MAMMONTHS.................2 (0.000%)
Dispute The Dissolution of Time Of Mammonths and Amber Schaeffer and Velikovsky CHAPTER FOUR: 21252 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
a poor one at that. OF MAMMONTHS AND AMBER If, 23709 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : OF MAMMONTHS AND AMBER
 
 MAMMOTH...................22 (0.003%)
Thompson) Kennett, J. P. Kentucky Kentucky, Mammoth Cave Kenya Kepler Kern River boulders and cobblestones kerykeion Kesil Kessler Loch Kester kettle Khima Kicking Horse Pass Kilamanjaro Kilauea, 3632 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
V. R. Malta Malthus, David mammal mammoth Mammoth cave, 3916 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
R. Malta Malthus, David mammal mammoth Mammoth cave, 3917 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
and a few assistants reduced the mammoth State Department and other agencies of the Federal Government to terrorized submission around the same time.7374 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
incident; the congested lungs of one mammoth implies this. 22295 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : FIRE AND GASES
its the dessication's onset - mastodon, mammoth horse, 25972 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : CLIMATE CHANGES AND TIME
become the case of the "deathless" mammoth, 37155 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
seeking to unfreeze and clone a mammoth cell with an existing elephant to give birth to a live mammoth. 37156 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
to give birth to a live mammoth. 37157 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
rooted tree buried with it. The mammoth and almost all other large animals of the same period were extincted between 5,37163 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
we have their drawings of the mammoth. 37168 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
of the Siberian islands formed of mammoth bones). 42115 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
1975 a radiocarbon dating of a mammoth find placed it at only 400 B. 46716 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
hills have been found composed of mammoth and large mammal bones, 46768 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
full stomachs, pterosaurs swallowing food, a mammoth with buttercups in his teeth, 46797 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
the Ukraine, Soviet scholars reported finding mammoth bones converted into skull drums, 48131 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
Below the muck have been found mammoth bones, 49539 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
over the significance of the multitudinous mammoth (and antelope, 50046 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
carbondating has been ignored. If frozen mammoth finds are dated from 44, 50048 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
worldwide atmospheric revolution, as with the mammoth. 63480 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
for a human tool made of mammoth bone. 64953 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : QUANTAVOLUTION AND HOLOGENESIS
datable fossil events, but there are mammoth destructions datable to the time, 104638 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
 
 MAMMOTHS..................23 (0.003%)
found alongside the bones of extinct mammoths. 21498 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : THE UNIFORMITIARIAN RESISTANCE
The famous case of the frozen mammoths is related to sudden atmospheric change. 22289 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : FIRE AND GASES
cold storage 15 . So indeed the mammoths have been preserved up to this time. 22292 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : FIRE AND GASES
B. P. on three different frozen mammoths; 23725 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : OF MAMMONTHS AND AMBER
have rotted 76 . But then the mammoths would have suffered three catastrophic time-points of sudden death and sudden preservation, 23727 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : OF MAMMONTHS AND AMBER
were horses, 510 bison, and 205 mammoths. 26104 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : SIGNS OF URANIAN CULTURE
9" long with small elephants and mammoths around it 46 . 26181 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : HAND, ROD AND SNAKE
1976), "The Problem of the Frozen Mammoths," 31311 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
by Americans and Russians. Rodents and mammoths froze quickly while eating warm-weather plants. 33447 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
have happened to some of the mammoths and other large-animals that were exterminated a few thousand years ago: 33887 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
throughout the northern regions of the mammoths and other large mammals occurred in conjunction with a tilt of the Earth's axis in the presence of the exoterrestrial entity causing the tilt. 34223 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 4 Magnetism and Axial Tilts -
to the famous case of the mammoths, 37152 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
a live mammoth. Were the original mammoths gassed into extinction? 37158 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
of the Bright Skies", Jupiter. The mammoths, 37198 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
Ellenberger, et al., "Catastrophism and the Mammoths," 37574 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods : Notes (Chapter Nine: Gases, Poisons, and Food)
bedmates are discovered: ostriches and foxes; mammoths and lions; 40483 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
torn and mashed mammalian remains (mastodons, mammoths, 46709 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
complete state: sloths in arid caves, mammoths packed in ice, 46758 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
clam bed or a dinosaur among mammoths -is too small. 47090 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
of Ruffignac contain two groups of mammoths marching towards each other. 106058 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
disciplined composition. Elsewhere a parade of mammoths is overdrawn by serpentine lines. 106060 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
packed full of unfossilized bones of mammoths, 135204 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
in the region where herds of mammoths roamed. 140504 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 7: ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF CORRECT PROGNOSIS - - -
 
 MAN.......................1322 (0.165%)
are immeasurably greater than any in man or Earth and that are especially electrical. 219 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 1: Introduction to the series - - -
Q theories of the birth of man are possible. 1015 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
Cadomin conglomerates caduceus Cajon Pass Calaveras man calcareous ooze calcinology calcite caldera Caledonian orogeny calendar Calgary silt California California, 2049 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
Charriere, -. -. chauvanism Chela, serra de Chellean man chemical bond chemical bonding chemical compound chemical element chemical marker, 2162 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
crime, criminality crinoid crisis Cro-Magnon man crocodile Croll, 2377 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
of Jaspers, Karl Jastrow, Robert Java man Java trench Java, 3510 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
David mammal mammoth Mammoth cave, Kentucky Man (early in America) Manavgat River Mandelkehr, 3918 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
primitive Naxos, Greece Nazis, Nazism Neanderthal man Near East Nebo Nebraska Nebraska Sand Hills Nebuchadnezzar nebula nebular cosmogony Nectanebo nectar Needham, -.4249 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
Basin, Yukon Old Faithful geyser Old Man of Hoy Old One of the Sea" old red sandstone Old Testament Olgas, 4438 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
of life original horizontality" concept original man Ormuzd Ornstein orogeny Orontius Fineus Orphic hymns Orphic mysteries orthogenesis oscillator Osiris Osmaniye osmium Othus Otto, 4481 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
of fire Pacific rise Pacifica Padagonian man paean pagan Page, 4525 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
pediment peer review Peirce, Charles Peking man Pelasgians Pelean volcano Peleg Peloponnesian Penninsula Peltier, 4591 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
of fire" Pillars of Hercules Piltdown man Piltdown, 4693 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
W. B. F. S Sabbat Sacral man sacrament sacred sacrifice sacrifice ritual saga Sagan, 5117 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
Marysville, CA Swaddle, T. W. Swanscombe Man swastika Sweden Swift-Tuttle, 5529 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
latter less; for, after all, one man died and the other grew old, 6356 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 1: ROYAL INCEST -
not socially pretentious, nor a prideful man, 6387 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 1: ROYAL INCEST -
he had never heard of a man about whom a million or more Americans could have delivered him a rancorous account. 6389 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 1: ROYAL INCEST -
something like this: There is a man in Princeton with good material on the scientific establishment...6400 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 1: ROYAL INCEST -
to read it so promptly? A man who attends to a wife, 6435 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 1: ROYAL INCEST -
something done, go to a busy man." 6441 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 1: ROYAL INCEST -
establishments of academia had offended a man who was a fighter and had his evidence in hand. 6867 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 2: THE PRODIGAL ARCHIVE -
was Don Price, an epiphenomenal career man of the public service, 7224 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
but then "I am not the man for you. 7547 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
of St. Francis, Ginsberg is an man of surpassing intelligence, 7617 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
early friend) and a pretty young man who looks like Edgar Allen Poe and publishes Fuck you: 7625 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
and astronomy. He is a large man, 7721 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
Velikovsky. I could see that a man coming out of a dozen years of every day in the stacks all day long and with his whole life work and magnificent set of theories at stake, 7798 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
political-social game-playing. When a man writes much, 7914 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
Unsettling of Heaven and Birth of Man," 8034 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
belong here? Did the languages of man disperse in shocked amnesiac behavior? 8060 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
of Chicago with an idea that man, 8125 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 3: CHEERS AND HISSES -
phenomena. Well, V. had thought, a man so broad in his interests and tastes would welcome a helping hand to apply legends to astronomy. 8220 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
for success. The concatenation of any man's successes was but a motley cluster of medals on the breast of the generalissimo of a banana republic. 8250 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
with him, "will be the only man who can play Moses when they make a movie of his book." 8305 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
intensely private psychic world of a man whose biological father was a strong and beloved figure, 8309 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
unsung heroes would have been the man whose name I forget (naturally), 8485 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
saved by the Pope and another man burned in his place. 8491 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
of matter, and the relativity of man's position in the universe. 8511 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
He died suddenly, as an old man will. 8766 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
of the sixth century." The same man with the centuries so wrong? 8773 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
in the transition from hominid to man... 8892 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
his primary host, informant, and contact man, 8944 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
a slender scintillating young and blonde man who seemed to be everywhere and into everything in London, 8944 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
in this book. Rix was a man who Velikovsky would have liked to write Mankind in Amnesia in his place. 9443 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
his place. He was a medical man, 9444 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
you. He was a very lonely man and every encouragement was a help to him. 9454 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
destruction and the destruction of others, man-made holocausts. 9775 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
catastrophic past is the source of man's aggression... 9805 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
City teacher; a jail inmate; a man from Topeka, 9919 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 6: HOLOCAUST AND AMNESIA -
the company was "less than a man," 10151 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
find indications of homosexuality in a man and lesbianism in a women, 10175 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
musicologist said Deg, and a fine man. 10239 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
turning his wife over to another man. 10240 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
once, although a war hero, a man of some fame then ( and more to come), 10328 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 7: FROM VENUS WITH LOVE -
and began with the conviction that man was essentially non-rational. 10458 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
phrasing of Lasswell's law: political man displaces private motives onto public objects and rationalizes them in terms of the public advantage. 10459 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
anything extraordinary about Lasswell's political man except in the intensity of his involvement with power. 10465 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
seventies to ponder the nature of man, 10468 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
an effective response. In this sense, man seemingly farthest removed from the animal kingdom, 10481 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
whether uniformitarian or disastrous, so too man's efforts at reconstructing and reinforcing his less genetic, 10487 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
different creature to begin with. Primordial man was now catastrophized in two senses, 10507 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
distinguished' academician knows much about his man's surface and nothing about his dynamics, 10612 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
simply because they come from scientists. Man's spotty history is given a coherence by rhetoric, 10618 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
addressed in the final work: Could man have been catastrophized other than by natural disaster and could a catastrophe strike into the hominids en masse. 10664 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
Freedman wrote: ... The notion of contemporary man as a schizotypicalis is one which I find easy to accept, 10667 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
dilemmas of knowing --if not understanding -- man, 10669 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
for generations of homo erectus, Acheulean man, 10696 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
it, biological (anatomical and cultural ones). Man is by nature an experimenter, 10711 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
created by the adequate faculties of man -- then and now -- to explaining things rationally. 10747 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
Given so heretical an idea of man's origins and nature, 10785 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
probably he escaped being some great man's Boswell or Harry Hopkins because of his persisting ambivalence or simple bivalence; 10797 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
documents of great antiquity." Well, one man's 'inspiration' is another man's delusion.10878 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
one man's 'inspiration' is another man's delusion. 10879 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
to the history of religion and man. 10961 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
first key he discovered by pursuing man's interest in things sacred back as far as possible, 10962 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
You cannot give up hope for man or woman, 11081 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
the same --what makes them "different"? Man's size? -- 11263 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
explaining natural history is that each man can barely cope with possible effects of his one favorable type of motion and change.11705 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
highly reputed as the "Grand Old man" of the School of Athens. 11965 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
nothing unusual had occurred beyond the man-caused or accidental burning and earthquakes, 12060 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
1) A natural catastrophe, 2) A man-made one. 12233 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
but in reading The Appearance of Man, 12742 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
Then Tagliacozzo went on a one-man crusade to resurrect the figure of Vico and Deg became the recipient of a continuous flow of material, 12768 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
Arizona, partly to be "his own man," 12889 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
orbits within memory of myth-making man and even historical mankind. 13151 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
upon the scene, a stocky dark man, 13298 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 10: ABC'S OF ASTROPHYSICS -
causes rather than the agency of man remains scanty." ( 13600 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
