Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Empedocles

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Empedocles:     more books (100)
  1. Fragments: Translated Into English Verse by William Ellery Leonard (1908) by Empedocles, 2009-06-12
  2. Il Diritto Penale Di Roma E Le Teorie Della Nuova Scuola Positiva (1897) (Italian Edition) by Francesco Empedocle Restivo, 2010-05-23
  3. Légende et oeuvre by Empédocle, Yves Battistini, 1997-02-13
  4. Empedoclis Agrigentini Fragmenta Disposuit (Latin Edition) by Empedocles, Heinrich Stein, 2010-03-25
  5. What Italy Stands for (Csis Significant Issues Series)
  6. Bill Clinton, una storia americana (Italian Edition) by Empedocle Maffia, 1993
  7. Médecin de L'antiquité: Imhotep, Hippocrate, Galien, Empédocle, Dioscoride, Hérophile, Alcméon de Crotone, Érasistrate, Oribase (French Edition)
  8. The Great Philosophers: Xenophanes, Democritus, Empedocles, Bruno, Epicurus, Boehme, Schelling, Leibniz, Aristotle, Hegel (The Great Philosophers, Volume III) by Karl Jaspers, Michael Ermarth, et all 1993-11
  9. Ancient Greek Vegetarians: Pythagoras, Apollonius of Tyana, Plutarch, Empedocles, Plotinus, Proclus, Xenocrates, Porphyry, Sotion
  10. Empedocles
  11. Empedocles: Fragments by Empedocles, Henry W., Jr. Johnstone, 1985-01-30
  12. Empedocles Agrigentinus, Volume 2 (Ancient Greek Edition) by Friedrich Wilhelm Sturz, Empedocles, 2010-02-12
  13. Volcan de La Mer Méditerranée: Stromboli, Ischia, Pantelleria, Vulcano, Empédocle, Strombolicchio, Volcan D'agde, Pinne, Lipari, Kara Dag (French Edition)
  14. Volcanisme Dans La Culture: Trente-Six Vues Du Mont Fuji, Empédocle, Vulcania, Lair, Voyage Au Centre de La Terre (French Edition)

61. 8X17 Empedocles
8X17 empedocles. In New Orleans Jeb Dukes is called in by his bossGary Garber to be fired, he is apologetic, sorry to let him go.
http://xfiles.wearehere.net/episodes/8x17.htm
8X17 Empedocles
Notewothy Quote Scully: "But then that's the other gift that you gave me, Mulder......Courage... to believe. And I hope that's a gift I can pass on." Credits
Writer: Greg Walker Director: Barry Thomas Cast:
David Duchovny Special Agent Fox Mulder Gillian Anderson Special Agent Dana Scully Robert Patrick Special Agent John Doggett Guest Cast:
Annabeth Gish Special Agent Monica Reyes Jay Underwood Jeb Dukes Wendy Gazelle Katha Dukes Denise Crosby Dr Speake Ron Canada Detective Potter Bruce Wright Gary Garber Dayna Beilenson Roberta Toews Cheryl Francis Harrington ER Nurse Amanda and Caitlin Fein Mia Dukes Jennifer Hammon ICU Nurse Devlin Elliott Pizza Delivery Man Jake Fritz Luke Doggett Veronica Brown Payphone Woman Louise Melilli Distraught Woman

62. The Poetry Of Sappho And Empedocles
The Poetry of Sappho empedocles. Laurie and I once had the onlinescreen names Sappho and empedocles some time ago. It's a very
http://www.bucksworld.com/poetry-etc.html
Laurie and I once had the online screen names Sappho and Empedocles some time ago. It's a very long story, but they were rather appropriate at the time. She was the most musically gifted person I have ever had the pleasure of meeting. Empedocles was the pet name we had for the very special "Us" that existed. Another long story... when I get that written down, I'll post that here too. Suffice it to say, we had a relationship that was very special, almost magical, and more like being a pair of identical twins on the inside than any other description I can find. We knew each other, we heard each other, we had countless conversations without words. As unbelievable, passionate, and mysterious as our relationship was, our time finally together was far too short. Laurie died on Mother's Day, 1998 Nothing is the same anymore... This is a collection of poems and lyrics that she and I have written. Laurie and I first met again as adults in October 1996. At present there are very few of Laurie's poems here. I hope to get ahold of her journals and diaries some time soon for a few weeks because she has read a lot the poetry she wrote about us years ago. We saw each other in dreams for many many years now. I know, I know... it sounds weird. I'll find a way and the time to write this "story" out some day soon. Maybe people will better understand then. In the meantime, enjoy. I hope some of these give you some appreciation for making the very most of the time you have with the ones that you love.

