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  2. Harmony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmony

    Subordinate harmony is the hierarchical tonality or tonal harmony well known today. Coordinate harmony is the older Medieval and Renaissance tonalité ancienne, "The term is meant to signify that sonorities are linked one after the other without giving rise to the impression of a goal-directed development. A first chord forms a 'progression ...

  3. Harmonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonia

    Primordial deities; Eros; Gaia; Nyx; Olympians; Aphrodite; Apollo; Ares; Artemis; Athena; Demeter; Dionysus; Hephaestus; Hera; Hermes; Hestia; Poseidon; Zeus ...

  4. Unity in diversity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unity_in_diversity

    Leibniz used the phrase as a definition of "harmony" (Harmonia est unitas in varietate) in his Elementa verae pietatis, sive de amore dei 948 I.12/A VI.4.1358. Leibniz glosses the definition Harmonia est cum multa ad quandam unitatem revocantur which means the 'Harmony' is when many [things] are restored to some kind of unity.

  5. Tri Hita Karana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tri_Hita_Karana

    Tri Hita Karana is a traditional philosophy for life on the island of Bali, Indonesia. The literal translation is roughly the "three causes of well-being" or "three reasons for prosperity." [1] The three causes referred to in the principle are: Harmony with God; Harmony among people; Harmony with nature or environment

  6. Category:Harmony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Harmony

    العربية; Български; Català; Deutsch; Ελληνικά; Español; Esperanto; Euskara; فارسی; Français; 한국어; हिन्दी; Ido; Italiano

  7. Harmonization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonization

    In music, harmonization is the chordal accompaniment to a line or melody: "Using chords and melodies together, making harmony by stacking scale tones as triads". [ 2 ] A harmonized scale can be created by using each note of a musical scale as a root note for a chord and then by taking other tones within the scale building the rest of a chord.

  8. Macroharmony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macroharmony

    Ciro Scotto wrote that it is "a large harmony that subsumes the individual chords", adding that he used it more specifically to denote pitch-class subsets. [5] Julian Hook related it to the concept of a field of pitch classes, noting that the difference was one of terminology.

  9. Harmonices Mundi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonices_Mundi

    Kepler divides The Harmony of the World into five long chapters: the first is on regular polygons; the second is on the congruence of figures; the third is on the origin of harmonic proportions in music; the fourth is on harmonic configurations in astrology; the fifth is on the harmony of the motions of the planets.