Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Animatismus

Animatismus (nomen a Roberto Ranulpho Marett, anthropologo Britannico factum) est "fides potestatis impersonalis et generalis cui homines aliquantum imperant."[1][2] Marett arguit certas culturas credere "homines, animalia, plantas, resque inanimatas certis viribus praeditas fuisse, quae impersonales et supernaturales fuerunt.[3][2] Mana, ait Marett, notionem Polynesiam commemorans, est vis animatistica in unam formam contracta intra ullam ex his rebus inventa quae potestatem, vires, resque bene gestas defert.[4] In culturis variis, animatismus et mana per successus et defectiones harum rerum variarum videri possunt: successus magnam animatismi vel manae summam significat, quandoquidem defectio ex imminutione vel amissione animatismi vel manae efficitur.

Nexus interni

  1. Anglice: "a belief in a generalized, impersonal power over which people have some measure of control."
  2. 2.0 2.1 Garry Ferraro, Cultural Anthropology: An Applied Perspective, ed. 7a (Belmont Californiae: Thompson Wadsworth, 2008), 340.
  3. Anglice: "people, animals, plants, and inanimate objects were endowed with certain powers, which were both impersonal and supernatural."
  4. Gary Ferraro, Cultural Anthropology: An Applied Perspective, ed. 7a (Belmont Californiae: Thompson Wadsworth, 2008).

Previous Page Next Page






Animatismus Czech Animatisme Danish Animatismus German Animatism English Animatism ET آنیماتیسم FA Animatismi Finnish Animatisme French प्राणवाद HI Animatisme ID

Responsive image

Responsive image