63. 8x17 Empedocles
Translate this page 8X17 - empedocles, Scullys Zimmer Mulder Sind Sie wach? Scully Ja. Mulder kommtnun herein. Er schließt die Tür hinter sich und geht zu Scullys Krankenbett.
http://www.txf.net/~spoilerofx/8x17.htm
8X17 - Empedocles
Scullys Zimmer
Mulder: Sind Sie wach?
Scully: Ja.
Mulder kommt nun herein. Er schließt die Tür hinter sich und geht zu Scullys Krankenbett. Er nimmt ihre Hand und lächelt sie an.
Mulder: Was sagen die Ärzte?
Scully: Ich hatte eine Ablösung, ein Riss in der Auskleidung meiner Gebärmutter. Es ist nicht ungewöhnlich aber sie müssen mich für eine Weile unter Beobachtung halten.
Mulder: Es wird Ihnen gut gehen.
Scully: Uns!
Sie sagt das mit schwacher Erleichterung und legt eine Hand auf ihren Bauch. Mulder legt auch eine Hand darauf. Es ist eine intime Geste, insbesondere da wir nicht genau wissen, wie Mulders Verbindung zu dem Baby ist. Man hört ein lautes Klopfen, dann kommt Scully ins Bild. Sie trägt einen Bademantel. Sie schaut durch das Guckloch, zögert dann kurz, die Tür zu öffnen. Sie schnürt ihren Bademantel zu.
Scully: Um Gottes Willen. Das glaube ich nicht... was machen Sie ? Scully öffnet die Tür. Mulder ist zu sehen, der bequem gekleidet im Flur steht. Er hält ein verpacktes Geschenk in der Hand.

64. Screenshots Empedocles
Translate this page Screenshots - empedocles,
http://www.txf.net/~spoilerofx/screenem.htm
Screenshots - Empedocles Jeb wird mitgeteilt, dass er gefeuert ist Nach einer Verfolgungsjagd tritt auf der Straße ein brennender Mann in ihn ein Reyes sagt dem Ermittler, dass der Fall keinen satanischen Ursprung hat Reyes hat eine Vision, in der sich die Ermordete in Asche verwandelt Mulder überreicht Scully ein Geschenk, als der Pizzabote klingelt Plötzlich krümmt sich Scully vor Schmerzen Mulder lässt Scully ins Krankenhaus bringen Jeb hat eine Vision, als er in den Spiegel sieht Reyes sieht eine Verbindung zu Doggetts Sohn und bittet Mulder um Hilfe Doggett hat eine Vision, während er in Scullys Zimmer steht Doggett will, dass Mulder sich aus dem Fall über seinen Sohn heraushält Reyes sucht Jebs Schwester und ihre Tochter auf, als diese einen Anruf von Jeb bekommt Doggett versucht seine Vision zu rekonstruieren, doch Scully wacht auf Doggetts Vision setzt sich fort, nachdem er Scully gefragt hat, wieso sie Mulders Theorien glaubt

65. 8X17: Empedocles
empedocles. Agent Monica Reyes returns when a case in New Orleans seems to showa connection with the death of Agent Doggett’s son, Luke, some years before.
http://www.wigglefish.com/zine/kmprxfeg/eight/8X17.html
Empedocles Rating: (4 out of 5) Writer: Greg Walker
Director: Barry Thomas
Original air date: April 22, 2001 previous episode: Three Words
next episode: Vienen

66. Empedocles Quotes - Literary Quotes About Empedocles And Practically Everything
Quotes about empedocles, Quotes on empedocles. at. The Quote Cache empedocles. Godis a circle whose center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere.
http://quotes.prolix.nu/Authors/?Empedocles