reliability. His major teacher was a man he had not met, 13697 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
in the period between hominid and man in the face of evidence that the hominids were human-like, 13742 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
confident that he was his own man, 13983 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
say, meaning the joke about the man who loved sweet "Turkish Delight" and would turn the conversation to it at the slightest cue.14014 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
is fundamental to all theoretical change: man is dependent for what he sees on what he has been taught to perceive, 14246 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
Board of Directors. I called each man to invite them aboard and received their prompt acceptances.14265 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
tender, fierce, loving care that every man's respectable notions deserve. 14277 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
who is one of the busiest man alive with his Space Board, 14332 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
to be the foundation for a man's love and devotion, 14378 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
and to let us place a man in his house to built up a list of friends with whom we might communicate. 14558 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
in cordial spirits. What a difficult man but what an enormous grasp of everything, 14561 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
of the Board, almost to a man, 14597 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
Residence Hall Club. He spared the man no detail, 14916 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
attended the cheerful but addlepated great man until he died. 15324 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
that it was unscientific, that no man could expect his work to stand free of error indefinitely, 15371 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
he prefers to remain a Great Man of Mysterious Origins. 15391 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 12: THE THIRD WORLD OF SCIENCE -
would not welcome a truly original man with constructive ideas. 16265 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
would not welcome a truly original man with constructive ideas." 16340 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
loner and martyr. If the one man who knew the Venus historical record best, 16433 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 13: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK -
mastermind, who says to them, "Now man has learned to be specific and special in his therapies, 16925 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 14: THE FOIBLES OF HERETICS -
achievement of equal population districts (" one man -- one vote"), 16960 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 14: THE FOIBLES OF HERETICS -
a couple of books and a man. 17371 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 14: THE FOIBLES OF HERETICS -
any further copy... Permission on "Darwinian man" is withdrawn (or at least suspended).17456 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 14: THE FOIBLES OF HERETICS -
doing far more service to the man's genius by admitting the weak parts of his work and sorting the wheat from the chaff. 17465 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 4: - Chapter 14: THE FOIBLES OF HERETICS -
both of whom bet on the man, 17998 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
like many another, was a nice man. 18052 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
vagus nerve syndrome that make a man "draw a long, 18088 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
the progression of history; it defeats man's greatest works in an instant. 18251 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
in the historical process. It depresses man's will and capacity to build an ultimate utopia. 18253 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
books, especially in Moon, Myths, and Man (1936). 19141 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
the earth in the time of man. 19148 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
forget that. He was a sad man when the Apollo Moon program was cut back. 19217 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
cheese, boasting of stalking and snaring man's mind as the very quarry was serving the hunter's breakfast. 19520 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
what Montaigne, the first civilized modern man, 19589 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 16: PRECURSORS OF QUANTAVOLUTION -
believe that the truth would free man and wished a social policy that would acknowledge ancient traumas of catastrophe so as psychologically to free him in his behavior today. 20801 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
of progress as the future of man e) Encourage the faith in stability that promoted the exquisite and productive division of labor in all areas (no rushing to the caves or wombs of overall theology needed) f) Simplify religion and produce deism, 20900 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
saw I was anxious. Buck up, man, 21091 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - - EPILOGUE -
The Ice Dumps The Creation of Man Religious Beginnings Paleolithic Religion Birth of 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, 21275 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
start that, whether a mountain or man, 21574 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : THE UNIFORMITIARIAN RESISTANCE
saltatory changes of the earth and man has been in the skies, 21633 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - INTRODUCTION : QUANTAVOLUTION BY CATASTROPHE
much as he could to restore man to his happier pursuits 1 . 22032 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE -
affect the human mind. Outside of man, 22425 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : THE BATTLE OVER TIME
Japanese city was the fate of man and nature, 22611 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : REVOLUTIONARY INTEGRATION OF THE COSMOS
that is unknown today. But modern man must look with sinking heart upon his earliest experience because the forces of nature then expressed themselves in exponentially greater measure than they do today and seemed to have as their target, 22616 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : REVOLUTIONARY INTEGRATION OF THE COSMOS
very existence as the deluded "wise man," 22622 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : REVOLUTIONARY INTEGRATION OF THE COSMOS
in-between. The penchant of early man and mammals for living near ice-fields is understandable only because the Earth beyond the ice was not cold (since the ice might come from above). 23368 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : MAGNETISM
of the world, the place where man likes to think of himself existing... 23447 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CYCLES AND ANNIVERSARIES
knowing that all resulted in placing man at the center". 23449 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CYCLES AND ANNIVERSARIES
great god, he was king of man and destroyer of man, 23470 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CYCLES AND ANNIVERSARIES
king of man and destroyer of man, 23470 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CYCLES AND ANNIVERSARIES
high skills are attributed to archaic man by two renowned scholars of ancient science and legend.23986 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : Notes (Chapter Three: Collapsing Tests of Time)
has occurred within the memory of man. 24236 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : THE NUMBER OF CATASTROPHES
of the non-instinctual primate called man is the sky-struck calendarizing that seems to have preoccupied humans from the moment of their creation as such. 24290 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 04: A CATASTROPHIC CALENDAR : WHY 14,000 YEARS?
the boreal region, the north; there man saw first super-Uranus, 24732 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : PLANETARY BEHAVIOR
heavens and settled the fate of man in relation to the heavens, 24975 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : EARLY ASTRONOMICAL IDEAS
clearing heavens and their effects upon man. 25195 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : Notes (Chapter Five: Solaria Binaria)
thousand years ago. THE CREATION OF MAN (see Figure 11 and accompanying chart) Amidst the developing chaos, 25414 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
reduced in numbers. The evolution of man, 25424 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
from the perspective of self-aware man, 25433 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
theology of creation everywhere holds that man was created suddenly, 25568 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
existence. Quantavolution would also maintain that man was created suddenly, 25569 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
art provides abundant evidence of primitive man's concern both with his own kind and with the animals which constituted his main source of food, 25619 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : PALEOLITHIC RELIGION
En, reminds us of the word man and sky. 25737 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : EJACULATIVE LANGUAGE
sky. Actually Ur-en signifies Celestial-man: 25737 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : EJACULATIVE LANGUAGE
commented that "the first problem of man was to organize the space around him." 25757 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : EJACULATIVE LANGUAGE
was stamped upon the mind of man, 25814 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : EJACULATIVE LANGUAGE
The Exponential Principle was applied to man. 25815 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : EJACULATIVE LANGUAGE
has edited numerous essays dealing with Man Across the Sea, 25933 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
human bone remnants of the Peking man - these are representations of larger clusters of culture traits.26099 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : SIGNS OF URANIAN CULTURE
4); and cf. Corliss, Compiler, Ancient Man (1978) 661-8. 26268 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : Notes (Chapter Six: The Uranians)
Ancient Man (1978) 661-8. 26. "Man's Arrival...." ( 26270 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : Notes (Chapter Six: The Uranians)
CHAOS AND THE MOON The Fish-Man, 27104 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LEGENDARY CHAOS AND THE MOON
interpreted psychologically as a projection of man, 27146 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LEGENDARY CHAOS AND THE MOON
is created. By Noah's time man was fully intelligent and had a history. 27167 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LEGENDARY CHAOS AND THE MOON
and longitude can be calculated. Earliest man could have commonsense means, 27340 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : THE NEAR EAST
Sometimes Set is depicted as a man with the head of this strange quadruped." 28514 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : THE DEVIL SETH
exploded into space under cataclysmic circumstances. Man's knowledge of clouds in primeval times was considerable and based upon observation. 28570 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : THE BONDS OF SATURN AND JUPITER
huge blazing chariot driven by a man or angel 6 , 29299 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : CAREER OF AN ANDROGYNE
preyed upon in the eyes of man), " 29438 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE PLOT OF THE ILIAD
around 700 B. C. "and Mediterranean man has begun to suffer the most severe cultural recession which history records or archaeology can determine. 29858 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : CARPENTER'S "SOFT" CATASTROPHISM
Recent Bronze set at -1450. No man-made catastrophe then could be so bad as all this. 30141 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 10: VENUS AND MARS : THE GREEK "DARK AGES"
of cultural diffusion. I think that man had enough fears within him to use the suggestion of a god fearfully without the "god" in reality behaving catastrophically.30589 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
have "settled for half a loaf;" man can work himself into a froth with very little help from celestial rage-makers; 30593 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
the Age of Solaria. It is man who changes gods and civilization, 30655 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
believe that ancient, terror- driven catastrophized man is any better at slaughtering his kind and ruining the environment than twentieth century, 30657 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
the environment than twentieth century, westernized man. 30658 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
Stone Alignments of Southern Hyderabad," 56 Man, 31090 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
H. S. (1936), Moons, Myths and Man, 31188 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
1946), The Intellectual Adventure of Ancient Man, 31542 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
Calif. Kennedy, G. E. (1975), "Early Man in the New World." 31824 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
Sr. (1965), "Fire Ecology -- Grasslands and Man," 31835 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
Johannes (1960), The Gods of Prehistoric Man, 31967 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
of Civilization. The Cognitive Beginnings of Man's First Art, 31976 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
1945), Tiahuanaco, the Cradle of American Man, 32160 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
W. Pennington Robert L. Rands (1971), Man Across the Sea: 32191 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
in Corliss, W. R. Compiler, Ancient Man: 32534 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - - BIBLIOGRAPHY -
biology (and in the case of man -anthropology) as the history of life moves much more slowly, 32839 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
do so under the eyes of man," 32851 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
man," can be easily updated: today man's eyes are wider; 32851 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
sound and sight. They help make man what he is and this can be regarded as a criterion of a natural force; 32939 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
has confirmed the testimony of a man who was caught in the open as a tornado passed above him by a few meters. 33937 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
Cf. C. L. Riley et al, Man Across the Sea: 34045 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones : Notes (Chapter Three: Hurricanes and Cyclones)
mysterious fire. The First that serves man's use is one thing. 34880 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity -
flames, the subsequent death of a man seemingly unaffected at the moment of stroke, 34984 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity -
near Maughold on the Isle of Man have been fused together like the mysterious vitrified towers of Scotland and elsewhere." 35182 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity -
eruptions if the greatest known to man was too small to produce significant record. 36071 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
Louis Lartel was excavating Cro-Magnon man (fragments of 15 individuals) near Les Eyzies-de-Tayec (Dordogne, 36121 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
See W. R. Corliss, ed., Ancient Man (Glen Arm, 36339 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash : Notes (Chapter Seven: Fire and Ash)
Posnansky, Tiahuanaco, The Cradle of American Man, ( 36371 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash : Notes (Chapter Seven: Fire and Ash)
dust, goes the pathetic saying about man's fate. " 36537 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 8 Falling Dust and Stone -
the most popular creation legends has man being made from clay, 36539 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 8 Falling Dust and Stone -
do surround the remains of Peking man at Choukoutien and human tools of the Lower Paleolithic in Europe and Tadzhik (U. 36554 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 8 Falling Dust and Stone -
it was known to early civilized man and fell apart before his very eyes 34 . 36755 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 8 Falling Dust and Stone -
8. H. Bellamy, Moon, Myths and Man (London: 36921 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 8 Falling Dust and Stone : Notes (Chapter Eight: Falling Dust and Stone)
operas" of radio and television. Contemporary man is motivated to come to grips with the sky by economics, 37049 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
men, but Re does not want Man utterly destroyed, 37415 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
metalworking by heat; why then did man wait another 15, 37920 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
the metals, so-called stone age man existed. 37926 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
and the Sun, and visible to man.) 38102 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
middle of the last century did man begin to exploit this oil, 38295 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
organic paleochemistry, pauses to reflect that "man has long been curious about the origin of these materials," 38331 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
L. Pauwels and J. Bergier, Eternal Man (Herts, 38406 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil : Notes (Chapter Ten: Metals, Salt and Oil)
more correct interpretation is that early man was caught in an increasingly turbulent cloudy world. 39263 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 12 Water -
5. 6. Bellamy, Moon, Myths and Man, 39391 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 12 Water : Notes (Chapter Twelve: Water)
source, in the skies of antediluvian man --a source of primeval rains, 39577 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
legends of the earliest period of man go beyond the Bible in defining a cosmic catastrophe prior to Noah's Deluge. 39662 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
the full self-awareness of modern man (in Homo Schizo I and I1) as part of the early catastrophic scenario of a binary nova of Super-Uranus, 39665 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
everything had been smooth and even...; man's stature was shortened." 39677 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
