CULTURALFEATURESOF........1 (0.000%)
and others, examines 200 basic, defined culturalfeaturesof the "Old World Oikoumene." 42221 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
 
 CULTURALLY................33 (0.004%)
and finally one God who were culturally advanced in their offerings and demands of humans, 806 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
prolonged after-affects geologically, biologically, and culturally. 6768 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
gestalt of the certain permitted breakthroughs culturally along the whole front of life. 10764 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
religion) one world-wide code (without culturally and ideologically distinct competitors) The "old discarded writers" are therefore to be understood as you would view a rabble before it was transformed into an army. 20930 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
as they were already racially and culturally differentiated. 25980 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : CLIMATE CHANGES AND TIME
activities to constrain and develop them culturally (humanly); 26193 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : HAND, ROD AND SNAKE
appeared with such claims to be culturally retarded and childish, 37040 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
golden Age of Saturn contrasts both culturally and physically with the bright harsh Age of Jupiter. 56307 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 15: THE JUPITER ORDER -
how rapidly man changes, physiologically and culturally, 62251 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
the human mind may have quantavoluted culturally because of experiences so intense and memorable that a new kind of creature emerged from them. 62616 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION -
who claim by a kind of culturally transmitted history that their ancestors arose in large numbers and were wiped out in cycles of catastrophes and revival, 62648 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
his origination, so did he become culturally holistic. 65099 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
expansion of homo schizo geographically and culturally proceeded rapidly. 65102 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
found a new role in a culturally fecundating voyage through the southern oceans to the western shores of the Americas.65917 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
of the view that humans are culturally determined. 66076 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
There are perhaps some non-schizoid culturally created humans, 66531 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : GROUP VS. INDIVIDUAL
sexually different, the genetically abnormal, the culturally and criminally diverse and perverse, 69551 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S SAMPLING FOR THE NORMAL
humans, perhaps even most humans, are culturally produced in their entirety. 70484 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : GENETICS: ARE THERE HOMINIDS AMONG US?
world. He is innately, individually, and culturally anxious, 70734 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT-DELAY
human and those who are only culturally human (a question already alluded to), 70816 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : SELF-FEAR AND SELF-CONTROL
church, and so on. Roles are culturally defined, 70897 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
is often argued that humans are culturally indoctrinated in fear, 71050 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : EXISTENTIAL FEAR
occurred. The display of fear is culturally determined; 71065 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : EXISTENTIAL FEAR
both hemispheres. Some of it is culturally induced; 72084 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE LOCATION OF INSTINCT DELAY
to eat a sugary carbohydrate, a culturally defined concoction, 73370 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : OMNIPRESENT FEAR
different from others, in which are culturally ordained the forms and categories by which the personality not only communicates, 74897 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
ground to the sublimations of the culturally perverse, 75338 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SECRET WORDS AND PANRELATIONISM
Other poly-egos are regarded as culturally dysfunctional and are tabooed. 76159 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE ORIGINS OF GOOD AND EVIL
of Lake Van are not only culturally close but close in blood types to the Etruscans 8 . 80807 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : THE EPITHETS OF VENUS
lack of explicitness. Made far removed, culturally and geographically, 92817 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : KORAH'S REBELLION
there seemed to be in a culturally creative mood in the mid-second-millennium. 104059 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
20, 1969, and had been impregnated culturally and otherwise by our doughty astronauts, 105024 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS -
is experiential. One proceeds analogically and culturally. 127106 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : FEAR STORAGE
 
 CULTURE...................565 (0.070%)
poly-faceted language and full-function culture. 532 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
is gone tomorrow, a civilization, a culture, 990 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
poly-faceted language and full-function culture. 1043 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
same would characterize the swiftly developing culture -- with rites, 1049 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
Aughrabies falls augury Augustine, Saint Auigancan Culture Aurora aurora at ground level Aurora-g auroral form auroral oval auroral storm Australasia Australia Australian Bight Australian glaciation Australian string dunes Australopithicus Austria Austroafrican authority autumn avalanche Avebury aversion, 1714 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
cultural hologenesis cultural relativity cultural synchronism culture culture, 2398 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
hologenesis cultural relativity cultural synchronism culture culture, 2399 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
dragon Drakensberg volcanics drama dramaturgy Dravidian Culture dream Dreamtime dress drift, 2586 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
Charles Har Karkom, mount Harakhte Harappa Culture Harkenss, 3173 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
mountain range mouse mouse, cosmic Mousterean culture Mozambique Mt. 4180 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
a critical fraction maintaining the Judaic culture-core. 6639 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
fear that affected all areas of culture everywhere down to the present day. 6764 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
public argument, a stereotype of the culture. 8660 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
which is a combination of a culture-look and a genetic-look. 9950 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
course upon which Jewish or gentile culture and sub-culture you are using as the standard. 9952 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
Jewish or gentile culture and sub-culture you are using as the standard. 9952 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
in which no Jewish race, or culture, 9956 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
heart of a Catholic and the culture of a Protestant, 9980 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
average norms and normals of a culture. 10210 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
luxury, splendor, power, idleness, extravagance, high culture and civic freedom are dwelt upon as the ambiance of homosexual inversion. 10219 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
fully aware, have we of Western culture quite learned to enjoy heterosexuality without guilt and fear of punition.)10232 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
many another Jew to German high culture were buried. 10316 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
and the world, so that religion, culture, 10493 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
ideas; it penetrated every shore of culture and did it within a few years. 10766 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
world of rocks, skies, nature, and culture can be twisted into a short-term frame, 10781 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
who tried to liberate a great culture from priestly and traditional thralldom, 10912 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
of catastrophic cycles of nature and culture. 10966 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
blond eel, and he heard of culture and society "Down Under," 11181 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
it directly into the Archaic Greek culture that succeeds it, 13573 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
some scholar who understood the catastrophe-culture-history interfaces must have read and disputed this part of the reconstruction of history. 13620 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
time was required to achieve a culture. 13743 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
escape the menacing youth and drug culture of Princeton? 14037 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
and their total loss to our culture. 15430 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
the traditional research materials of the culture -- in classics, 17716 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
as they gave to applying, American culture would be up a notch or two over all its length and breadth. 17977 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
trenchant irony called "1001 Question on Culture Policy" in which using the format of a book of interrogations,18729 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
publications and deeper problems of human culture and natural history, 18822 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
whom consigned the progressive evolution of culture are hard put to survive, 18827 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
and the industrial wordage of the culture -- and he would sound off sometimes on the gamut of the intellectual pariahs, 18846 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
a cost the humble creators of culture would afford. 18851 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
production and distribution, because the fast culture was still too slow to accept them. 18852 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
of them are abortions of a culture of intellectual and science prostitution. 18946 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
method of myth analysis and anthropological culture analysis in my writings. 19280 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
university, or the development of a culture is a perfecting of a fixed conceptual ideal which reduces the possibility of free adaptation to new ideas. 19956 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
t we suffering from the two-culture problem? 20444 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
a proposition that is useful to culture, 20851 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
the Heavenly Host Ejaculative Language Ecumenical Culture The Expansion of Homo Schizo Old and New World Concordances Climate Changes and Time Puzzles of Tihuanacu Signs of Uranian Culture Hand, 21280 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
Puzzles of Tihuanacu Signs of Uranian Culture Hand, 21285 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
of mankind; and the origins of culture. 21415 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - FOREWORD -
which these objects and experiences enter culture will be pathologically or at least illogically affected (see Figure 4 on pp. 22357 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : PANDEMONIUM AND DARKNESS
has never been doubted by any culture anywhere or anytime, 23436 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CYCLES AND ANNIVERSARIES
anytime, except by the modern uniformitarian culture 64 . 23436 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CYCLES AND ANNIVERSARIES
canopies ...homo sapiens schizotypicalis appears... ecumenical culture... 24126 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : THE NUMBER OF CATASTROPHES
a fully developed human mind and culture was indicated and implicated in these earlier times, 24263 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : WHY 14,000 YEARS?
