ISBN:
9780415177962
Sprache:
Englisch
Seiten:
Online-Ressource (766 p)
Serie:
International Library of Sociology
Paralleltitel:
Print version Society and Nature : A Sociological Inquiry
DDC:
301.7
Schlagwort(e):
Electronic books
Kurzfassung:
First published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company
Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis:
Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Introduction; Part I. Primitive Conception of Nature; I. Primitive Consciousness; 1. Prevalence of the Emotional Component; 2. Lack of Causal Thinking; 3. Lack of Ego-Consciousness; 4. Soul Belief and Experience of the Ego; 5. Collective Consciousness and Tendency to Substantialize; 6. Autocratism, Conservatism, and Traditionalism; II. The Social Interpretation of Nature; 7. Animism as Personalistic Apperception of Nature; 8. Primitive Man's Capacity of Differentiation
Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis:
9. Tu-Analogy, not Ego-Analogy, the Basis of Primitive Man's View of The World10. Actual Behavior of Early Man Toward Objects of Nature; 11. Primitive Magic; 12. Significance of the Soul Belief for Primitive Man's Interpretation of Nature; 13. No Idea of "Impersonal Forces"; 14. Personalistic and Causal Thinking; 15. "Imputation" to the Person and Normative Thinking; 16. "Nature" as Part of Society; III. The Interpretation of Nature According to the Principle of Retribution; 17. Principle of Retribution and Vengeance; 18. "Directed" and "Nondirected" Vengeance; 19. Vengeance among Animals
Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis:
20. Vengeance on Inanimate Objects21. Significance of the Idea of Retribution for the Social Life of Primitive Man; 22. Principle of Retribution and Morality; 23. Retribution and "Talio," Exchange, Reciprocity; 24. Primitive Man's Sense of Justice; 25. Retribution in Relation to the Deity; 26. The Idea of Retribution and Magic; 27. Retribution in Relation to Animals; 28. Social Significance of the Animal Soul; 29. Guaranteeing of the Social Order through the Retributory Function of the Animal Soul; 30. Significance of Rites as Preparation for the Hunt
Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis:
31. Animal Soul and Human Soul as Retributory Authority32. Retribution in Relation to Plants; 33. Interpretation of Illness and Death According to the Principle of Retribution; 34. Interpretation of all Kinds of Misfortune According to the Principle of Retribution; 35. Interpretation of the Weather According to the Principle of Retribution; 36. Interpretation of Thunder, Lightning, etc., According to the Principle of Retribution; 37. The Idea of Retribution in the Myths of Primitive Peoples; 38. The Motive of Retribution in the Culture Myths
Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis:
39. The Motive of Retribution in the Deity-, Hero-, Ancestor-, and Death-Soul Myths40. The Motive of Retribution in the Creation Myths; 41. The Motive of Retribution in the Myths of Nature; 42. The Motive of Retribution in Animal Myths; 43. The Myths of the Origin of Death; 44. The Myths of Painful Parturition, the Necessity of Work, and the Lost Paradise; 45. The Flood and Catastrophe Myths; Part II. Greek Religion and Philosophy; IV. The Idea of Retribution in Greek Religion; 46. The Idea of Retribution in the Soul Belief; 47. The Supposedly Amoral Character of Greek Religion
Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis:
48. The Idea of Divine Retribution in the Homeric Religion
Anmerkung:
Description based upon print version of record
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