direction. As the clouds that surrounded man 's early cultures began to break up and descend as deluges, 39718 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
in gobs the size of a man's head and were at times boiling hot, 39773 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges -
6, 52. Bellamy: Moon, Myths and Man, 39834 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges : Notes (Chapter Thirteen: Deluges)
6. Ibid. 7. Moon, Myths and Man, 39844 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 13 Deluges : Notes (Chapter Thirteen: Deluges)
three quite different 'aggregates of species. Man appeared following the last of these,39897 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
like a ravenous beast. Only one man escaped, 40101 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
while observed: this might be the man about whom Moses the legislator of the Jews wrote...40135 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
more familiar with earthquakes than modern man: 41102 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 16 Earthquakes -
zombies 2 . When the rocks move, man's world shakes and shatters. 41166 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 16 Earthquakes -
new, created in the time of man; 42141 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
of man; before the time of man, 42141 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
with Africa. Probably the first modern man to consider the evidence of the common roots of the Dravidians of Tamil Culture of Southern India with the natives of Australia. 42435 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
drawings in the American southwest of man and dinosaur; 42721 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
man and dinosaur; also footprints of man and dinosaur are linked; 42722 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
In J. C. Riley et al. Man Across the Sea: 42897 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands : Notes (Chapter Eighteen: Sinking and Rising Lands)
at a larger figure. Some of man's early obsession with geometrical measurements of Earth and sky were motivated by perceptions of terrific effects and of changes still then occurring or feared.42939 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 19 Expansion and Contraction -
in another. I doubt that ancient man would argue the point. 42944 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 19 Expansion and Contraction -
perform most transport of sediments, that "man- sized" moderate forces of brimming "bankfull" waters supplement the "dwarf" work in carving banks and valleys, 44875 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels -
the following analogy. A dwarf, a man, 44909 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels -
cannot dent with his axe. The man is a strong fellow and a hard worker, 44914 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 23 Canyons and Channels -
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN GENESIS AND EXTINCTION Man is an exceptional creature, 47206 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
this is not the work of man alone perhaps, 47211 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
from its ancient cosmic bouts. But man is failing to protect the Earth. 47212 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
of famine, plague, and war. Later man was excused from the struggle, 47229 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
to be a transitional form to man 13 . 47427 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
for the complex 'higher' animals, especially man. 47522 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
the complex 'higher' animals, especially man. Man, 47522 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
the Colt revolver, "makes a big man equal to a little man." 47530 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
big man equal to a little man." 47530 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
all that can be observed between man and ape, 47671 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
since some 50 million years before man made his first appearance." 47716 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
and little celestial or terrestrial turbulence. Man's ears were not made for explosions any more than his eyes were made to stare at the sun. 48004 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 28 Genesis and Extinction -
nature behaves in the same way; man has changed. 48351 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
story of creation, the record of man begins in a world growing lighter, 48653 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
parts of the world. 1. Earliest man could make out no sharply visible lines between far sky, 48882 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
and earth; they merged. 2. Earliest man asserted that the atmosphere cleared somewhat amidst a chaos, 48887 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
at least several occasions. 10. Earliest man says, 48929 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
all datings of hominids and early man are far too old, 49785 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
mankind into the natural sciences, makes man a creature and creator of nature in a holistic sense, 50238 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
4. Ruth D. Simpson, "Updating Early Man, 50307 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface : Notes (Chapter Thirty-one: The Recency of the Surface)
quantavolution? Nor can one arrogate to man alone the ability to compress time. 50460 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - EPILOGUE -
Vaucouleurs. 14. Parker argues that a man (with a body temperature of 37 Celsius) can rub two sticks together to ignite them (producing a fire at several hundred degrees Celsius). 51451 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 2: THE SOLAR SYSTEM AS ELECTRICAL : Notes on Chapter 2:
identified with the age of first man and an unbroken plenum. 54072 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 10: INSTABILITY OF SUPER URANUS -
affairs. Heaven both inflamed and frustrated man's desire ... 54364 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 10: INSTABILITY OF SUPER URANUS -
with the fossil bones of Java man. 54703 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 11: ASTROBLEMES OF THE EARTH -
were witnessed by prehistoric and ancient man and the spheres treasured as sacred. 54704 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 11: ASTROBLEMES OF THE EARTH -
myth, fables and rites. If primeval man were "spinning yarns" in contradiction or exaggeration of actual happenings, 55196 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
refer to the experience of primeval man - catastrophized mind transacting with calmly evolving nature; 55203 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
In terror, self-abasement and pleading, man created a Uranus-Heaven religion and hoped for cosmic tranquility. 55896 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 14: THE GOLDEN AGE AND NOVA OF SUPER SATURN -
mist without rain, and before agriculture. Man is made out of earth and placed in the luxuriant Garden of Eden, 56329 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 15: THE JUPITER ORDER -
state of unabashed nudity and unselfconsciousness. Man gave names to every creature, 56330 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 15: THE JUPITER ORDER -
We think it more plausible than man was watching a sky model and emulating it than that, 57524 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE A: ON METHOD -
observed birth and subsequent assembly before man's eyes provide sufficient motivation for worship.58408 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 3: TECHNICAL NOTES: - TECHNICAL NOTE E: : SOLARIA BINARIA IN RELATION TO CHAOS AND CREATION
Hans Schindler (1936), Moon, Myths and Man (Faber Faber: 59197 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
Stephen H. (1970), Habitable Planets for Man (Elsevier: 59422 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
Washburn, Sherwood L., "The Evolution of Man," 60212 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS HOMO ERECTUS PEKING MAN FOOTPRINTS AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE OLDUVAI GORGE A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS DOBZHANSKY, 60376 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
Grazia FOREWORD Most scholars believe that man has progressed since his original appearance on earth.60498 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
the good. Some scholars believe that man is a rational animal. 60502 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
preview an argument that comes later, man is continually seeking ways to reestablish the uninterrupted instinctive responses of his forebears, 60504 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
unaware that the precise rationality of man, 60507 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
By what means did hominid become man? 60523 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
of mental illness are innate in man? 60529 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - - FOREWORD -
EVOLUTION Scientists tracing the origins of man face an almost impossible task. 60578 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION -
around a suspected visit of early man is prized. 60579 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION -
we are, on the trail of man's most important original trait, 60581 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION -
1610 cc), then back to modern man with 900 to 2300 cc -- elapsed time being set at four million years. 60637 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE HUMAN BRAINCASE
view that, point-by-point, evolving man grew in brain size and in adaptative control of the environment, 60691 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE HUMAN BRAINCASE
evolutionist ever doubted the cousinship of man and ape: 60724 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
the crucial trait that set off man from the ape. 60737 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
Human Delusion 11 . He believes that man, 60743 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
more and more tools and artifacts. Man was proud of his abilities and became, 60744 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
Vanity, then, is the nemesis of man, 60746 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
the human psychosis is to reconcile man to what is possible. 60747 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
in 1930, the upright posture of man was the start of his fateful development. 60750 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
and putting his genitals up front, man exhibited himself and felt shame. 60752 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
exhibited himself and felt shame. Further, man could never gratify his sexual drive fully and therefore had to seek all kinds of sublimation, 60752 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
and moving through Neanderthal to modern man: 60762 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
The consequences for the evolution of man were far- reaching. 60764 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
is not impossible to do so. Man has no memory of being a hominid, 60789 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
back to Judaic theory, which has man created from clay, 60827 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
from the penis of Quetzalcoatl. Now man, 60840 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
earth patties. Iranian Bundahism recites that man and bull were fashioned of the soil, 60844 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
rib of Adam. The Egyptians believed man to be divinely fashioned of clay, 60851 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : LEGENDS OF CREATION
Through how many memorial generations of man do the roots of myth penetrate? 60878 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
continuous story from the beginning of man. 60889 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
not spun about the evolution of man from the animals? 60904 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
were accordingly constructed to show that man and the universe did have a beginning. 60912 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
God; the word was God. Afterwards man was created, 60929 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
book to accept our thesis that man was born schizophrenic and has always been schizotypical. 60932 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
we not also suggest here that man was striving in manifold ways to recall a hologenesis of mind and culture? 60933 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
the cultural, or 'intrinsic', memory of man must be extremely long, 60946 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : MEMORIAL GENERATIONS
to the journey from ape to man, 60992 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
it to evolve 27 . That is, man is a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy, 61002 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
of fights during the ascent of man, 61031 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
other variables were not present, then man should by now be left-handed and retrogressed to bilaterality.61033 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
felt committed to the view that man must have arisen from lower primate forms to his present eminence by a ladder of incremental changes. 61050 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
incremental changes. In The Descent of Man, 61052 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
from some ape- like creature to man as he now exists so that it would be impossible to fix on any definite point when the term 'man' ought to be used. 61053 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
any definite point when the term 'man' ought to be used. 61054 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
years allocable to the ascent of man were negligible by contemporary guesses; 61090 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
evolution from hominidal ancestors to modern man. 61111 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
man. Can we then say that man has changed bit by bit over this period of time and very gradually became the schizoid type that we know today? 61111 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
of cerebration and culture? Also, did man lose his instinctive behavior bit by bit, 61116 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
the rounds of humanity. If modern man has taken a long time to evolve and if the changes were on the ladder, 61195 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
criticism. As evidenced by the Piltdown Man fraud, 61204 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
fossil hominids? Up to the present, man has not been able to exterminate his primate relatives, 61206 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
have occurred in the ascent of man. 61242 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
bulk was greater that of modern man, 61262 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
time. The most famous is Peking man from China. 61270 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
is an arguable age of full man in current anthropological circles. 61287 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
45 Alberto Blanc helped rehabilitate Neanderthal man, 61301 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
pointed out that homo erectus (Pecking man) was available in fragments of forty individual skulls; 61304 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
homo erectus through Neanderthal to modern man. 61307 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
to him and to others: Pleistocene man when spreading into unoccupied territory could have saturated it to carrying capacity... 61360 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
Antarctica in 12,000 years. Now man is thought to be older in the Americas. 61364 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
the Americas. I would maintain that man is as old in the Americas as anywhere else, 61365 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
Sr., Fire and the Ecology of Man, 61410 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
1967, 151-3. 4. Origins of Man, 61413 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Notes on the Mentality of Primitive Man, 61426 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Washburn, ed., Social Life of Early Man, 61427 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Spuhler, et al., The Evolution of Man's Capacity for Culture, 61429 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Washburn and R. Moore, Ape into Man, 61430 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Norton, 140ff. 14. The Ascent of Man, 61439 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
John E. Pfeiffer, The Emergence of Man, 61450 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
1-2. 21. Moons, Myths and Man, 61454 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
London: Macmillan, 1871. 24. Descent of Man, 61461 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Page 541. 30. The Antecedents of Man, 61474 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
op. cit., 349. 34. Descent of Man, 61483 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Hominids: The Single Species Hypothesis, 6 Man 4 (1971), 61512 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Evidence for the Ideologies of Early Man, 61514 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Washburn, ed., Social Life of Early Man, 61515 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
America. 49. The Relationships between Neanderthal Man and Homo Sapiens, 61524 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
52. Some Population Problems involving Pleistocene Man, 61532 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
the past 14,000 years? Might man have originated hologenetically in the holocene period, 61564 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
His dentition was close to modern man's, 61572 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
maturation were delayed, as in modern man, 61578 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
Swanscombe and Steinheim, with practically modern man. 61585 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
is anatomically too different from modern man. 61587 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
bones are uniquely different from both man and the chimpanzee and gorilla. 61601 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