forces. THIRD PHASE: THE CONSTRUCTION OF CULTURE A. 25533 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
fears, and mechanisms, but assume variegated culture-forms depending upon the "mix" of history, 25556 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
who, in relation to a particular culture mix are deviant (i. 25561 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
every case the peculiarity of the culture where it emerges. 25566 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
Principle was applied to man. ECUMENICAL CULTURE Celestial religion began as intense preoccupation with the behavior of the gods and as the imitation of that behavior as the new humans saw and understood it. 25821 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
identified as of this Uranian ecumenical culture. 25894 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE EXPANSION OF HOMO SCHIZO
and who develops a single ecumenical culture. 25906 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
having participated in the earliest Uranian culture. 25917 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
be proof already of a shared culture between old worlds and new, 25929 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
divergence from a possible common ecumenical culture. 25930 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
of an "Old World eikoumene" (ecumenical culture of Euro-Asia). 25937 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
its thesis of world-wide ecumenical culture but also the placement of the inventory of culture within the framework of the revolutionary calendar. 25945 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
the placement of the inventory of culture within the framework of the revolutionary calendar. 25945 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
there was first the worldwide Uranian culture on the Pangean all-land Earth, 25946 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
for a worldwide human race and culture existing prior to "the ice ages" and also (it should be stressed) prior to the widespread desert conditions found in many parts of the world where ice-age theory has said that ice was absent (the Siberian tundra, 25965 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : CLIMATE CHANGES AND TIME
survivors and rebuilt. SIGNS OF URANIAN CULTURE From the age of Urania, 26090 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : SIGNS OF URANIAN CULTURE
a kind of evolutionism thinks of culture growth like teeth, 26095 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : SIGNS OF URANIAN CULTURE
are representations of larger clusters of culture traits. 26100 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : SIGNS OF URANIAN CULTURE
with lunar behavior. The ecumenical Uranian culture remained the substraturm of Lunarian culture. 27007 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LUNAR WORSHIP
culture remained the substraturm of Lunarian culture. 27007 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LUNAR WORSHIP
the world and all types of culture are obsessed with the idea that masses of neighboring land were deluged or overrun by water and sank forever into the depths. 27056 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : SUNKEN LANDS
location of the center of each culture, 27065 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : SUNKEN LANDS
in 1917, there is an archaic culture. 27218 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : THE MOON IN MESO-AMERICA
speculate that much of this "archaic culture" belongs to the reconstruction period following Lunaria, 27221 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : THE MOON IN MESO-AMERICA
with the model of a Lunarian culture. 27299 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : WESTERN EUROPE
close touch with the Tethyan-Mediterranean culture. 28116 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 08: SATURN'S CHILDREN : THE PEOPLES OF SATURNIA
to the Andes, a full neolithic culture, 28165 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 08: SATURN'S CHILDREN : THE PEOPLES OF SATURNIA
of great temples. A stone age culture, 28291 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 08: SATURN'S CHILDREN : SURVIVORS AND SATURNALIA
modern air about its ideas and culture. 28395 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 08: SATURN'S CHILDREN : Notes (Chapter Eight: Saturn's Children)
Tepe Yahya in Iran, the Olmec culture of Meso-America Sumer, 28708 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : MONUMENTALISM
as to whether the West European culture is indigenous or derived. 28723 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : MONUMENTALISM
Egyptians came with a distinct language, culture, 28748 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : REPEATED DISASTERS
the Jovean assemblage of Greco-Roman culture. 28791 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : GODS NOT INVENTED
Tidal floods swept over every coastal culture. 29281 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : CAREER OF AN ANDROGYNE
humanists in descriptions. Every language, every culture and sub-culture carries one and more names for Venus. 29451 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE PLOT OF THE ILIAD
Every language, every culture and sub-culture carries one and more names for Venus. 29451 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE PLOT OF THE ILIAD
the current nominee for the Mother culture, 29550 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : GLOBAL RUINATION AND ITS PERPETRATOR
coordination. In India, the wreckage of culture can be correlated with the stories of a rampant Venus. 29561 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : GLOBAL RUINATION AND ITS PERPETRATOR
had been reduced to a survival culture). 29619 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE DEVI AND THE MEXICAN BALLPLAYER
civilization, then a widespread later Olmec culture, 29720 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : A LONGER DAY
the Romans, carrying a highly developed culture from Asia Minor where, 29824 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : MARTIA
distinguishable from their Villanovan predecessors in culture and separated from them by a layer of catastrophic debris 63 . 29828 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : MARTIA
into the archaic and classical Greek culture without much lapse of time. 30066 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE GREEK "DARK AGES"
1200; Alaca Huyuk; first level of culture begins at -1300; 30138 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE GREEK "DARK AGES"
of planets, development of human intelligence, culture, 30482 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
however, did any movement on a culture-wide scale offer to smooth out the cycles of ancient history, 30801 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 12: VICTORY OF THE SUN : SUN AND SCIENCE
Dravidian Problem in the South Indian Culture Complex, 31784 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
Alfred L. (1952), The Nature of Culture, 31851 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
participate in this phase of our culture, 32870 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
correspondingly, all religions changed. (h) No culture complex can be shown to have avoided, 33028 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
simple search of the annals of culture will reveal a closely related trend. 33359 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
impossible the carrying on of their culture. 33433 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
reason why the flowering of Greek culture occurred under the same climatic conditions later on. 33435 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
cannot explain the death of a culture by enemy invasion, 33542 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
pursue the death agonies of a culture. 33546 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
are ignored, changing climates would carry culture both East and West 1 . 33733 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
dunes, astroblemes, volcanos, climatic switching, and culture extinction together can entertain an hypothesis of holospheric quantavolution, 33965 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
1400 B. C. says that "Olmec culture is well-characterized by ceremonial centers, 34646 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 4 Magnetism and Axial Tilts -
site and its resemblances to Inca culture are no more than its resemblances to the earliest Ecuadorian or Mexican cultures or to the Easter Island complex for that matter. 36186 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
with the downfall of the Mycenean culture. 36202 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
evidence of the destruction of Mycenean culture by fire has been available for a long time, 36203 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
Svria, finds that the proto-Syrian culture datable sometime after 2300 B. 36246 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
question is: Which came first, the culture or the oil? 38267 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
not forget them easily. But no culture makes of any such weather event a centerpiece of their history as human beings. 39496 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
unless a flood practically obliterates a culture, 39499 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
The probability is high that every culture can recite the story of a universal flood which practically nobody survived. 39506 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
a rapid development of thought and culture; 39731 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
scholar (Fairservis) who deems the Indus culture to have declined because of economic extravagance and poor ecological practices, 40314 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
the Indus and probably pre-Indus culture were most extensive -at least from today's Iran on the north to China on the east, 40319 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
and flourishing? They either abandoned the culture or they were destroyed. 40343 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
may have drowned the mythical Atlantis culture, 40624 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth -
disasters, many years passed before a culture could renew itself or be resettled by survivors from other areas.41469 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 16 Earthquakes -
less, during the Magdalenian Upper Paleolithic culture. 41592 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism -
would have dominated all religion and culture if there had not appeared some immense and forceful sky bodies that focused attention upon themselves. 41595 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism -
a large, high island and its culture three thousand years ago 10 . 41735 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism -
Rome, there is a grandeur of culture, 41859 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism -
considered seriously and literally: the Atlantean culture did exist across a water barrier to the west; 42101 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
leaves a great prior gap of culture, 42208 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
percent of the Old World basic culture traits are shared with the New World. 42225 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
knew writing and had a complex culture, 42332 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
that the oldest surviving large-scale culture in the world is African, 42431 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
is African, exemplified in the Tamil culture of India. 42432 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
heard claims that this south Indian culture was a survival of a great sunken culture.42433 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
a survival of a great sunken culture. 42433 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
roots of the Dravidians of Tamil Culture of Southern India with the natives of Australia. 42436 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
principally in Southern India today. Their culture is called the Tamil and is now reputed among scholars to be the oldest in India, 42453 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
predating by far the Indo-European culture of the Aryan immigrants of the mid-second millennium B. 42455 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
C., not to mention the medieval culture brought in by Muslim invaders. 42456 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
old world. This earliest pre- Sumerian culture has been termed the Ubaid. 42495 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
significance. The origins of Egyptian high culture, 42516 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
Suddenly, upon the neolithic, a high culture seems to have been imposed. 42517 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
or upon its related areas of culture in Peru, 42703 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
such proof is that an ecumenical culture must have existed prior to the Lunarian diaspora.46720 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
other trait, just as in a culture every culture trait relates to every other culture trait somehow, 47494 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
just as in a culture every culture trait relates to every other culture trait somehow, 47494 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
culture trait relates to every other culture trait somehow, 47494 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
is a whole, just as a culture is a whole. 47495 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
and that catastrophized human nature and culture, 48013 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
The Pythagorean philosophy of ancient Greek culture generated the theory of music and the theory of numbers out of the behavior of the heavens. 48180 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
the connections between Egyptian and Hebrew culture, 48200 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
music and all other aspects of culture. 48212 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
hologenetically, in a quantavolution. H. Human culture would have been hologenetic, 49037 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
was dated much earlier before the culture was unearthed.) 49505 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
and Creation that assigns an ecumenical culture, 49786 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
the legendary corpus of the same culture; 54106 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 10: INSTABILITY OF SUPER URANUS -
fearfully by the rapidly developing human culture that was spreading throughout the World. 54362 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 10: INSTABILITY OF SUPER URANUS -
Homo sapiens schizo-typicus appears... ecumenical culture... 54860 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
and in place. The devising of culture was practically instant. 55156 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
people. The social process, the instant culture, 55161 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
need not be surprising. Humanization and culture seem to have appeared in the initial phases of Solaria Binaria's collapse, 55167 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
all, peoples possessed an ecumenical "creation culture" would point to a worldwide takeover by a single culture within a thousand years.55175 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
a worldwide takeover by a single culture within a thousand years. 55176 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
he builds the totality of his culture on a tragic plane; 55199 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
chaos. This narrative is but one culture's account of mankind's witnessing of the explosion of a celestial body. 55271 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 13: NOVA OF SUPER URANUS AND EJECTION OF THE MOON -
with results upon human nature and culture that were in modern perspective often richly "constructive", 55913 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 14: THE GOLDEN AGE AND NOVA OF SUPER SATURN -
of natural disasters plunged the Harappan culture of India into a fatal decline now too.56778 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
1976, p14; Bimson). 7. Anthroposphere: Every culture-complex changed markedly. 56809 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 16: VENUS AND MARS -
nature originated abruptly with a complex culture in the first age of binary instability, 57108 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
a heavy dedication of mind and culture to them. 57522 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
regard legends as expressive of a culture and of some historical value; 57569 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
Tylor, Sir Edward Burnett (1903), Primitive Culture (John Murray: 60150 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
under the title The Origin of Culture, 60151 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
HOMINIDS METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE OLDUVAI GORGE A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS DOBZHANSKY, 60380 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
BEING Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION PROTO-CULTURE LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS TRIBES, 60423 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
TIME MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY ECUMENICAL CULTURE AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS CULTURAL INTEGRATION Chapter 6: 60427 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
precipitated and perpetuated the change. Did culture spring up with, 60527 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
it lag behind, the human transformation? Culture sprang up with the gestalt of human creation. 60528 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
as tool-making and, by implication, culture. 60643 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE HUMAN BRAINCASE
that as with anatomy, so with culture: 60651 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE HUMAN BRAINCASE
as with anatomy, so with culture: culture, 60651 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE HUMAN BRAINCASE
by bit. Thus, a ladder of culture has been assembled. 60727 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
earth. Peoples of all types of culture insist, 60809 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
recall a hologenesis of mind and culture? 60934 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
26 So Buettner-Janusz, claiming that culture put severe demands upon the brain, 60999 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
has been long, and that the culture traits have budded upon the branches of anatomical changes. 61096 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
can bud on the branches of culture; 61097 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
there was sufficient neurological material for culture. 61105 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
material for culture. 33 But can culture (that is, 61105 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
produced an outburst of cerebration and culture? 61114 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
beasts were without sign of human culture despite a fairly large brain. 61246 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
the most tangible signs of a culture. 61290 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
of contemporaneity not only of different culture variants, 61324 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
by Mellars and others. The Mousterian culture is also found in connection with Aurignacian Upper Paleolithic remains.61327 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
is, all at once? Did his culture originate promptly with his physical origins, 61392 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
A quantavolution of human genetics and culture implies human hologenesis, 61394 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
Elman R. Service, eds., Evolution and Culture, 61417 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Evolution of Man's Capacity for Culture, 61429 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
cf. 435. 25. Human Evolution and Culture, 61463 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
