one after the other as a contiguous compiled export of sub-posts.

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Sample audio_note A

MapsElf

Jesse

CSH: We’re talking about perceiving the irrational basis of your desiring, about perceiving that your motivator is irrational, about seeing that the set of commands that drives you is not a proper basis for living—and not being able to do anything about it. Because it constitutes you so deeply that it’s un-eraseable.

Jesse: Not to mention you got a good chunk of it just from genes, which you definitely don’t have any control over.

CSH: But, we have to agree that seeing the basis of your lack of autonomy has some value.

Jesse: Disagree!

CSH: It’s helpful to know that you’re being driven mechanically!

Jesse: No. Not really.

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Sample person_note B

This is $bpSubtitle

Sample person_note B (1547 – 1637)

English follower of Paracelsus. People have the qualities of a magnet and that when two people meet, an interactive magnetic field arises.

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Gollwitzer, Peter M., Sheeran, Paschal, Michalski, Verena & Seifert, Andrea (2009). When Intentions Go Public. Psychological Science, Vol. 20, No. 5, 612-18.

Abstract: Based on Lewinian goal theory in general and self-completion theory in particular, four experiments examined the implications of other people taking notice of one’s identity-related behavioral intentions (e.g., the intention to read law periodicals regularly to reach the identity goal of becoming a lawyer). Identity-related behavioral intentions that had been noticed by other people were translated into action less intensively than those that had been ignored (Studies 1–3).

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Paracelsus (1520). Sample book_note A.

First mention of the unconscious, psychosomatic disease, and autosuggestion.

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H. P. Lovecraft (1936). The Haunter of the Dark

Before he realised it, he was looking at the stone again, and letting its curious influence call up a nebulous pageantry in his mind. He saw processions of robed, hooded figures whose outlines were not human, and looked on endless leagues of desert lined with carved, sky-reaching monoliths. He saw towers and walls in nighted depths under the sea, and vortices of space where wisps of black mist floated before thin shimmerings of cold purple haze. And beyond all else he glimpsed an infinite gulf of darkness, where solid and semi-solid forms were known only by their windy stirrings, and cloudy patterns of force seemed to superimpose order on chaos and hold forth a key to all the paradoxes and arcana of the worlds we know.

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Sample quote_ana_note

Franz Mesmer (1766). On the Influence of the Planets on the Human Body

Inside of Tinderbox, this introductory paragraph actually begins with a tab. Welcome to the quote_ana_note world, where you do not have to prepend tabs to miles and miles of text that you want to blockquote. To export a normal paragraph, begin with a tab. To export commentary text, begin with a bullet. That’s it! Now for the rest of the sample note:

With this insight one can understand how, with regard to the movements which represent colors, forms, and shapes, it is possible that the entire system of nerves becomes an “eye.”

How can movement ever emerge as anything other than movement? Sellars talks about this—it must be a feature of the reductive elements. What makes the system negentropic are rules and tiny bits whose properties are very few, or maybe even single. In Conway’s Game of Life, the property is single—black or white. This binary is in fact the distinction between thing and no-thing, matter and void (or: place), being and nothing.

Moreover, reflecting upon the rarefied nature and the mobility of matter, and the exact contiguity with which it fills all space, one can understand how there can never occur any movement or displacement, even within its slightest parts, which does not reach, to some extent, the entire expanse of the universe.

The fluid, being rigid and mechanical, converts collision with the rapidity of metal bars in all directions, thereby nullifying spatial separation. (Remember, from your local Museum of Science, the metal bar lying text to the bars filled with air and water to demonstrate how the medium of propagation affects the speed of sound.)

We can therefore conclude that there is neither a being nor a combination of matter which—by the relations in which they exist with the whole—does not imprint an effect upon all surrounding matter and upon the medium within which we are immersed; it follows that everything which exists can be experienced, and that animated bodies, finding themselves in contact with all of Nature, have the faculty of being sensitive not only to beings, but also to events which succeed one another.

Franz Mesmer, On the Influence of the Planets on the Human Body

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(350 BCE – 1858)

For 2000 years, European medicine was based on the humoralism theory of Galen (129–216) and Hippocrates (460– 370 BCE). According to humoralism, the human body is filled with four basic liquids, called humors, which are in balance when a person is healthy.

The four humors
HumorSeasonElementOrganQualitiesTemperamentTemperament characteristics
Bloodspringairliverwarm and moistsanguinecourageous, hopeful, playful, carefree
Yellow bilesummerfirespleenwarm and drycholericambitious, leader-like, restless, easily angered
Black bileautumnearthgallbladdercold and drymelancholicdespondent, quiet, analytical, serious
Phlegmwinterwaterbrain/lungscold and moistphlegmaticcalm, thoughtful, patient, peaceful

Health could be maintained or restored by balancing the humors, and also by regulating air, diet, exercise, sleep, evacuation and emotion. Medical treatment consisted of enemas, bleeding, emetics (cause vomiting), laxatives (ease defecation), purgatives (strong laxatives), and cathartics (accelerate defecation).

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Syntax: Arg1, Arg2, [OptionalArg3]

Type: Type

Scope: This is my scope

Purpose: This code note has been made for demo purposes

My name is Sample code_note. This is dummy text. The purpose of all this is to show how such a note gets embedded inside your layout. Below is some plausible Tinderbox code. This is dummy text.

Hover below to reveal BoxPress code

Here is some plausible Tinderbox code. ^do(_striptags, "$2")^<figure ^if($3)^class="center-block $3"^endIf^><a target="_blank" href=^if($4)^"$4"^else^"^root^img/$1"^endIf^><img src="^root^img/$1" alt="^value($tmpStr1(_stripnote))^" title="^value($tmpStr1(_stripnote))^" ^if($5)^width="$5"^endIf^ class="img-responsive center-block well well-sm ^if($3)^^value("$3".replace("(img-left|img-right)","))^^endIf^"></a><figcaption>$2</figcaption></figure>"