67. Empedocles - Wikipedia NL
Andere talen English. empedocles. empedocles leefde omstreeks 440vóór Christus, en was dus een tijdgenoot van Parmenides. Net
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empedocles
Hoofdpagina Recente wijzigingen Pagina bewerken Voorgeschiedenis Speciale pagina's Mijn gebruikersvoorkeuren instellen Mijn volglijst tonen Recent bijgewerkte pagina's tonen Afbeeldingen uploaden Lijst ge-uploade afbeeldingen tonen Geregistreerde gebruikers tonen Statistieken tonen Ga naar een willekeurig artikel Niet-gelinkte artikels tonen Niet-gelinkte afbeeldingen tonen Populaire artikels tonen Meest gewenste artikels tonen Korte artikels tonen Lange artikels tonen Nieuwe artikels tonen Taallinks Alle paginatitels tonen Geblokkeerde IP-adressen tonen Onderhoudspagina Boekhandels Printer-vriendelijke versie Overleg
Aanmelden
Help
Andere talen: English
Empedocles
Empedocles leefde omstreeks 440 vóór Christus, en was dus een tijdgenoot van Parmenides . Net als Pythagoras was ook hij een filosoof, profeet, natuurkundige en kwakzalver.
  • Natuurkunde
    Hij ontdekte dat lucht een afzonderlijke substantie was: als je een emmer ondersteboven in het water duwt, stroomt het water er niet in.
    Hij wist dat de maan geen licht uitstraalt, maar slechts weerkaatst. Hij dacht dat dit ook voor de zon gold. Hij vermoedde al dat het licht zich met zeer hoge snelheid voortplant. Vermoedelijk leerde hij van Anaxagoras dat zonsverduisteringen ontstaan doordat de maan voor de zon schuift.

68. Dictionary: Empedocles
About this site News Linkers Top Searches SearchBox Webstats Dictionary. Thesaurus.Look up this word in the thesaurus empedocles. empedocles. 1 entries found.
http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/Empedocles
Hyper Dictionary
Dictionary Results
About this site
News

Linkers

Top Searches
...
Webstats

Dictionary
Thesaurus
Look up this word in the thesaurus: Empedocles
Empedocles
entries found From WordNet ... Empedocles

69. Protagorean.com: Empedocles
PROTAGOREAN.COM. PrOtagoRean.com. PROTAGOREAN.COM. empedocles. b R b b. b empedocles/TheColumbia Encyclopedia. http//www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0817277.html.
http://www.protagorean.com/empedocles.html
P ROTAGOREAN.COM P ROTAGOREAN.COM PrOtagoRean.com PROT A GOR E AN.COM
EMPEDOCLES
b R b
b
b Empedocles/The Columbia Encyclopedia http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0817277.html
b Empedocles (c. 495 - 435 BC)/ The Oxford Companion to Philosophy http://www.xrefer.com/entry/551906
b Empedocles (fl. 450 BCE.)/ from The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/e/empedocl.htm
b Empedocles http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/projects/ptpdlp/pathways/pgc2.html
b Empedocles Fragments and Commentaryfrom The First Philosophers of Greece (1898)/by Arthur Fairbanks http://history.hanover.edu/texts/presoc/emp.htm
b Empedocles of Acragasfrom Early Greek Philosophy by John Burnet http://plato.evansville.edu/public/burnet/ch5.htm
b Empedoclesfrom Outlines of the History of Greek Philosophy (1889)/by Edward Zeller ... http://philos.wright.edu/Dept/PHL/Class/PS/ZelEmped.html
b The Pluralists: Empedocles http://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/320/emped.htm
b Review by John Bussanich of Peter Kingsley, Ancient Philosophy, Mystery, and Magic: Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition ... ROTAGOREAN.COM