in that the finger bones of man are incompetent for both knuckle-walking and hanging-climbing, 61605 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
the hanging- climbing hands of Olduvai man may be of minor importance if he were otherwise human.61615 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
very similar to that of modern man. 61637 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
the range of variation of modern man. 61637 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
homo erectus and therefore classifiable as man in a way that we must deny to any australopithecine (whether named H. 61642 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
from the motley ranks of modern man. 61662 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
modern individuals and so, too, Neanderthal man, 61663 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
had a cranium larger than modern man and a culture. 61664 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
of development very similar to modern man; 61671 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
hardly to be distinguished from modern man. 61672 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
making was also assigned to Peking man, 61678 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
at 1.5 million years. Peking man, 61700 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
about the true age of Peking Man. 61702 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
be the sole method of plotting man's ascent! 61707 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : HOMO ERECTUS
bones, and now modern footprints. PEKING MAN Sinanthropus, 61717 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : PEKING MAN
region in various races of modern man. 61723 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : PEKING MAN
mind when comparing ancient and modern man: 61727 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : PEKING MAN
the most distinctive peculiarities of modern man are degenerative in origin.) 61727 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : PEKING MAN
curators of the site of 'Peking Man' to redate it to carry it backwards in time from 200,61787 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : PEKING MAN
long ago pointed out that Swanscombe man, 61852 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : FOOTPRINTS
Paleolithic. Also before Neanderthal came Fontechevade man, 61854 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : FOOTPRINTS
all respects a modern type of man. 61855 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : FOOTPRINTS
of numerous explorations and excavations, that man had existed, 61870 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
them, flint tools and selected bones; man, 61875 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
but believe that the association of man and great animals stretched far back into the Pliocene, 61877 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
Africa, actually in the time of man. 61881 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
in what corner of the globe man or his precursor made his appearance for the first time.61903 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
exhibiting bone-structures foreign to modern man. 61907 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
they discovered. This would place Patagonian man over thirty million years ago, 61911 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
accepted Ameghino's early datings of man or even the presence of a hominid in the Western Hemisphere, 61915 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
The data, he thought, indicated that man was changing rapidly. 61934 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
man was changing rapidly. If modern man is so variable in physical structure, 61934 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
and proto-modern types with modern man, 61939 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
elapsed time between ancient and modern man must be presumed to approach zero time.61956 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
The groupings of ancient and modern man are internally homogeneous; 61965 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
elapsed time between ancient and modern man must be very short. 61966 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
cultural and intellectual qualities that stamp man as unique from any animal 15 .61982 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
years as the age of modern man. 61988 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
cultural, terms. That splendid hoax, Piltdown man, 61989 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
of geochronology in regard to fossil man is that time is measured by evolution; 62016 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
earth-time for the development of man 16 . 62022 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
development of man 16 . But then man was still hovering in the five figure bracket of 20,62022 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
in the humanization and diffusion of man, 62047 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
ignored in reckoning the origins of man in time. 62051 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
Red Sea. 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
The same is true of Peking Man (see Index) and of all other hominid and protohuman finds, 62247 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
the Holocene period. Consider how rapidly man changes, 62251 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
evolution of modern mankind. Or else man would have evolved, 62256 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
much time is not needed, if man is evolving on a consistent anatomical base. 62260 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
in prospect, other conclusions about fossil man pale. 62273 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
homo erectus and other types of man, 62274 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : A SURPRISING COLLAPSE OF TIME
anthropology as the fraud of Piltdown Man and the excavation of the caves of Choukoutien in China that gave up the skulls of Peking man (sinanthropus); 62298 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
gave up the skulls of Peking man (sinanthropus); 62299 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
evaded in most discussions of Peking man these days, 62306 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
skulls may have originated elsewhere. Peking man, 62310 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
present living. In the case of man, 62323 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
must perform all other human operations; man is born. 62362 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
one place he says that pre-man separated from apes no less than 11 million years ago 30 . 62365 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
in Buettner-Janusz's Origins of Man 34 . 62409 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
R. S. David, et al., Early Man in Soviet Central Asia, 62440 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : Notes (Chapter 2: Hominids in Hologenesis)
Pei and Wong Wen Hao, Fossil Man in China, 62451 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : Notes (Chapter 2: Hominids in Hologenesis)
ibid., 631. 10. Guide to Fossil Man, 62461 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : Notes (Chapter 2: Hominids in Hologenesis)
and Neoteny in the Evolution of Man, 62463 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : Notes (Chapter 2: Hominids in Hologenesis)
1964, 130. 25. The Appearance of Man, 62502 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : Notes (Chapter 2: Hominids in Hologenesis)
and Row, 1956; The Future of Man, 62502 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : Notes (Chapter 2: Hominids in Hologenesis)
also now considered close to modern man's, 62551 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION -
This 'X' might be much like man or a surprisingly different type. 62565 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION -
alongside the fossil australopithecines, even modern man -- to all physical appearances -- might be his own ancestor. 62567 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION -
be assigned to the ages before man, 62698 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
be attributed to the ages of man. 62699 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
Pleistocene, fully within the time of man's cultural flowering. 62713 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
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
not even tolerable, so that, if man had the ability to choose, 62826 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : QUANTAVOLUTION VS. EVOLUTION
of nature. It 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
does but that culture does as man is. 62856 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : BRAIN SPECIALIZATION
which is grossly 'over-developed' in man. 62868 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : BRAIN SPECIALIZATION
be designed to test the hypothesis. Man is supposed to be fetalized as compared with the apes since in the adult man the size of the head and the relative proportions of its parts resemble those in juvenile apes rather than those in adult apes. 63015 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SIGNALING HORMONES
the apes since in the adult man the size of the head and the relative proportions of its parts resemble those in juvenile apes rather than those in adult apes. 63015 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SIGNALING HORMONES
would accelerate. The quantavolution that split man's mind and freed it to displace copiously upon the world may thus have been influenced by a declining GMF. 63031 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SIGNALING HORMONES
Dobzhansky) that in the case of man, 63080 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
bringing about speciation from hominid to man. 63084 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
worry about. 12 . Like the last man to squeeze aboard a crowded bus, 63088 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
presumably the change from hominid to man must be applauded. 63092 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
in their book From Ape to Man, 63097 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
between viability and the ape-to-man difference is still to be bridged. 63104 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
itself. To explain the creation of man by mutation under a uniformitarian theory is thus impossible. 63109 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
supposed effects of natural selection. If man has been humanized within the past 100,63410 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
and geophysical environment. The time of man and protoman now includes a Holocene that impinges upon the Pleistocene that is moving back in turn into the old Pliocene. 63451 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
in the time of proto-modern man as well. 63458 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
of life. The first ancestors of Man appeared and an essentially new epoch started, 63464 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
largely caused by the activity of Man 25 . 63469 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
Man 25 . This last explanation, involving man, 63471 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
in both Pleistocene and Holocene, including man. 63472 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
lesser resistance of the mammals and man to radiation effects, 63482 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
behavior upon the infant after birth. Man, 63708 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
reversals was before the time of man. 63736 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
of man. However, the time of man has been pushed back well beyond this period in conventional theory, 63736 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
all of these possibilities? Or would man becomes stupefied, 63784 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
catastrophic past is the source of man's aggression... 63826 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SOCIAL IMPRINTING
to time by fresh natural (or man-made) catastrophe. 63837 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SOCIAL IMPRINTING
Even in the genetic humanization of man, 63844 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : SOCIAL IMPRINTING
printing, 195. 12. Radiation, Genes, and Man, 63942 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : Notes (Chapter 3: Mechanics of Humanization)
the easiest thing to capacitate in man was his brain; 64274 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : FRIGHT, RECALL, AND AGGRESSION
own self divided through self-awareness, man's gaze was fascinated by the sky. 64301 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : FRIGHT, RECALL, AND AGGRESSION
a few generations of philosophers. Primeval man did not own a neuter gender. 64304 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : FRIGHT, RECALL, AND AGGRESSION
incorporated in the story of Adam (man) and Eve (woman); 64350 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS
and social behavior. The pride of man in a memory that is superior to that of the beasts is inordinate. 64430 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
forgetting of events. The amnesia of man came from the primal terrors and set up the mechanism of denial, 64437 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
liar, lying both consciously and unconsciously. Man does not remember his experiences as Hominid 'X, ' 64442 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
cultures have creation stories. Before creation, man was clay or animal or part-god. 64451 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
there but is about to appear. Man appears as the canopy breaks and the gods appear.64473 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
humans: Another innate displacement activity in man seems to be sleep. 64493 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : MEMORY AND FORGETTING
this determination or voluntariness or will? Man was supposed to possess a will; 64624 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : BECOMING TWO-LEGGED
It is a delusional creation of man's poly- ego confederation playing with its kaleidoscope. 64652 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : VOLUNTARISM
shook their kaleidoscopes. So that one man's iron will was to win a battle, 64656 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : VOLUNTARISM
from the internal catastrophism of creation. Man is a catastrophized animal: 64716 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE
The great variety 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
agree with Washburn and Moore that man was born only once, 64886 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : QUANTAVOLUTION AND HOLOGENESIS
not account so well for northwestern man. 64909 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : QUANTAVOLUTION AND HOLOGENESIS
such as Frobenius, who thought that man moved first from West to East and then back in later times.64918 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : QUANTAVOLUTION AND HOLOGENESIS
likely that existing incidental evidence of man's presence in the Americas will ultimately be augmented to the point of acceptance. 64924 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : QUANTAVOLUTION AND HOLOGENESIS
of the Ottawa National Museum of Man. 64954 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : QUANTAVOLUTION AND HOLOGENESIS
cit., 210. 5. From Ape to Man; 65052 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : Notes (Chapter 4: The Gestalt of Creation)
promptly with homo schizo. Just as man became psychologically holistic upon his origination, 65098 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION -
culture without artifacts. But in reality man must go on to make other tools. 65149 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
tools. He has no choice. Like man's anatomical tools, 65152 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
As the batons of upper-paleolithic man evidence, 65165 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
practically nothing belonging to the earliest man, 65175 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
glues and so forth. E. H. Man's survey of the isolated and simple-living Andaman Islander a century ago revealed no more tools of the stone type but more made of the material that would have been destroyed by time and nature.65184 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
uncovered from, or imputed to, paleolithic man, 65192 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
a two-faced creature, half smiling man and half cat. 65207 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
his study on prehistoric religions that Man, 65220 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
good reason to deny to paleolithic man a preoccupation with mystery, 65222 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
his immediate predecessor) behaves like modern man. 65226 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
2 . He is saying that modern man has been basically unchanged from his beginnings. 65230 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
be incorporated into appraisals of earliest man? 65303 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
fault. In order to discover proto- man, 65308 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
them into the category of primeval man, 65314 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : PROTO-CULTURE
body size are also positively related. Man's enormous brain is partly accomplished in embryo and partly post-natally. 65338 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
whether deliberate or disastrous, is foreseeable. Man should have 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
being everywhere 8000 years ago. Could man have been fully potentiated and activated by mutation -- i. 65381 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
which would be taking trillions of man- hours? 65398 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
home for our first representative of Man. 65460 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
In effect, he is saying: deny man exists, 65462 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : LOST MILLIONS OF YEARS
agree that a hologenesis of both man and culture is logical and recent. 65528 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
all would have told him that man's history was short, 65531 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