in Renfrew, ed., The Explanation of Culture Change: 61520 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
of the century, claimed an Acheulian culture of the Lower Paleolithic in South America.61521 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
homo sapiens (schizotypus) in physiology and culture? 61563 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
time and with the Acheulian-Chellean culture at Olduvai, 61583 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
Acheulian-Chellean culture at Olduvai, which culture extends into the Terrafine of North Africa and is found also at Swanscombe and Steinheim, 61584 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
larger than modern man and a culture. 61664 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
section illustrates the distribution of prehistoric culture in relation to deposits of North China, 61737 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : PEKING MAN
man had existed, with an Acheulian culture, 61871 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
chapter and book. TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE Oxnard is impressed by the uses to which a long history of mankind might be put:61975 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
We shall soon be arguing that culture was practically instantaneous. 61986 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
physical type must have had a culture provides a sword that cuts both ways against time. 61995 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
The problem of Olduvai man and culture is part of a complex world wide geological history that I have outlined in Chaos and Creation.62159 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : OLDUVAI GORGE
is justified. Time, period boundaries, evolution, culture, 62423 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
to the contention that mentation and culture have developed by small increments over millions of years. 62779 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : QUANTAVOLUTION VS. EVOLUTION
behave humanly in both mind and culture. 62784 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : QUANTAVOLUTION VS. EVOLUTION
than very slow evolution, mentation and culture must originate at once. 62785 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : QUANTAVOLUTION VS. EVOLUTION
years, and that the flowering of culture occurred among Upper Paleolithic man and then again in neolithic times, 62806 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : QUANTAVOLUTION VS. EVOLUTION
humanization wait upon a slowly evolving culture, 62852 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : BRAIN SPECIALIZATION
is not that man is as culture does but that culture does as man is. 62856 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : BRAIN SPECIALIZATION
is as culture does but that culture does as man is. 62856 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : BRAIN SPECIALIZATION
the heart, for instance. And our culture tells us: ' 63598 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : PSYCHOSOMATIC GENETICS
chapters to come, diffusion of basic culture from a single point of origin, 63669 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
lapse, a third phase fashions the culture. 64119 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
fears, and mechanisms but assume variegated culture-forms depending upon the mix of history, 64136 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
who, in relation to a particular culture-mix are deviant (i. 64140 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
every case the peculiarity of the culture wherein they emerge. 64145 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE GESTALT OF CREATION AND ITS AFTERMATH
moorings, but, with the help of culture, 64348 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS
2 . The corridors of art and culture everywhere echo with the cries and gasps of remote recollections.64405 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
of schizophrenic displacement, catatonic cultures, sleeping culture pockets, 64514 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
of detail in man's innumerable culture traits is an expectable and understandable resultant of all the psychological and real events attending the creation.64748 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE
we are satisfied that a human culture, 64833 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : A PRIMORDIAL SCENARIO
if holistic behavior, then collective instant culture, 65094 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
instant culture, or at least a culture that develops as rapidly as the acting out of dream and thought sequences can be managed.65094 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
thought sequences can be managed. A culture -- a group mode of mentation and behavior -- arose promptly with homo schizo.65097 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
did he become culturally holistic. Human culture was global from its beginnings. 65099 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
culture was global from its beginnings. Culture was schizoid and remains so. 65099 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
chapter would lead far afield. PROTO-CULTURE The question is, 65123 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
psychology. How would this originate a culture? 65127 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
or two, the major structures of culture would be necessarily, 65130 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
fire tactics, time-factoring. The first culture was a set of wild moves in all directions guided by displaced instincts and an intense need to stabilize the psychic world. 65135 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
new program. Usually the search for culture begins with a search for tools, 65140 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
One can indeed conceive of a culture without artifacts. 65149 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
Who ports a club, supports a culture. 65160 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
half years back to the pebble culture of australopithecus and homo erectus. 65197 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
in the way of tools and culture. 65260 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
short order arrive at a complete culture-kit. 65263 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
proto-human had very soon a culture that was as schizoid as he was and held the essentials of most subsequent discoveries and institutions. 65324 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
the news about, and practice of, culture moved with him. 65326 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
communities existed, tied into the ecumenical culture, 65327 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
reached a comfortable Neolithic level of culture within a thousand years of humanization, 65377 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
been an across-the-board human culture with all basic practices, 65379 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
as to develop his mind and culture except very slowly and incrementally? 65383 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
analysis, tending to show that human culture has not been slow in developing, 65444 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
and unjust to the mentality and culture of 'primitive' peoples. 65465 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
as old as the oldest modern culture. 65475 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
as one can tell. The tribal culture holds a stronger illusion of special gods and heroes; 65476 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
unity is complete 6 . When a culture achieves some tolerable mastery of its individual and collective minds, 65483 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
humanness or human development of a culture. 65486 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
is difficult to 'put a tribal culture back together again' once it has been absorbed into civilization. 65501 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
absorbed into civilization. Sometimes a tribal culture will remember having been ruled distantly but not tightly or absorbingly. 65502 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
time since the beginning of human culture for all tribes to have experienced participation in a major civilization -- except for the ecumenical proto- culture to which all peoples must originally have belonged. 65509 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
civilization -- except for the ecumenical proto- culture to which all peoples must originally have belonged. 65511 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
using long-time reckoning, have human culture appearing, 65518 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
a hologenesis of both man and culture is logical and recent. 65528 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
To distinguish this age from proto-culture, 65573 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
us refer to it as neo- culture and think of it as merging the Upper Paleolithic, 65574 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
showing the great age of advanced culture in France, 65584 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
sites are called generally the Valdivia culture. 65637 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
They are definitely not of Japanese culture type, 65637 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
in embryo during the first ecumenical culture of homo schizo. 65641 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
divergent historical experiences, of a single culture type. 65660 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
doubt on any great antiquity for culture, 65661 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
spanned by two implements 18 . ECUMENICAL CULTURE There was in the beginning one human race, 65700 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
one human race, one language, one culture. 65702 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
a point for the beginning of culture? 65715 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
not absurd, to believe that any culture trait possessing particular recognizable form could be part of a primordial culture. 65739 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
could be part of a primordial culture. 65740 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
the beginnings of a division of culture traits as we conceive of them: 65769 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
is, the hologenesis of mentation and culture derives support from the increasingly early assignment of scientific works.65812 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
the number of isolated units of culture. 65831 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
in organization possess an essentially primordial culture. 65833 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
XVII). He placed the world ecumenical culture of the first civilization in the region of the Persian Gulf. 65897 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
independent origin of New World high culture. 65945 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
points to a very early heartland culture; 65951 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
summarize, an hypothesis of ecumenical world culture in the earliest times, 65960 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
grasped the meanings of the human culture, 65971 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
this manner an ecumenical or universal culture was quickly created and diffused among a variety of human racial types. 65975 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
in adapting to a changing world. Culture traits were imposed under the most stringent conditions. 65977 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
the lore from them. The Dogon culture shows clearly the fundamental law of cultural anthropology: 66004 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
cultural anthropology: All aspects of a culture are interconnected: 66005 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
31 . All the pieces of human culture resemble or hook on to each other. 66022 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
work themselves into the cousinship of culture traits. 66026 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
it should be. Why is a culture -- Womburi, 66035 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
the cosmos! But in an industrial culture, 66040 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
because, in the times following creation, culture burst forth spontaneously in all of its manifestations; 66044 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
came before its rationalization. And each culture is of course culture-bound, 66047 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
And each culture is of course culture-bound, 66047 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
the First Law of Anthropology. Every culture is integrated and coordinated within itself; 66060 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
comparative study of existing cultures. All culture arose hologenetically, 66061 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
nature sets limits on what a culture can do. 66063 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
there is no practice in any culture that lacks a homolog in every other culture.66067 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
lacks a homolog in every other culture. 66068 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
culture. The pattern and limits of culture began with and must follow the schizotypical nature of individual humans as they transact among themselves and with the world. 66070 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
syndrome of schizotypicality through any given culture and all cultures taken together.66072 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
flourished in many forms, is that culture is a thick varnish laid upon a brute to contain and rule him. 66078 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
controls via a group and its culture. 66083 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
wrong' for the people of a culture. 66229 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS -
social consensus on meanings from which culture sprouts. 66303 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SPEECH AND LANGUAGE
credit for works effectively upon the culture. 66422 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : GRAPHICS
by the theory of hologenesis of culture, 66480 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : PRIMORDIAL LANGUAGE
a coordinated poly-ego, so a culture, 66502 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : GROUP VS. INDIVIDUAL
and trivializes. The externalized, exo-tribal culture is actually abandoned and condemned,66673 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : PSYCHOLOGY OF ORGANIZATION
by or remain from a disappeared culture, 66693 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : MEGALITHS AND MEGALINES
instruments, either, of their times and culture. 66725 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : MEGALITHS AND MEGALINES
The bearers of the new human culture were not all members of the new humanity. 66753 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL
principle of the total cohesion of culture, 66770 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL
of culture, earlier described. Since the culture is holistic, 66770 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL
culture is holistic, so must the culture's leadership be holistic. 66771 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL
practices, like all other life and culture, 66944 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SEXUAL RAMIFICATIONS
holocausts of sinners of the same culture in church squares before the 'god of peace and forgiveness, ' 66971 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SEXUAL RAMIFICATIONS
by catastrophic genesis and experience. No culture has escaped the process from the beginning of human time. 66986 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SEXUAL RAMIFICATIONS
the scientist carries his shell of culture as he goes about his work. 67084 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : THE COMPULSION TO REPEAT CHAOS AND CREATION
was his external enemy, society and culture, 67126 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SUBLIMATION
Mexico, according to Brundage 34 . If culture appeared promptly upon humanization, 67378 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
then be more readily extirpated from culture. 67383 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
35 . Suffice to say that no culture, 67386 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
contact with unaffected hominid bands. The culture gap between the two species would be wider than their appearances might suggest.67399 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
Study of Violence in Ancient Greek Culture, 67511 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : Notes (Chapter 6: Schizoid Institutions)
to train the people of a culture how to avoid and handle anxieties. 67713 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HISTORISM
that historism is a branch of culture, 67718 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HISTORISM
is a branch of culture, a culture complex, 67718 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HISTORISM
politicians arise to break down the culture and introduce changes. 68038 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : ORDINARY MAD TIMES
in all major aspects of their culture the anniversaries of their birth from chaos and their reception of culture. 68096 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : ORDINARY MAD TIMES
from chaos and their reception of culture. 68097 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : ORDINARY MAD TIMES
the four olds, ' old thought, old culture, 68317 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
and to act pragmatically. Modern western culture is even dominated to some extent by atheistic thought. 68341 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
the true facts of evolution and culture theory. 68505 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
and external, and prompting an immediate culture. 68670 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : A RECENT SMALL SHARP CHANGE
The central nervous system, mentation, and culture are holistic -- all must be related to all.68675 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : A RECENT SMALL SHARP CHANGE
old, even though human behavior and culture are not demonstrable until the Upper Paleolithic age.68679 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : A RECENT SMALL SHARP CHANGE
and who then emerges with a culture, 68689 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : A RECENT SMALL SHARP CHANGE
is known of his early behavior, culture, 68724 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
in a hologenesis of mind and culture. 68755 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
speciated man was genetically predisposed to culture. 68759 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
man was genetically predisposed to culture. Culture was inevitably and promptly determined by the human quantavolution. 68759 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
by-point cultural evolution is impossible. Culture is species specific behavior of homo schizo. 68762 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
behavior of homo schizo. He finds culture as he finds a water hole or a mate. 68763 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
hole or a mate. And this culture is a monstrosity of nature, 68764 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
the species, and the basic human culture all point toward a creature who is perennially distressed from having to invent his own mind. 68774 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
establish the trappings and rituals of culture. 68785 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
often so deeply buried in his culture that he can go about 'happily' denying its presence. 68794 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
and at different periods of the culture. 68803 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
humans without instant heavy administrations of culture, 68826 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
was responsible for the invention of culture and the great changes of history. 68827 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
eyes upon certain visible differences of culture, 68846 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
of imperialism for the concept of culture during the 1920's, 69115 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - - FOREWORD -
experiences into the mainstream of his culture; 69247 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
the fact that our chromosomes and culture manage to fashion hundreds of differences between animals and humans. 69286 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
This transferability, universality, and relativity of culture, 69447 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
to be abnormal behavior in one culture will be found to have a normal place in some other culture. 69449 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
a normal place in some other culture. 69450 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
norm; in a doubting and liberal culture, 69451 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
disappears into the tolerant maw of culture. 69455 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
encrusted with the rest of their culture and too enmeshed in their failures or careers to make a computer date via the Human Relations Area Files with a culture normally harboring the abnormality. 69466 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
Human Relations Area Files with a culture normally harboring the abnormality. 69467 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
sets the stage. A family, a culture, 69950 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE HUMAN DISEASE
internal with external turbulence, to provide culture-shock therapy. 70299 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THERAPIES
get the patient back into the culture camp. 70423 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THERAPIES
prone to humanness! For just as culture can effect, 70481 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : GENETICS: ARE THERE HOMINIDS AMONG US?
and bow down before the schizoid culture that makes him human! 70487 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : GENETICS: ARE THERE HOMINIDS AMONG US?
seek to go beyond society and culture as the determinants. 70912 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
fear. Many mothers of modern western culture earnestly try to preserve their children from the sense of fear. 71053 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : EXISTENTIAL FEAR
delay as automatized, unconscious, or deliberate. Culture, 71302 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
so produce the astonishing phenomenon of culture. 71357 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : POLY-EGO VERSUS INSTINCT
budget method of supporting arts and culture, 71681 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK -
Eovolution of Man's Capacity for Culture, 72603 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : Notes (Chapter 3: Brainwork)
of anthropology that in a "pure" culture, 72851 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : DISPLACEMENT
practices and artifacts are interrelated. Human culture is one grand intermeshing of displacements.72852 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : DISPLACEMENT
they can only come when a culture's people succeed in frightening themselves into observances of certain obsessions. 73004 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : TIME AND REMEMBERING
in the plant and animal kingdoms. Culture institutes furious rites to make people remember something that they are forbidden to remember in all of its detail. 73060 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : TIME AND REMEMBERING
training is an obsession that is culture-bound, 73207 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : OBSESSIONS, COMPULSIONS, HABITS
thereof is uncertain: and consequently no culture of the earth; 73289 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
civilized cultures, such as Alsatian peasant culture, 73703 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : AVERSION AND PARANOIA
the language and procedures of existing culture, 73720 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : AVERSION AND PARANOIA
must be universal in man and culture. 73740 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : AMBIVALENCE
incest prohibition is the only universal culture trait, 73747 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : AMBIVALENCE
Civilization. Even these trenchant criticisms for culture now seem superficial. 73917 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
induce from pre-history, a human culture that sought to provide pleasure except as it might be incidental to relief and escape. 73919 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
Homo Schizo 1, that language, like culture as a whole, 74551 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : THE STRUCTURE OF SPEAKING
language are clearer in an oral culture. 74597 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : VOX PUBLICA
As is true of language and culture so with language and politics: 74808 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : INNER LANGUAGE
better to the integration of Hopi culture in all its phases." 74872 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
point of a multilingual awareness... Western culture has made, 74930 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
naturally emergent speech, upon what a culture does to it, 74944 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
upon what it does to the culture, 74945 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
heads are pressed together by a culture and by the exercise of the structures dealt with in this chapter, 74968 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
Chapter 6: Symbols and Speech) 1. "Culture and Continuity," 74998 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : Notes (Chapter 6: Symbols and Speech)
Culture and Continuity," 9 Tech. and Culture (April, 74998 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : Notes (Chapter 6: Symbols and Speech)
flood of 1973; it permeates every culture's ideology. 75149 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE MUDDLE OF MENTATION
as the omnipresent holistic character of culture and religion. 75334 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SECRET WORDS AND PANRELATIONISM
forward. The faster a person or culture moves, 75758 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : TIME AND SPACE
its history are changed. But a culture denies that it can change, 75759 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : TIME AND SPACE
homo schizo were destroying the total culture of Europe which he was discussing. 76090 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
the fantastic humanities. Now the same culture that creates the absolute reality-fantasy division also creates an absolute sanity-madness division.76118 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
be barred from consecrated soil. The culture, 76157 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE ORIGINS OF GOOD AND EVIL
the love song of Demodocus. Greek culture was badly damaged by natural disasters of the eight and seventh centuries before this era, 76646 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
primitive people gradually achieving a higher culture. 76680 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
the symbolizer of a unified Greek culture. 76719 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
of the European mind and its culture. 76737 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - INTRODUCTION -
mentioned above, though relative to the culture of the indigenous Australians. 78007 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 5: HOLY DREAMTIME : THE PIOUS DRAMATIST
of the Iliad, and of the culture and the skies being both of the preceding two generations.78243 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 6: THE RAPE OF HELEN : THE INDESTRUCTIBLE LADY HELEN
disaster. Pylos was of Mycenaean Greek culture: 78581 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE SAGE WHO BRIDGED THE DARK AGES
invent a long period of Hellenic culture in which "little happened," 78699 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE SAGE WHO BRIDGED THE DARK AGES
from a "primitive" to a "civilized" culture. 78735 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
and destructiveness of others and of culture increase as terror and guilt interact on a complex and massive scale. 78737 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
God who destroyed their kin and culture. 78925 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
is influence by the archaic Mediterranean culture. 78963 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
emerges therefore is a people and culture exploding in space and time, 79020 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
The incongruences and inconsistencies of material culture, 79054 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
sang about them and their destroyed culture. 79078 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
of abrupt takeover of a destroyed culture by marginal survivors who cast aside, 79082 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
from every source their new synthetic culture. 79084 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
of 400 to 500 years. Their culture is believed to be a composite of all this time, 79090 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
is concentrated in a true primitive culture that made savage contact with the civilized world in 1300 B. 79091 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
theory of causation that has a culture being gradually born. 79101 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
of the chariot from a superior culture with whom they were now coming into contact. 79132 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
it to have followed the Mycenaean culture over the centuries. 79187 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE
in the usage of a removed culture. 80052 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : HOW TO NAME A PLANET?