70. Selinunte - Temple "B" (or Empedocles's)
It is a hypothesis that this temple was dedicated to empedocles, the philosopherwho expressed the theory of the transmigration of souls and discovered in
http://www.centrocomp.it/castelvetrano/selinunte/templeb.html
It is a hypothesis that this temple was dedicated to Empedocles, the philosopher who expressed the theory of the transmigration of souls and discovered in himself the nature of a fish, because he swam magnificientiy, of a bird, as he ran quick as lightning, and, like his teacher Pythagoras, of a god.
This temple should have been a thanksgiving to Empedocles who had saved Selinus from malaria. His biographers describe him so penetrated and convinced of his divine nature to ascribe these sentences to him: "I'm not a mortal anymore, but a god ! I wander about honoured by everybody because I deserve it.
Beautiful, crowned with fillets and wonderful flowers, I wander about the most famous cities".
As there are not certain elements to establish to whom the temple was consecrated, let's examine the technical aspect.
It is a hellenistic "in antis" building, where four Ionic columns and a Doric entablature formed the eastern front. The temple is 8,45 m. long and 4,60 m. wide, covering an area of 38,87 square metres. CITY OF CASTELVETRANO - SELINUNTE (TP)
E-Mail : cvetrano@centrocomp.it - asscult@centrocomp.it

71. Matthew Arnold From The Hymn Of Empedocles
The DayPoems Poetry Collection Tim Bovee, proprietor www.daypoems.net Clickon the bonsai for the next poem. From the Hymn of empedocles.
http://www.daypoems.net/poems/703.html
To link to this poem, put the URL below into your page:
Plain for Printing
The DayPoems Poetry Collection
Timothy Bovee, editor

www.daypoems.net

Click on the bonsai for the next poem.
Further Reading:
From the Hymn of Empedocles
By Matthew Arnold
IS it so small a thing
To have enjoy'd the sun,
To have lived light in the spring,
To have loved, to have thought, to have done;
To have advanced true friends, and beat down baffling foes;
That we must feign a bliss Of doubtful future date, And while we dream on this Lose all our present state, And relegate to worlds yet distant our repose? Not much, I know, you prize What pleasures may be had, Who look on life with eyes Estranged, like mine, and sad: And yet the village churl feels the truth more than you; Who 's loth to leave this life Which to him little yields: His hard-task'd sunburnt wife, His often-labour'd fields; The boors with whom he talk'd, the country spots he knew. But thou, because thou hear'st Men scoff at Heaven and Fate; Because the gods thou fear'st Fail to make blest thy state

72. Empedocles
empedocles c.495c.435 bc , Greek philosopher, b. Acragas (present Agrigento),Sicily. Leader of the democratic empedocles. c.495-c.435
http://www.slider.com/enc/17000/Empedocles.htm
submitwolf - award winning internet software
Home
Encyclopeadia E Ele - Ell ...
  • Rope Ladders
    Trellian WebPage
    Slider Search:
    The Web Encyclopaedia Shopping Index Help Encyclopaedia

    Empedocles c.495-c.435 b.c. , Greek philosopher, b. Acragas (present Agrigento), Sicily. Leader of the democratic faction in his native city, he was offered the crown, which he refused. A turn in political fortunes drove him and his followers into exile. Empedocles taught that everything in existence is composed of four underived and indestructible roots, material particles identified as fire, water, earth, and air. He declared the atmosphere to be a corporeal substance, not a mere void; and in the absence of the void or empty space he explained motion as the interpenetration of particles, under the alternating action of two forces, harmony and discord. Believing that motion, or change of place, is the only sort of change possible, he explained all apparent changes in quality or quantity as changes of position of the basic particles underlying the observable object. He was thereby the first to state a principle that is now central to physics. See studies by C. E. Millerd (1980) and M. R. Wright (1981).
  • 73. Itinera Electronica: Du Texte à L'hypertexte
    Translate this page Lucrèce, De la nature des choses, Livre I. empedocles. Vers. 1, 710-719, imbri.~Quorum Acragantinus cum primis, empedocles, est, ~insula quem triquetris terrarum.
    http://agoraclass.fltr.ucl.ac.be/concordances/lucrece_dnc_I/precise.cfm?txt=Empe