the early fossils and relics of man and life generally, 65532 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
activity. It would not be modern man, 65561 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
millions of years between a true man, 65562 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY Not only did primeval man quickly achieve a world-wide protoculture, 65571 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
so do the most ancient texts. Man is created, 65577 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
looking for those factors which led man to discover agriculture; 65645 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
great antiquity for culture, hence for man. 65662 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
species. 14 Might it be that man under catastrophic circumstances takes care of his plant seeds while the wild seeds are destroyed? 65667 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
the wild seeds are destroyed? Might man also preempt the best areas for growing the plant, 65668 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
time in the murky history of man. 65748 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
to a god-hero who, partly man and partly god, 65782 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
occurred from time to time; ancient man was never whimsical about orienting his towns.65801 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : ECUMENICAL CULTURE
social theorist Cassirer also: If a man first directed his eyes to the heavens, 66016 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
satisfy a merely intellectual curiosity. What man really sought in the heavens was his own reflection and the order of his human universe. 66017 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
see, they continue to force upon man their original togetherness. 66051 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
convincing, the quantavolutionary theory of early man should be. 66096 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : CULTURAL INTEGRATION
New York: Mentor, 1965. 5. Primitive Man vs. 66134 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
11. The Role of Fire,.. 7 Man 2, 66148 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
cit., 92. 14. In Riley, Ed., Man Across the Sea, 66155 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
Posnansky, Tiahuanaco, The Cradle of American man, 66180 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
1965. 30. Ibid. 31. Essay on Man, 66194 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
1970. 33. Cf. Kluckhohn. Mirror for Man, 66198 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 5: Cultural Revolution)
and existed from the beginning of man. 66310 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SPEECH AND LANGUAGE
newly grown parts of the brain. Man did not get so clever that he began to talk. 66360 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SPEECH AND LANGUAGE
eye. No one doubts that earliest man (or latest hominid) was as digitally adept as he was orally proficient. 66390 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : GRAPHICS
of coolness and remoteness. PRIMORDIAL LANGUAGE Man spoke one tongue to begin with. 66434 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : PRIMORDIAL LANGUAGE
shared his further evolution to the Man of today. 66446 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : PRIMORDIAL LANGUAGE
Whorf spoke of the story of man's linguistic development -- of the long evolution of thousands of very different systems of discerning, 66467 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : PRIMORDIAL LANGUAGE
a political victory can let a man digest a thick steak, 66518 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : GROUP VS. INDIVIDUAL
severe discipline, compulsively exercised and rationalized. Man has had to work in this way. 66622 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : PSYCHOLOGY OF ORGANIZATION
of primeval catastrophe, as 'the way man's mind worked' and 'how societies changed. ' 66802 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : REPUBLIC AND MONARCHY
but from an increasing feeling that 'man is getting away with too much, ' 66813 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : AUTHORITY
the gods will respond by devastating man. 66814 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : AUTHORITY
that they may carry Cro-Magnon man down to the Old Kingdom of Egypt. 66960 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SEXUAL RAMIFICATIONS
as the cosmic fiction of early man, 67087 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : THE COMPULSION TO REPEAT CHAOS AND CREATION
are human, whether perpetrated by Bodo man or by related hominidal or human types.67264 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : CANNIBALISM
the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, 67285 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : CANNIBALISM
rten as instances, often claim that man was originally a cannibal warrior. 67393 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
36 . Krten's theory, that man was originally two or more kinds of primate of generalized brain and instincts who struggled with each other, 67395 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
an excellent source of food. Peking man, 67411 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
erectus, along with other types of man, 67411 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
amidst which hominid was mutated into man and which occurred throughout his earlier history added to his fright and stressed his already biologically catastrophized nature. 67429 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
of Civilization, The Cognitive Beginnings of Man's First Art Symbol and Notation, 67456 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : Notes (Chapter 6: Schizoid Institutions)
we can agree that Arthur Koestler, man of much political experience as well as a profound human analyst, 67597 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY -
of life forms from molecule to man, 67682 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : A SICK JOURNEY
a crazy message to the ordinary man, 67926 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOID EPISODES IN ABUNDANCE
and children, and of how prehistoric man, 67941 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOID EPISODES IN ABUNDANCE
own wishes to transform reality. Prehistoric man must have had an even higher degree of over-estimation of his thoughts and fantasies than modern man 8 . 67944 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOID EPISODES IN ABUNDANCE
his thoughts and fantasies than modern man 8 . 67945 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOID EPISODES IN ABUNDANCE
were not among them, thought that man was anything else but irrational and likely to be possessed. 68007 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HELL
real than the true course of man's history which itself is a form of Freud's compulsive return to the original trauma.68104 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : ORDINARY MAD TIMES
way of handling primordial and civilized man's mental and life problems, 68118 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : ORDINARY MAD TIMES
civil violence. We should appreciate that man is at war only half the time. 68205 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : NAZIS, STALINISTS, AND DEMOCRATS
Politics (1930) Lasswell speaks of the man who hates his father and tries to kill the king, 68268 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : NAZIS, STALINISTS, AND DEMOCRATS
behavior a formula: that the political man (terrorist) displaces private motives (father hatred) onto public objects (king) and rationalizes it in terms of the public advantage (tyrannicide or republicanism). 68269 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : NAZIS, STALINISTS, AND DEMOCRATS
CUSTODIAN OF FEAR What else has man done other than prepare for and engage in conflicts and war? 68283 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
all life but especially in mankind. Man, 68293 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
so on. He is a good man, 68352 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
which is to say that this man is of the ilk of the friar of a Byzantine monastery that once stood next to his cemetery.68353 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
mind with displacements and ideas, but man does not require a continuous experience of sky activity, 68358 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : RELIGION AS CUSTODIAN OF FEAR
species (1844) and the descent of man (1871) were intellectually weak, 68417 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
that, personally and as a typical man of his times, 68464 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
psychosomatic revolt. He was a gentle man, 68475 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
and anthropology, especially as it concerns man. 68480 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
force of transition from primate to man. 68501 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
Washburn, ed., Social Life of Early Man, 68550 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : Notes (Chapter 7: Psychopathology of History)
is this: however he came about, man was born a rational animal, 68702 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
ethologists are on the proper track: man in his 'rational' nature is most like an ape, 68708 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
said, long ago, There is no man who differs more from another than he does from himself at another time. 68710 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
constitution of the primate, from which man derives so many mental and physical attributes. 68728 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
needed to permit the speciation of man and that probably little time was actually available, 68756 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
current geochronometry notwithstanding. Further, the speciated man was genetically predisposed to culture. 68759 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
nature, whose very existence proves that man is the only species that dwells outside of itself, 68764 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
the far-flung schizotypical visions of man that are commonly voiced by philosophers and politicians.68892 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
I AM" EXISTENTIAL FEAR INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL POLY-EGO VERSUS INSTINCT "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN" Chapter 3: 69005 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
conservative theologians and politicians. The ordinary man had made it a vehicle of his biases, 69109 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - - FOREWORD -
into the quagmire of ideas concerning man as a rational animal. 69160 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - - FOREWORD -
sapiens sapiens not the "wise wise" man and cannot by nature be so. 69305 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
or both, he is not the man we thought he was. 69310 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
who offer an anatomical definition of man. 69369 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
that they are dealing with contemporary man. 69371 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
best that can be said of man is that he does more of everything and does it more consistently and continuously. 69430 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
In the benighted United States, a man who drinks his urine and bathes in it is locked up, 69434 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
recognized as an inherent part of man's being. 69559 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S SAMPLING FOR THE NORMAL
of person in society, an "ideal man and woman," 69709 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
not because he is a natural man, 69714 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
other neuroses and psychoses. The democratic man, 69728 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
rustic fallacy: a new kind of man is to be created, 69735 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
earlier, the idea would be ludicrous: man is naturally conflictful, 69740 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THE IDEAL PERSON
For instance, Aristotle's famous sentence, "Man is a social animal," 69790 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : SELF-AWARENESS
beyond this obviously inadequate characterization of man, 69795 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : SELF-AWARENESS
said "Give me a sentence a man has spoken, 69822 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : CATEGORIES OF MADNESS
in addition to the nature of man, 70129 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : RECONCILING THE NORMAL AND ABNORMAL
of human nature, the nature of man can best be analyzed by means of the concept of the insane. 70168 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : RECONCILING THE NORMAL AND ABNORMAL
that would realistically distinguish human nature. Man does not really want to know himself; 70173 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : RECONCILING THE NORMAL AND ABNORMAL
nature do not want to know man either. 70175 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : RECONCILING THE NORMAL AND ABNORMAL
reveal anything of the nature of man? 70262 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : THERAPIES
forever fearfully reflect? If, unlike animals, man has to make up his mind, 70738 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT-DELAY
4 . He sees the remedy as man's reflectiveness, 70842 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : SELF-FEAR AND SELF-CONTROL
and object." This is what distinguishes man from animal, 70858 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
The unity of consciousness is illusory. Man does more than one thing at a time - all the time - and the conscious representation of these actions is never complete." 70869 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
Indeed, it is never fully achieved. Man is always an infant in this regard. 70882 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
and others would have it be. Man would never have a self, 70908 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
the sacred, holy, awful confrontation of man with god or the divine essence 15 .71036 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : EXISTENTIAL FEAR
existential fear in human nature? That man is an anxious animal has been a byword in psychology. 71045 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : EXISTENTIAL FEAR
of animals. Yet we see in man a variety of psycho-pathological tendencies and behaviors - such as merciless aggression and global attentiveness - not present in mammals and apes. 71091 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : EXISTENTIAL FEAR
of is relevant here. INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL We begin by a comparison. 71142 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
speaks of an aesthetic instinct in man. 71197 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
homo schizo. For we say that man seeks to revert to the animal in order to recapture the instinctive bliss of the single self. 71222 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
of the single self. That is, man unconsciously seeks his death as a human, 71223 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
of homo schizo, the evolved thing, man, 71233 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
instinct in the total behavior of man when compared with the behavior of animals most closely resembling him. 71266 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
an interminable chain of immediate fears. Man can and would like to fill infinity with his control activities. "... 71333 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : POLY-EGO VERSUS INSTINCT
concepts are great instruments for control. Man in effect enlarges the world by imposing more and more of a time frame behaviorally upon it. 71340 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : POLY-EGO VERSUS INSTINCT
part of an irresistible expansion of Man's will to control, 71344 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : POLY-EGO VERSUS INSTINCT
Control by evolutionary reversion is impossible. Man is unable to reestablish the instinctual basis of existence. 71354 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : POLY-EGO VERSUS INSTINCT
continuously searching to retrieve his nature, man provides himself with thousands of behaviors of the same categories but inestimably greater in appearances and consequences. 71390 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
analogous to animal behavior, but that man and primate share homologous infrastructure and functions. 71400 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
as instinctive in both animal and man. 71410 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
to agree that the differences between man and other species, 71424 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
analogous behaviors can be extracted from man and beast. 71427 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
may be musical, and so a man, 71434 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
to base a separation of species. Man is condemned to a life-work of completing his instincts. 71443 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
that the transition from hominid to man offers a splendid example of regressive evolution. 71445 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
of encounters. In the case of man, 71495 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
Press, 1966. 4. The Future of Man, 71527 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : Notes (Chapter 2: The Search for Lost Instinct)
and Row, 1964; The Phenomenon of Man, 71527 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : Notes (Chapter 2: The Search for Lost Instinct)
is insulting slang to call a man a "musclebrain." 71637 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK -
found a "socially completely normal" young man with a large cranium, 71650 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK -
the human's, or less. Like man, " 71708 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE ANIMAL BASEMENT
in problem solving efforts, hence intelligence. Man would like to solve his problems by automatic reflexes but he must feel pain and anxiety, 71780 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE ANIMAL BASEMENT
and purposes as it does in man, 71806 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE ANIMAL BASEMENT