surely represented a pre-Hellenic, matriarchal culture, 80750 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : THE EPITHETS OF VENUS
but the recently explored Saharan "Libyan" culture. 80756 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : THE EPITHETS OF VENUS
over the powerful proto-mediterranean religious culture. 80790 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : THE EPITHETS OF VENUS
common to those participating in the culture of that group." 81281 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : APPENDIX TO CHAPTER TEN LOGIC OF IDENTIFYING RELATIONS SUCH AS "HEPHAESTUS IS ATHENA"
as a group of the Olympian Culture. 81333 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : APPENDIX TO CHAPTER TEN LOGIC OF IDENTIFYING RELATIONS SUCH AS "HEPHAESTUS IS ATHENA"
every aspect of human feeling, thought, culture and creativity should be affected is to be expected. 82871 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 13: HOW THE GODS FLY : ELECTRO-MECHANICS OF THE GODS
with the total state of his culture, 82995 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : METER AND METAPHOR
so tightly linked with the Mycenaean culture that they could not all have been carried orally over 500 or 400 devastated, 83109 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : HOMER: EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
before and still obtruded in the culture of the Homeric people. 83112 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : HOMER: EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
the most vendable story in Greek culture - "Achilles and The Siege of Troy." 83164 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : HOMER: EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
by and based upon a ritualized culture fascinated by repetitions and order. 83343 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 14: THE USES OF LANGUAGE : THE THROES OF ORIGINAL PLOT
its details, are characteristic of the culture. 83845 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : THE RULES OF MEMORY
Western man's" partially Greek-born culture, 83848 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : THE RULES OF MEMORY
rescued from the ruins of Mycenaean culture. 84058 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : AMNESIAC PHILOSOPHERS
is untranslatable without knowledge of its culture, 84530 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : THE KERNELS OF HISTORY
does not "bridle" in a horseless culture, 84538 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : THE KERNELS OF HISTORY
hero or god in a given culture. 84540 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : THE KERNELS OF HISTORY
and also Genesis. Depending upon the culture, 84854 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : A CLAIM OF SUCCESS
of Israel into the larger surrounding culture. 86781 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES
of just this detail of a culture, 87367 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : THE HORROR OF RED
common expression, at least in Germanic culture, 90831 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : CIRCUMCISION AND SPEECH PROBLEMS
of post-mosaic times, when the culture of the leaders would have slumped for several centuries.91170 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : SCIENTIST AND INVENTOR
esteem and encouraged to develop. From culture to culture, 91241 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : TALKING WITH GODS
encouraged to develop. From culture to culture, 91241 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : TALKING WITH GODS
the relatively devout and unidimensional shepherding culture - a god who discussed issues with him and who alternately browbeat him,91292 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : TALKING WITH GODS
Many others were assimilated to Egyptian culture. 92024 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS -
permitted the explosive expansion of American culture in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries within a unified and great domain.92418 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : BLAME THE PEOPLE
would have to represent some other culture's image and therefore violate the "pariah" tendencies of the Jews.93860 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE NAME OF YAHWEH
are freed in utero or in culture from the possibility of lending themselves, 94185 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : SIN VS SCIENCE
adaptable from one restricted area and culture, 94868 GODS FIRE: - - - CONCLUSION -
of individuality and broad limits of culture, 95448 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
been religiously affected. No bit of culture escapes religious relevance or effects. 95941 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION - - - FOREWORD -
penetrates the fullness of history and culture licenses us to draw upon any and all human settings for illustration and proof. 95944 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION - - - FOREWORD -
inevitable in the primeval mind, as culture, 96246 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
of a hologenesis of homo sapiens, culture, 96247 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
incidental to establishing the hologenesis of culture, 96321 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
sky-gods will persist in a culture. 96435 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
what foreign cultures call a certain culture's gods; 97134 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
to marry the gods of one culture to those of another. 97135 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
restrain the process, in any given culture the number of supernatural beings is apparently magnified by the telling of tales from foreign and destroyed cultures; 97203 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
upon the true beings of the culture until, 97207 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
occurs in part because the original culture to which a myth and legend belonged no longer exists to explain to us the difference between the two; 97687 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND SCRIPTURE -
and the Muslim followed suit. No culture has been free of cannibalism in its history, 97809 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
New Year is ignored by no culture, 97954 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
is virtue, except man-bound-in-culture? 98322 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
the organization of spirits-shaman-tribal culture to the organization of the Holy-Trinity-priesthood-Roman Catholic world religion,98377 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
from the peculiar schizotypicality of his culture, 98408 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
devils or spirits going from one culture to another. 98425 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
are pulled together in a given culture by their original proximity during a cycle such as a solar year and by their psychological resemblance. 98729 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 8: INDISPENSABLE GODS -
events of the history of his culture. 98981 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
the political climate of his larger culture respecting his religion, 98994 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
strangers in and outside of his culture. 98995 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
also conflictful features of his larger culture, 99036 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
to and gaining from the larger culture, 99052 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
am asking consideration of relatively changeless culture, 99080 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
everything in the world and in culture is tied to everything else, 99303 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
attitudes are embedded deep in the culture; 99852 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
study is obviously crucial in human culture and welfare, 100327 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
a history, a sociology, a sub-culture, 100415 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
as well as in his hovel; culture marches along all paths and all paths are psychically connected, 100455 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
and throughout the medium of his culture is of one piece, 100523 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
needs. The overall problem of a culture is, 100579 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
substantially the history of religion and culture. 101534 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: CONCLUSION - THE DIVINE AND HUMAN -
Greek, not Cypriote, copper. (Nature Science). Culture shifts, 102029 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
or provide a substitute for its culture. 102563 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : THE "BURNT CITY" OF TROY
Thera-Santorini explosion of late Minoan culture occurred hundreds of miles away in the South Aegean Sea, 102591 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : THE "BURNT CITY" OF TROY
succeed Troy IIg; the Troy III culture was closely related 34 . 102750 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
work. His excavation of the Minoan culture of Thera-Santorini, 102771 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