    74. Empedocles' Shoe By Tom Kuhn / Karen Leeder (eds)
    Book information on empedocles' Shoe Essays on Brecht's poetry by Tom Kuhn / KarenLeeder (eds) a Methuen Bertolt Brecht title. The cover of empedocles' Shoe
    http://www.methuen.co.uk/empedoclesshoe.html
    Home Catalogue Coming Soon Ordering ...
    Browse Methuen:
    Methuen General Anthologies Children's Books Cultural Studies Fiction Gay Interest History Humour Monty Python Poetry Screen Sport Travel Methuen Drama Bertolt Brecht Contemporary Dramatists Modern Plays Performance Play Anthologies Screenplays Student Editions Theatre Studies Theatre Workshop World Classics Search Methuen: Methuen Home Drama Bertolt Brecht ... Tom Kuhn / Karen Leeder (eds) Empedocles' Shoe
    Empedocles' Shoe by Tom Kuhn / Karen Leeder (eds)
    Essays on Brecht's poetry
    Tom Kuhn and Karen Leeder (ed)
    A key critical work bringing relevance to Brecht's poetry in the 21st century Brecht is increasingly recognised as one of the most important lyric voices of the 20th century. Alongside Rilke he is honoured as Germany's greatest modern poet. Yet his poetry is relatively little known in the English speaking world. This title takes its cue from an allegorical poem about the artist's legacy and looks at how poets and translators might read Brecht today.
    The volume arises from a seminar held at Oxford University in 1998 to mark the centenary of Brecht's birth and includes seminal contributions from experts. It sheds new light on individual poems as well as giving an overview of Brecht's poetry from the earliest days to the GDR years. There are also Brecht poems in parallel translation as well as translations by major British poets such as Tom Paulin, Seamus Heaney, Jamie McKendrick, Michael Morley, Derek Mahon, and David Constantine.

    75. PHILOSOPHERS - EMPEDOCLES
    empedocles (49535 BC) Happy is he who has gained the wealth of divinethoughts, wretched is he whose beliefs about the gods are dark .
    http://www.creatorix.com.au/philosophy/t06/t06f09.html
    EMPEDOCLES
    (495-35 BC)
    "Happy is he who has gained the wealth of divine thoughts, wretched is he whose beliefs about the gods are dark" (Quoted in "Clement Miscellanies" V xiv 140.5) From a wealthy and distinguished family in Sicily, Empedocles was apparently a person of some political importance and may have worked as a doctor. He wrote in verse and significant fragments of On Nature and Purifications survive. His philosophy is an attempted synthesis of Parmenides Pythagoras and Heracleitus . He thought of himself as one whose wheels of incarnations had turned circle. Legend has it that his final immortality-winning act was to leap into Mt Etna. A more likely story is that he died in exile, a victim of political enemies. Empedocles' philosophy abandoned the Monism of Parmenides in favour of four "roots of all things" or elements - earth, air, fire and water. Two forces, Love and Strife motivate the "roots" to combine (Love) or separate (Strife). Empedocles still clung to the principle that something cannot arise out of nothing or perish into nothing but sought to explain the generation and destruction of everyday things as is witnessed by our senses. The apparent coming-to-be of something is the combination of portions of the elements. His general idea seems to be that, inspired by Love or Strife, portions of the elements flow into or out of one another. The ease or difficulty of this depends on their pore structure, combination only taking place between "bodies whose pores are in reciprocal sympathy". An appropriate flowing-in constitutes the coming-to-be of something, a flowing-out, its destruction.

    76. Empedocles, Anaxagoras, And The Atomists
    empedocles, Anaxagoras, and the Atomists. In the empedocles, the oldestof the four, was rumored to be a Pythagorean (151). But if
    http://www.mindground.net/atomists.html
    Empedocles, Anaxagoras, and the Atomists             Empedocles, the oldest of the four, was rumored to be a Pythagorean (151).  But if the Pythagoreans were by definition a mystery religion, then it must be deduced that Empedocles deviated from this tradition.  Therefore, the ideas that he presented may be acknowledged to have been influenced by the Pythagoreans but not necessarily confined to them. This influence helped form a duality in Empedocles’ mind between a separate and pristine godlike state and the condition of his known environment, described in his text Purifications as a “meadow of Doom” (153) in which immortal souls are “driven this way and that, vainly supposing that [they have] discovered the whole” (156).  These exiled spirits are trapped in eternal cycles perpetuated by what Empedocles viewed as impure acts, such as bloodletting (154), a notion derived straight from Pythagoras.             Another element in Empedocles’ ideas of a Pythagorean origin is the importance that they both placed on numbers.  Empedocles claimed that the cosmos was composed of four elements, namely earth, air, fire, and water, and two forces, being mingling and separation, named by him as “Love” and “Strife” (158).  Upon these building blocks and the forces that move them, all that exists is built by a series of variations of ratios.  What separates one substance from the next is simply a basic shift in the portions of elements and the amount of Love or Strife involved.