early a stage to distinguish between man and primates with respect to their relative efficiencies in saltatory conduction. 71983 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE LOCATION OF INSTINCT DELAY
relative efficiencies in saltatory conduction. That man's conduction velocity may be less, 71984 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE LOCATION OF INSTINCT DELAY
global sensory psychic experiencing, common to man and animals, 72155 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE LOCATION OF INSTINCT DELAY
other from the right. Not so man. 72279 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : HANDEDNESS
handle perceptual information better than a man's. 72342 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : HANDEDNESS
cannot be proven, like the feral man, 72391 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : ORDER AND DISUNITY
creature would choose the way of man and rest content with it? 72476 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : MEMORY AND REPETITION
a hero, except the animal, while man suffers the inevitable consequences of identification with the dead, 72478 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : MEMORY AND REPETITION
In J. N. Spuhler, Eovolution of Man's Capacity for Culture, 72603 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : Notes (Chapter 3: Brainwork)
14. "Bilateral Organization of Consciousness in Man," 72616 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : Notes (Chapter 3: Brainwork)
in another chapter, employed ideas of man as a rational being, 72780 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION -
upon the Earth. TIME AND REMEMBERING Man practices displacement and projection in creating space and time. 72944 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : TIME AND REMEMBERING
its flexible control of recall. Since man's experience is rich, 72955 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : TIME AND REMEMBERING
accepted by the free will of man. 73191 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : OBSESSIONS, COMPULSIONS, HABITS
mankind's fearful state. Regarding primeval man, 73283 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
a time of war, where every man is enemy to every man; 73285 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
every man is enemy to every man; 73286 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
violent death; and the life of man, 73293 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
have always and necessarily been mixed; man is by nature bent upon order. 73298 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
Further, as we have been saying, man was very much more dependent upon psychological "income" in comparison with material subsistence. 73305 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
Locke, writing in the same period, man's mind was no "blank tablet" (tabula rasa) upon which experience alone might write. 73308 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
origin, ever since, and at present, man's mind is congenitally inscribed with an existential fear that inspires his most important human operations.73310 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR -
And, as Hobbes declared, does not man live in fear of violence when he is not engaged in it - just as foul weather affects not only the days when it happens but also the times when it might occur?73360 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : OMNIPRESENT FEAR
M. Gray has mentioned, fright in man is more complex than in animals because "the new dimension that is reached in man can be viewed as symbolic fear." 73640 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : GUILT AND PUNISHMENT
new dimension that is reached in man can be viewed as symbolic fear." 73641 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : GUILT AND PUNISHMENT
and abnormal" behaviors are developed in man, 73663 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : GUILT AND PUNISHMENT
the common myths of divine hermaphroditism.) Man's mind certainly dwells upon hermaphroditism. 73668 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : GUILT AND PUNISHMENT
schizo theory, must be universal in man and culture. 73740 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : AMBIVALENCE
and refractory defect in pleasure capacity." Man has been mistakenly called a hedonistic or pleasure-seeking animal. 73817 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
law or judgement, as when a man was condemned to death, " 73858 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
that lingers in coition. Other than man, 73884 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
suffering is exalted before oneself, before man, 73894 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : ANHEDONICS
him." 13 So the model of man is taught the greatest knowledge by the greatest suffering.73942 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : CATATONICS
as with the other delusions of man. 74047 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : CATATONICS
anhedonia for the simple reason that man seeks self-control holistically and hologramatically; 74053 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : CATATONICS
phrases of terror and doom dominate. Man cannot lift himself by his own bootstraps. 74165 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : SUBLIMATION OF FEAR
animal, for the animals closest to man have also a problem of eternal angst. 74173 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : SUBLIMATION OF FEAR
Language breaks the instinctive bond between man and nature and sets man free in a maelstrom of delusions. 74263 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH -
between man and nature and sets man free in a maelstrom of delusions. 74263 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH -
no longer the exclusive domain of man," 74354 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : ANATOMY
they can be made to imitate man closely. 74369 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : ANATOMY
going on naturally in the brain; man is imitating his internal central nervous system operations, 74505 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : THE STRUCTURE OF SPEAKING
or wanted. "Fence-sitting tobacco-chewing man;" " 74524 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : THE STRUCTURE OF SPEAKING
of an unknown blank in the "man" code data bank; 74526 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : THE STRUCTURE OF SPEAKING
human ratiocination. The computerized robot is man's high hope for recapturing his primate instinctive behavior.74559 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : THE STRUCTURE OF SPEAKING
Instead of dealing with things themselves, man is in a sense constantly conversing with himself," 74795 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : INNER LANGUAGE
theory of human nature. Put bluntly, "Man thinks the same everywhere, 74839 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : IDEOLOGY AND LANGUAGE
1966, 73. 15. An Essay on Man, 75031 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : Notes (Chapter 6: Symbols and Speech)
M. Zingg, Wolf Children and Feral Man (N. 75047 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : Notes (Chapter 6: Symbols and Speech)
is ordinary scientific and rational behavior. Man chooses art, 75110 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL -
ordinary people. THE OMNIPOTENCE OF THOUGHT Man exercises from his gouty toe to the heavens above what Freud has called "the omnipotence of thought." 75192 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE OMNIPOTENCE OF THOUGHT
of the anarchist, G. Zangara, a man hates his father, 75382 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : RATIONALIZATION
men are mortal; Socrates is a man; 75421 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE DISSOLUTION OF LOGIC
to prove reasonable, it is every man for himself, 75479 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE DISSOLUTION OF LOGIC
form of rational behavior known to man, 75560 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE USES OF PUBLIC REASON
or the past century. The more man subjectivizes, 75651 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : CAUSATION
older. When a woman tells a man, " 75725 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : TIME AND SPACE
today and in the future. Time, man's great tool, 75760 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : TIME AND SPACE
is projected memory. To control himself, man must control his projections both past and future. 75762 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : TIME AND SPACE
a mistake to assume that a man is a biologic individual plus a reason, 75875 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE COST OF LOSING MAGIC
material effects deemed favorable. Why does man select these operations, 75938 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SCIENCE AS INSTINCT
chasm, of healing the instinct glitch, man would feel even better. 75989 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SCIENCE AS INSTINCT
activity, so that, for instance, a man who was inordinately and illegitimately fond of his mother plunged obsessively into sofa design, 76008 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
mater. What can we call a man who cannot paint but loves to eat; 76036 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
a poor social-climber; a generous man who ignores his community's needs? 76039 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
gods were made to behave as man wished they might, 76079 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
human nature, entitled An Essay on Man 21 , 76086 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
of homo schizo. The division of man into a body and soul is one such, 76123 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
a sharp difference between ape and man and discovering this in the human soul. 76125 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SUBLIMATION AS PREFERABLE DISPLACEMENTS
Church, decrees that the schizotypicality of man should consist of two contraries. 76158 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE ORIGINS OF GOOD AND EVIL
arrogance, like a newly ennobled baron, man invents his ancestry. 76293 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - - EPILOGUE -
so goes the world. All of man is good and bad, 76308 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - - EPILOGUE -
1979) "Iron sharpens iron, and one man sharpens another." 76432 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS - - - CELESTIAL SEX, EARTHLY DESTRUCTION, AND DRAMATIC SUBLIMATION IN HOMER'S ODYSSEY: -
the just killing of an evil man, 76858 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 1: AN ATHENA PRODUCTION -
had been captured by a giant man-eating Cyclops whom he blinded in order to escape.76863 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 1: AN ATHENA PRODUCTION -
to at the sight of a man? 77132 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 2: THE SONG OF LOVE : THE PHAEACIAN UTOPIA
an enemy, for there is no man on earth, 77133 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 2: THE SONG OF LOVE : THE PHAEACIAN UTOPIA
musician. And, of course, a blind man may develop epic powers of memory. 77741 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 5: HOLY DREAMTIME -
that in a state of nature man's life was "nasty, 77800 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 5: HOLY DREAMTIME : THE SCANDALOUS LITTLE PIECE
outside of the profane life of man; 77907 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 5: HOLY DREAMTIME : BURLESQUE OR RELIGION?
if male, receive in addition a man, 78455 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES -
hastened home from Troy (wise old man that he was) in fear of divine wrath, 78558 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
It was a society where every man's hand was raised against his neighbor. 78844 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
these traits not typical of "primitive man" ? 78874 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
getting one's concept of primitive man from Homer that one can believe so, 78876 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
believe so, for usually modern "primitive man" is gentle, 78877 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 7: CRAZY HEROES OF DARK TIMES : SOCIETY IN SHOCK
Earth: and she brings forth to man The flocks he feeds, 79374 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : A MOST ANCIENT GODDESS
Mother of ancient tradition is a man-woman, 79557 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : ENCYCLOPEDISTS AND THE MOON GODDESS
a man-woman, or a woman-man, 79557 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : ENCYCLOPEDISTS AND THE MOON GODDESS
magic would incite concupiscence in any man. 79643 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : ENCYCLOPEDISTS AND THE MOON GODDESS
star. Hesiod writes of "Phaeton, a man like the gods, 79844 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : A MATCH OF SOURCES
black one), Scotia (dark one), Androphonos (man-slaver), 80319 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : Notes (Chapter 8: The Two Faces of Love)
Braun, and F. L. Whipple, Moon: Man's Greatest Adventure (New York: 80353 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : Notes (Chapter 8: The Two Faces of Love)
Hera and Zeus disagreed concerning whether man or woman achieved more pleasure in sexual intercourse. 80854 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : CONGENITALITY AND HOMOLOGY
drawn with a goldsmith, 'a skillful man whom Hephaestus and Pallas Athena taught all kinds of craft (techne). '" 80918 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : CONGENITALITY AND HOMOLOGY
Gaia rejected him. He was half-man and half-serpent; 81016 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 10: HE WHO SHINES BY DAY : CONGENITALITY AND HOMOLOGY
of this state of affairs, modern man might not simply imagine that it was alive simply because it was covered with live plants and animals but that it was full of gods (as Thales said), 82169 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 12: THE LAUGHING GODS : POSEIDON
the sunlight. Whatever importance late historical man may ascribe to his life-giving powers, 82191 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 12: THE LAUGHING GODS : HELIOS
uncanny in the whole prehistory of man than his mnenotechnics. 83717 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY
coloring still distinguish the life of man and a people, 83721 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY
in us whenever we become 'serious. ' Man could never do without blood, 83724 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY
and the slaying of the father, man achieved a (bad) conscience and the need to justify and to punish. 83737 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY
world in which we live today. Man's memory itself, 83765 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY
encounter. It is characteristic of "Western man's" partially Greek-born culture, 83847 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
change and far more perfect than man. 84007 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : AMNESIAC PHILOSOPHERS
J. Jung, "Approaching the Unconscious," in Man and His Symbols (New York: 84134 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : Notes (Chapter 15: The Birth and Death of Memory)
Cf. H. Bellamy, Moon, Myths and Man (London: 84149 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 15: THE BIRTH AND DEATH OF MEMORY : Notes (Chapter 15: The Birth and Death of Memory)
deal out grim punishment to every man among them. ' 84238 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : DREAMWORK
periphery of the audience, the ordinary man beset by the disastrous conduct of the gods.84296 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : DREAMWORK
their way, Sex is tossed by man onto the laps of gods. 84380 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : SEXUALITY AND DISASTER
the transfigured forms of behavior that man invented to ameliorate the symptoms of disaster. 84408 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : SEXUALITY AND DISASTER
Writing of the activities of archaic man, 84433 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : IN ILLO TEMPORE
archaic man, which would include Homeric man, 84433 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : IN ILLO TEMPORE
morale 8 . Yet this same "archaic man" dreads history. 84451 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 16: THE TRANSFIGURATION OF TRAUMA : IN ILLO TEMPORE
horde of customs and rememorized. Furthermore, man is a myth-maker and he will always find sufficient personal and social crises to inspire individual and collective repressions of memory, 84638 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND -
sense, then, entitled to do with man what they will. 84894 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
I please." Many will assert that man would have been better off without the gods. 84896 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
than with the lessons of catastrophe. Man was created by catastrophes and made to some degree what he is by them.84899 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
13. 2. Ibid. 3. An Intelligent Man's Guide to Science, 84989 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : Notes (Chapter 17: Settled Sky and Unsettled Mind)
were only a question of a man being addressed by a bush, 85437 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS -
shape in the likeness of a man's countenance." 85529 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COMETS AND ANGELS
in the land of Egypt both man and beast" 46 - and is doubtful, 85851 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COSMIC PLAGUES
everyone. Behold no craftsmen work. A man strikes his brother. 85941 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : THE DESTRUCTION OF EGYPT
King Pharaoh Thaoi Thoum was the man Moses. 86161 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS -
it that Moses was a poor man in the desert. 86560 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : THE ORGANIZED MOVE
psychology of the great but frustrated man, 86683 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES
been as fanatically possessed as any man could be, 86731 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES
the terribly oppressive and vindictive old man mysteriously died. 86782 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 2: THE SCENARIO OF EXODUS : UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES
In the year 1666, a young man called Moses Suriel from Brussa, 86982 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : WHOSE ANGEL?
Contradicting this, V. Manoilov, Electricity and Man, 87977 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 3: CATASTROPHE AND DIVINE FIRES : Notes (Chapter 3: Catastrophe and Divine Fires)
a turkey. Franklin was a humane man who liked turkeys - he once nominated the turkey for the American national bird in preference to the eagle totem - and was probably seeking a less painful way of butchering them. 88154 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION -
learned Buber, a hero and good man in the terrible Nazi period, 88385 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE GOLDEN BOX
said, to be sure, did that man, 88391 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE GOLDEN BOX
ark was duplicated by a young man named Micah in his home, 88930 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE ARK'S END
the threshing floor of Nacon, a man named Uzzah "took hold of it, 89034 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 4: THE ARK IN ACTION : THE ARK'S END
fallen out) for everybody, and the man of rank can no longer be distinguished from him who is nobody." 89703 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : RADIATION DISEASES
amazing, happen as the artifices of man. 89761 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : THE ELECTRO-CHEMICAL FACTORY
air intakes on mountain tops or man-made tents. 89883 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : MANNA
may-poles, dolmens, bethels, etc.; no man is complete without one. 90020 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : THE BRAZEN SERPENT AND OTHER RODS
It is the size of a man's hand. 90137 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 5: LEGENDS AND MIRACLES : THE POUCH OF JUDGEMENT
MOSES "To deny a people the man whom it praises as the greatest of its sons is not a deed to be undertaken lightheartedly - especially by one belonging to that people." 90355 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES -
of Mahatma Gandhi as a young man before his great alteration of character) 14 . 90536 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : A DISLIKING FOR HEBREWS
and reserve. He is not "a man of the people," 90540 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : A DISLIKING FOR HEBREWS
quackery, ecstasies, but spoke with God man-to-man." 90628 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MEEK KILLER
but spoke with God man-to-man." 90628 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MEEK KILLER
job done for him by the man's equals. 90660 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MEEK KILLER
punishment of this rash and controversial man. 90667 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MEEK KILLER
an opportunity of attacking the young man, 90671 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MEEK KILLER
consumed. Moses knew better than any man what this meant. 90711 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE COURTLY SHEPHERD
Yahweh wishes, because he is "a man of uncircumcised lips." 90841 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : CIRCUMCISION AND SPEECH PROBLEMS
will probably guess correctly that a man with a speech defect will prefer an ideal without one. 90907 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : CIRCUMCISION AND SPEECH PROBLEMS
one. Even better than this, a man with a speech defect will invent a model whose speech defect will be, 90908 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : CIRCUMCISION AND SPEECH PROBLEMS
a magician, a sorcerer, a medicine man, 90945 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : SCIENTIST AND INVENTOR
from Yahweh, and so on. One man's science is another man's magic. 90965 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : SCIENTIST AND INVENTOR
One man's science is another man's magic. 90965 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : SCIENTIST AND INVENTOR
condemning to death by stoning any man or woman who is proven to have "gone and served other gods and worshipped them, 90997 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : SCIENTIST AND INVENTOR
priest scientists of Egypt. Neither common man nor noble would be able to write, 91045 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : SCIENTIST AND INVENTOR
theological bureaucracy, with a rationalized god-man ruler whose divine qualities were part of the law and did not have to be frequently demonstrated by charismatic acts: 91250 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : TALKING WITH GODS
on their own account. A young man ran to tell Moses about them, 91350 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE CENTRALIZATION OF HALLUCINATION
occupational psychologist would agree, "Yes, the man's a scientist, 91583 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
was a beautiful young boy and man. 91674 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
it is highly improbable that another man could have succeeded in any other way than that of Moses.91711 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
to. Moses was more than a man; 91793 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 6: THE CHARISMA OF MOSES : THE MANIAC SCIENTIST
first-born of Israel, of both man and beast. 92290 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : TECHNICIANS AND SECURITY POLICE
on. He is not "a family man" as we have already indicated. 92510 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : BLAME THE PEOPLE
us; as for this Moses, the man who brought us out of the Land of Egypt, 92565 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : REVOLT OF THE GOLDEN CALF
were brief and harsh: "Put every man his sword on his side, 92585 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : REVOLT OF THE GOLDEN CALF
throughout the camp, and slay every man his brother, 92586 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : REVOLT OF THE GOLDEN CALF
every man his brother, and every man his companion, 92587 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : REVOLT OF THE GOLDEN CALF
every man his companion, and every man his neighbor." 92587 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : REVOLT OF THE GOLDEN CALF
four creatures around the throne (lion, man, 92619 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : REVOLT OF THE GOLDEN CALF
that all Israel is holy, each man in his own special relationship to God, 92704 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : KORAH'S REBELLION
each other and coursed through each man, 92864 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : KORAH'S REBELLION
Moses the First was a good man, 93057 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : FREUD AND THE MURDER OF MOSES
was a possibility that the old man, 93120 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : BETH PEOR
in sympathy with the grand old man's frustration and importunities to Yahweh. 93286 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : BETH PEOR
military - of a hallucinated, all-powerful man. 93935 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : THE CHARACTER OF YAHWEH
of Harold Lasswell: the power-driven man displaces his private motives upon public objects, 94027 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : SIN VS SCIENCE
might think that so ambitious a man would find a place where he might continue his mission after death. 94299 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : IMMORTALITY
He is portrayed as a magnificent man. 94416 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : MONOTHEISM
been familiar with Thoth - the sophisticated man's god - in Egypt. 94603 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 8: THE ELECTRIC GOD : MONOTHEISM
further that he was the last man to be under such direct divine guidance. 95069 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE LIMITS OF DISTORTION
In our vision, we see this man Moses at times, 95275 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : UNBELIEVING SCHOLARS
understanding and gullibility of the common man (though much of this may be the work of the priests and editors.) 95638 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
Scripture 06. Ritual and Sacrifice 07. Man's Divine Mirror 08. 95880 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
II. THEOTROPY 09. Sacral Vs Secular Man 10. 95885 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS -
how secular, merits attention as religious man. 95946 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION - - - FOREWORD -
move into metaphysics. All that historical man has attempted to achieve with religion is adequately describable by the scientific method. 95974 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION - - - FOREWORD -
the fresh, mad eye of primeval man, 96016 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
or, for that matter, that in man himself, 96038 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
come close to the truth. And man, 96100 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
should say) is paramount and moves man to wherever his rears alight. 96111 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
Radin's anthropological surmise is acceptable: "man was in a state of fear, 96112 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
of fear, physically, economically, and psychically. Man thus postulated the supernatural in order primarily to validate his workaday reality." 96112 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
to make an animal out of man, 96121 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
state of mind of the "religious man" through the ages.( 96124 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
D. Lasswell uses the term "political man," 96125 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
uses the term "sacred." "For religious man," 96128 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
why not include today?) "all of man's organs and physiological experiences, 96130 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
and making it real." "For religious man, 96134 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
sacred is saturated with being... Religious man deeply desires to be, 96137 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
with our ides of religious genesis. Man naturally sees the world supernaturally. 96139 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
too, as the Hebrew Elohim assures man, 96144 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
and working like any ideal reasonable man would think and work. 96149 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
that they may not control anything; man is born with an inferiority complex from not controlling himself. 96155 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
up first the fearful fact that man does not control himself, 96160 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
the eradication of the human in man. 96183 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
do so, with no lasting effect. Man has achieved every imaginably bad society except one of lasting soullessness.96186 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 1: THE GENESIS OF RELIGION -
of bear skull accord to Neanderthal man also basic religious ideas. 96314 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
that would initiate religion, along with man. 96325 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
race itself, we would maintain that man was never human before he was religious.96345 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
there, the sky must have impressed man and b) the sky is impressive (for the gods are there)." 96399 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
sky-religions are primordial, how is man prompted to perceive the supernatural there, 96411 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
too, of the long evolution of man) might be dropped. 96438 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
dropped. Then at least, we see man becoming human and sky-religious concurrently.96438 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
of all great events remembered by man and emplaceable in primevalogy is the separation of Heaven from Earth.96455 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
order, i. e., the universe as man knows it? 96470 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
is as follows: The Cosmologist is Man. 96474 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
as follows: The Cosmologist is Man. Man senses ancient experiences. 96474 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
be either a memory of when man first got his head straight, 96481 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
solids upon the world, that before man's eyes the god of the sky tool shape, 96500 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
as, "The divine remoteness actually expresses man's increasing interest in his own religious,96516 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
all his efforts to be loyal, man has been forced to worship new gods over the ages.96594 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
gases must indeed have enveloped primordial man and attended the birth of the gods.96629 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
and imposed models of conduct upon man. 96690 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
was born in the creation of man and, 96690 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
their origins in the origins of man; 96715 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
overthrown by nature and simultaneously by man. 96726 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
and relate to the Ouranian complex. Man believed himself forced to change gods from time to time by evidence in nature.96730 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
to time by evidence in nature. Man, 96732 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
and religious conceptions. In these transitions, man became adept (to his way of thinking, 96735 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 2: THE SUCCESSION OF GODS -
known among the people as a man; 96802 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
Lord's order is "slay every man his brother, 96823 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
every man his brother, and every man his companion, 96824 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
every man his companion, and every man his neighbor." 96824 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
Again it is often said that man will colonize space, 97005 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
only among blind moles, but in man, 97016 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
must consist in the appreciation of man's lot and a surcease from it upon death, 97041 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
moral rules and moral behavior that man used to regard as products of his superior and voluntary ethics.97053 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
As for the "moral law of man," 97056 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
no way of exorcizing them from man's primordially established soul. 97142 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
help themselves, a very human 'old man', 97420 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
the time he was "the professional man's god," 97467 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
Christians, having promoted the Son of Man to become the Son of God, 97487 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 4: THE HEAVENLY HOST -
sacrifice and the lesser the oblation. Man, 97839 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
is accompanied by Rubezahl, a gigantic man in a mask and cloak, 97914 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
There is a rule for everything. Man, 97923 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
the creation of the world and man, 97945 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
the fragments of its body, including man from the blood of a demonic ally of Tiamat. 97999 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
the 'rebirth' of the world and man." 98006 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
or restore a right relationship of man to the sacred order," 98052 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
scarcely exotic, though often esoteric. First, man behaves in imitation of the gods. 98058 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
So, if the god fights, the man fights. 98062 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
man fights. If the god rages, man rages. 98062 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
bestows generous gifts, so does the man. 98063 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
are common gifts. Nor does worshipful man stop short of trickery. 98071 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
is perhaps impossible to say whether man modeled kingship upon gods or gods upon kings, 98088 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
not eradicate the existential fear of man but only its referents - gods, 98101 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 6: RITUAL AND SACRIFICE -
by Alfred de Grazia CHAPTER SEVEN MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR No god is the same to any two people, 98193 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
in religion). That is, rationally evolving man creates ever more rational religion.98240 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
placed an ever heavier superstructure upon man, 98243 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