human activity, beginning with the material culture. 103425 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
of transition. As in Greece the culture reverts to survivorship; 103462 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
of Thira upon Minoan civilization. Minoan culture, 103919 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
unknown sites to plot. Regions of culture disappear, 103968 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
disasters of meandering rivers (but no culture has been destroyed). 103998 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
of the Saharan region and its culture. 104005 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
Lipari, for instance, a totally new culture (the Ausonian) entered upon the scene. 104021 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
related, if not descended from, the culture of a sunken central region of the Tyrrhenian Sea. 104046 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
they actually reveal at the critical culture points. 104401 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY : CORRELATING NATURAL DISASTERS
points to an extraordinary destruction in culture and nature. 104479 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
Anthroposphere or cultural sphere, says: "Every culture complex in the world changed radically in mid-second-millennium." 104691 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
considered typical prima facie of its culture. 104851 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 8: THE OBLITERATION OF HUMAN SIGNS -
its hypothetical 12,000 year old culture. 104884 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 8: THE OBLITERATION OF HUMAN SIGNS -
destroy beyond rediscovery the hypothetical British culture of 12, 104887 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 8: THE OBLITERATION OF HUMAN SIGNS -
for the great leap from pre-culture to culture. 105028 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS -
great leap from pre-culture to culture. 105028 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS -
been paraphernalia typical of a hypothetical culture that travels through space. 105040 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS -
advance the question of whether living culture inherited advanced techniques. 105044 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS -
end of the Upper Paleolithic cave culture of the Dordogne, 105468 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
a one-meter level of Mousterian culture stuffed with bones of different species, 106037 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
on top of the Upper Magdalenian culture, 106048 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
to present, a sample of each culture should have a modal group that is logically positioned to show the N-S axis, 106301 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
in Africa; the astonishing slowness of culture change ( million years of the same hand- stone); 106471 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE -
has long centered upon the "people culture" of Leakey's first-found hominids, 106500 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE -
huge earthquakes that ended the Mycenean culture. 106745 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 14: ATHENS QUAKES -
It is built up in a culture, 108038 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : DETAILED EXPOSITION OF THE PROJECT
1970). 17. Linda Fleming. The Sub-Culture of Science Fiction (Chapel Hill, 108324 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PERTINENT WORKS
nineteenth century. Only so advanced a culture could produce and systematically employ such a telescope. 108665 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 21: JUPITER'S BANDS AND SATURN'S RINGS -
exceeds the general level of its culture. 108668 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 21: JUPITER'S BANDS AND SATURN'S RINGS -
our complex, contradictory, pluralistic, and confusing culture. 109190 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : I. QUANTAVOLUTION AND CREATION IN ARKANSAS
in the schizoid style of our culture. 109193 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : I. QUANTAVOLUTION AND CREATION IN ARKANSAS
from primates, gradualism in evolution of culture, 109348 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
in evolution of culture, religion wholly culture dependent, 109349 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
religion wholly culture dependent, etc. B. Culture is religion-dependent, 109351 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
specialized education and training in the culture, 109485 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
is a psychological product of his culture and behaves as such. 109596 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
the unknowns share an enormous common culture) that they will experience the equation, 109667 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : ALL SCIENCE IS SOCIAL SCIENCE
with roots like him in Slavic culture, 110197 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY 1895-1979 1
well-debated older theories of human culture. 110616 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : IV
of universal catastrophes occurred, a universal culture existed. 110623 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : IV
destroyed most of this grand ecumenical culture, 110624 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : IV
their habitat. Or whether oceanic bio-culture might not be accompanied by developments in thermal control, 110736 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : VI
adjuncts of human nature, behavior, and culture in general. 111034 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
Great fears; the amnesia of holocausts; culture-creation through obsessive-compulsive behavior.111130 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
volumes): The Origins of Man and Culture and Human Nature and Behavior; 111392 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
climate, the solar system, the biosphere, culture, 111454 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM -
ancient history, and the origins of culture and human nature. 111465 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM -
of primeval experiences upon human nature, culture and modern man: 111540 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM : CURRICULUM
study of animals, man, myth, and culture, 112231 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
in and out of the individual culture. 121523 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - - INTRODUCTION -
a neolithic revolution of mind and culture flourishes. 126918 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY -
myriad implications and you have a culture. 126927 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY -
its details, are characteristics of the culture. 127487 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE RULES OF MEMORY
characteristic of our partially Greek- born culture, 127495 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE RULES OF MEMORY
some therapy that could rid a culture of its great fear and at the same time maintain a distinction between "good" and "bad"? 127631 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE DIFFICULTY OF D-FEAR THERAPY
would also receive a more barren culture. 127668 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE DIFFICULTY OF D-FEAR THERAPY
most imperative. Through our language and culture the Judaeo- Christian religions keep a hold on us, 128766 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
tone, since even in our present culture it is impossible to escape exposure to it in the course of one's upbringing. 128931 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
of northeast Arizona also trace their culture back to the great Mesoamerican complex of civilizations, 129059 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
rite. Human sacrifice existed in Mesoamerican culture before, 129094 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
be termed a barbarization. The Aztec culture itself was in such tension as it continued to witness these spectacles of mass sacrifice that when the Spaniards arrived it seemed to be experiencing a desertion by its own gods. 129105 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
material only recently available to his culture, 130741 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
a certain group or time or culture or race, 131646 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
end with the destruction of human culture and civilization. 132409 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
to have all of man's culture and experience available to our study and being free enough of the weight of traditional cultures to seek out a larger identity - the first members of a civilized society since the early Neolithic to wish to look clearly into the eyes of the wild and see our self-hood, 132594 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
great meaning for the history of culture. 137529 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 4: CUNEIFORM ASTRONOMICAL RECORDS AND CELESTIAL INSTABILITY - - -
also the conclusion that advanced human culture would be found in the today uninhabited area 'on the Kolyma or Lena rivers flowing into the Arctic Ocean' in northeastern Siberia (W. 140502 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 7: ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF CORRECT PROGNOSIS - - -