    77. Empedocles At PhilosophyClassics.com -- Essays, Resources
    empedocles free essays, eTexts, resources and links from PhilosophyClassics.com.Part of empedocles. 495 BC - 435 BC *. Greek philosopher
    http://www.philosophyclassics.com/philosophers/Empedocles/
    Part of the Classics Network , a leading provider of online resources for the humanities. Literature Classics.com Philosophy Classics.com —Advertisement Home Help Login Contact
    Empedocles 495 BC - 435 BC Greek philosopher who developed the pluralist tradition by arguing that the world is comprised of four elements
    EMPEDOCLES (c. 490—430 B.C.), Greek philosopher and statesman, was born at Agrigentum (Acragas, Girgenti) in Sicily of a distinguished family, then at the height of its glory. His grandfather Empedocles was victorious in the Olympian chariot race in 496; in 470 his father Meto was largely instrumental in the overthrow of the tyrant Thrasydaeus. We know almost nothing of his life. The numerous legends which have grown up round his name yield very little that can fairly be regarded as authentic. It seems that he carried on the democratic tradition of his house by helping to overthrow an oligarch... [read entire biography] Source External Publication
    This page is maintained by our Editorial Team. Become an Expert and help us build this site!

    78. Empedocles - 8X17
    The characters, plotlines, quotes, etc. included here are owned by ChrisCarter and 1013 Productions, all rights reserved. The following
    http://www.insidethex.co.uk/transcrp/scrp817.htm

    CarriK
    and made available for your personal enjoyment by me, DrWeesh from my website, InsideTheX
    SCENE 1
    NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA
    5:45 PM GARY GARBER: You don't know how much I hate my job on days like this, Jeb. If it were my choice... (he glances at ROBERTA TOEWS) … I'd be giving you a promotion but with the economy the way it is... (JEB DUKES also glances at ROBERTA TOEWS, then back to GARY GARBER. He is in shocked disbelief.) JEB DUKES: Are you firing me? GARY GARBER: You can hold your head up, Jeb. You've done a good job here. JEB DUKES: I-I don't believe this. I... I thought this was just an evaluation. (GARY GARBER stands and shakes his head. It is a polite but firm dismissal.) GARY GARBER: I'm sorry. I really am. (JEB DUKES looks again at the woman, ROBERTA TOEWS. She merely looks back at him.) (JEB DUKES leaves the office. So does ROBERTA TOEWS. As if in a dream, JEB DUKES walks slowly through the office watching the other employees answering phones, gathering up papers, closing up their desks, preparing for the next day of work. He speaks to no one and leaves the building. The city streets are dark and wet. An older model car comes around the corner followed by a flashing police car, sirens blaring. The car passes JEB DUKES and crashes into a station wagon in the middle of the next intersection. The cars burst into flames. JEB DUKES, along with other horrified witnesses, run toward the accident. One of the OFFICERS blocks them from approaching the fiery wreck.)

    79. Zeferino González / Historia De La Filosofía / 45. Empedocles /
    Translate this page § 45. empedocles. Este filósofo escribe Deus immortalis haberiDum cupit empedocles, ardentem frigidus Aetnam Insiluit. Hácenle
    http://www.filosofia.org/zgo/hf2/hf21045.htm

    80. 8X17: Empedocles
    8X17. empedocles. Rating (4.0 out of 5). Original air date April22, 2001. previous episode Three Words next episode Vienen.
    http://stories.wigglefish.com/public/0001_0020_0029.cfm?ID=688

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-80 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter