Transubstantiation: Difference between revisions
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Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "{{a|crypto|}}{{qd|Transubstantiation||n|A Christian doctrine that during Holy Communion, that wafery thing and the horrid sweet sherry is transformed into the actual body and blood of Jesus Christ, even though it still looks, and tastes, for all the world like bread and wine.}} This is rather like the clever trick non-fungible tokens, and Bitcoin, are meant to have played on a distributed ledger. A piece of code is transformed into actual art or capital. {{..." Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit |
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This is rather like the clever trick [[non-fungible token]]s, and [[Bitcoin]], are meant to have played on a [[distributed ledger]]. A piece of code is transformed into actual art or capital. | This is rather like the clever trick [[non-fungible token]]s, and [[Bitcoin]], are meant to have played on a [[distributed ledger]]. A piece of code is transformed into actual art or capital. |
Latest revision as of 19:50, 24 September 2024
The JC’s crypto-dyscomium™
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Transubstantiation
/trænz'səbˌstænʃiˈeɪʃᵊn/ (n.)
A Christian doctrine that during Holy Communion, that stale dry wafery thing the priest stuffs in your gob and the horrid sweet sherry you get a glug of to wash it down is, in the moment, transformed into the actual body and blood of Jesus Christ — even though it still looks, and tastes, for all the world like the inside of a bottle cap and cooking wine.
This is rather like the clever trick non-fungible tokens, and Bitcoin, are meant to have played on a distributed ledger. A piece of code is transformed into actual art or capital.