upon man, not knowing that when man has assumed the burden of what they term rational behavior, 98243 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
smarter; horses have not; how should man have done so without a proven physiological alteration of his mind?98246 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
such qualities into a mirror of man, 98260 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
propositions about the Divine Mirror of Man: 98265 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
amount to a creature not unlike man. 98286 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
not unlike man. That Elohim created man in his or their image is, 98286 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
fundamentally naive form, he hints that man is too clever for God. " 98301 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
him becomes the greatest work of man. 98305 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
is jealous of the game that man is playing, 98307 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
source of god as mirror of man. 98319 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
that the gods are not like man, 98321 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
to say what is virtue, except man-bound-in-culture? 98322 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
sure, on precisely those qualities that man has and wants much more of: 98327 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
debate over whether all divinity that man can know is anthropomorphic hardly needs empirical evidence. 98330 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
probably tautology. That is, granted that man can only know by an extension of himself, 98332 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
This, too, is a Mirror of Man. 98376 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
go back to Adam, the First Man, 98384 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
complete and solemn. Celestially or mundanely, man is operating with the same mental mechanisms and their external social extrusions. 98396 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
schizotypus elsewhere - whether speaking of religious man or secular man; 98407 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
speaking of religious man or secular man; 98407 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
problem or of the problem of man against god. 98428 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
of the forces of nature. Primeval man and his successors found good in the gods because in the first place the ideal of the good god itself performed useful functions. 98439 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
performed useful functions. The gods created man, 98440 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
functions. The gods created man, and man was superior to the mammals whom he resembled and lived among. 98440 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
A quick transfer of traits occurred - man gave to god all of his abilities and took them back as blessed gifts, 98453 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
power in the human mind, and man would step forward to control the world with an obsessive confidence, 98456 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
the transfer. At the same time, man could deny his personal responsibility for all that he was creating.98458 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
it and gave it back to man; 98517 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
of which were developed in primeval man analogously obsessive and some in non-analogous behavior, 98538 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
of the four behavior patterns of man was to set him apart as a voluntary self-mover. 98605 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
schizotypical as, or more so, than man, 98614 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
from human experience. It reflects indeed man's most destructive and exhilarating experiences. 98616 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
extinguish this essential schizotypicality would restore man as an instinctive mammal, 98807 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 8: INDISPENSABLE GODS -
can distinguish and designate the two. Man's need to control the terrible and the terror causes him to invent gods. 98825 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 8: INDISPENSABLE GODS -
undertake all the actions that ancient man had ready just for such approaching catastrophes -- propitiation, 98828 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 8: INDISPENSABLE GODS -
gods and of the rules for man's behavior respecting the gods are distorted and incorrect, 98834 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 8: INDISPENSABLE GODS -
nature of the gods. Whenever historical man has said "Let us change our religion," (98845 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 8: INDISPENSABLE GODS -
Grazia CHAPTER NINE SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN Any old religion is likely to have a complete life-program, 98944 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
of other creatures, why could not man rapidly invent just that proper set of behaviors that would satisfy the respective and combined needs of his human mechanisms and culminate in expressions of satisfactory existence? 98957 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
why not. We call him "sacral man." 98964 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
standpoint of its expression through sacral man has not appealed to modern writers. 98968 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
ego, of political criminality. For sacral man, 99017 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
Or, perhaps, a model of secular man can reveal, 99099 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
Let us see. As with sacral man, 99100 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
heavier than the fearload of religious man. 99154 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
aggressive or less vicious than religious man. 99158 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
more explainable than that of religious man. 99160 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
certain at all that the secular man has ever been really secular, 99172 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
rather than merely a disintegrated sacred man. 99173 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
disintegrated sacred man. The modern secular man was emerging in the Renaissance. 99175 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
to involute. Evidence abounds that secular man is actually a form of sacral man with Jesuitical control. 99198 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
is actually a form of sacral man with Jesuitical control. 99198 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
divine arbitrariness, of supernatural animation. Sacral man in his extreme expression sees the cosmos and all its details as sacred; 99200 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
men, of course. The extremely secular man sees everything as void of the supernatural and fully accessible to the senses; 99202 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
software?" We cannot maintain that secular man is less superstitious than sacral man. 99238 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
man is less superstitious than sacral man. 99238 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
sitting will plunge to earth. Secular man has a plethora of both types of illnesses.99244 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
amount of secularism can eradicate. Secular man can only claim that these are all piecemeal tools, 99282 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
must be a very special secular man, 99285 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
So the ideal, extreme, purely secular man will try to squeeze out of life all that is fictional, 99289 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
the supernatural and its rituals, secular man, 99297 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: SACRAL VS. SECULAR MAN -
its attention. As with other creatures, man's attention in part is a valuing of the object, 99454 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
These are the functions of words. Man is irretrievably consigned to a life crowded with them. 99553 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
as things go well with a man, 99797 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
for the parental agency. If a man is unfortunate, 99805 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
authorities and experts say: because primitive man was at the mercy of savage natural forces. 99811 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
of savage natural forces. Still, if man were to be of the same ideological cast today, 99812 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
between traditional sacral and modern secular man is that the former has not forgotten his primeval scenarios, 99819 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
years and that the lot of man is to bend with each wind. 99852 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
is not surprising that the common man is somewhat apprehensive about recalling the last drought or predicting the next one. 99861 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
case not to be influenced by Man, 99869 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
and death. We see how sacral man confronts secular problems and converts them into forms amenable to sacred solutions.99883 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
to address the moral perplexities of man. 99891 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
cannot separate a pig and a man far enough for comfort. 99933 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
scientists cannot appease their consciences and man's sacrality with any consistency.99940 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
problem has agitated all generations of man everywhere since the beginning of history and before, 100319 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
against their "meaningless" reductionism that religious man is rebelling. " 100356 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
in this method of coping with man's essential madness. " 100372 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
which addresses, not "mythical" or "rational" man, 100385 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
or economics without models of "economic man," 100449 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
fakery here; there is strict necessity; man lives in the skies as well as in his hovel; 100454 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
for specialized solutions. Under these circumstances, man lives throughout the cosmos, 100459 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
explain the harsh effects of religion. Man is wicked and is therefore punished by his gods; 100495 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
Not only does it make of man in his own eyes a wicked sinner, 100505 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
it also makes it impossible for man to govern himself; 100508 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
nor the gods themselves can prevent man's exercising his will upon them to turn along his way.100517 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
theory of homo schizo holds that man derives his religion from the same set of mechanisms whence he derives all his religion, 100519 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
that, it makes sacred and religious man impregnable to separatistic assaults upon his religion. 100531 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
to the permitted secular areas. Religious man can further declare that the elimination of religion does not eliminate evil,100536 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
showing that secularized societies and secularized man have shown no noticeable improvement in conduct denominated as good.100538 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
religion will not consign evil beyond man's ken. 100547 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 11: RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS IN SCIENCE -
not take too much more than man can be in order to define a god or demigod. 100833 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
by looking for something close to man, 100850 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
requirements of an environment similar to man's can be waived; 100851 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
on quantavolution knows how we believe man to have acquired his nature and how the world as we know it has come about. 100912 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
Thereupon he may ask: "Why does man need a god, 100914 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
cause?" Worse, "What legitimate reason has man for seeking god?" 100915 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
What can any god do for man that is good for man?" 100916 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
for man that is good for man?" 100916 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
thermodynamics. Elsewhere we have written of man's basic needs, 100943 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
Will not the gods take from man the taste of evil for which he slavers? 100950 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
gods, like certain historical gods, allow man the gift of diabolism with all that it does for his music, 100951 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
an argument, posed as, "Let every man go to hell in the own way." 100956 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
down the line of theotropy, whereas man's decline and destruction are always close at hand. 100965 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
it is now widely believed that man will do - destroy themselves and contribute to the entropy of the universe?100981 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
has been asserted in this work, man is not a rational animal in any usual sense of the term "reason," 100995 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
occupied with the future, as historical man has first sought a heavenly salvation and lately has sought salvation in the future also but in a more scientific and technological way.101035 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
scholasticism. "Tell it to a starving man." 101108 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
secularism, science can help greatly sacral man achieve the divine, 101527 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: CONCLUSION - THE DIVINE AND HUMAN -
The Key to the Sciences of Man, 101636 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 9: A NOTE ON SOURCES -
the nature of the earth and man has been in the skies. 101874 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
progression) in the 'size' of events: "man is the measure of all things" -- hardly. (101934 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
at megalithic sites may indicate ancient man had sensing devices for astronomical constructions. (102055 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
in the history of nature and man. 102066 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
have occurred in the time of man, 102987 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
for what it did to shape man and his environment. 102998 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : A NEW INTERDISCIPLINARY METHOD
his first studies of Cro-Magnon man near Les Eyzies- de-Tayec, 103166 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 2: THE BURNING OF TROY : Notes (Chapter 2: The Burning of Troy)
the legendary ties between the good- man figure Hercules and the god Ares-Mars, 103370 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 3: THE FOUNDING OF ROME -
Ark was duplicated by a young man named Micah in his home, 103684 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 4: MICAH'S ARK -
was complex; here he was a man of peace; 103727 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 4: MICAH'S ARK -
rather than by the hand of man. 103861 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE -
hour strip a land and all man-made works down to bedrock. 104124 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE : BROADER CONSIDERATIONS
be already envisioning some five hundred man-years and woman-years of reading and analysis. 104225 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 5: THE CATASTROPHIC FINALE OF THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE : A SCHEDULE OF CATASTROPHIC AGES
not provoked by the action of man. 104316 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 6: UPDATING SCHAEFFER'S DESTRUCTION INVENTORY -
races converge at the moment when man was ready for everything except reflective thought?105017 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS -
H. Bellamy in Moons, Myths and Man (1936) p. 105098 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 9: ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS : Notes (Chapter 9: Ancient Astronauts)
the receptionist clerk saying to the man: " 105873 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
and Isturitz. Does any animal besides man penetrate into these grottoes? 105962 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
hoopla (the comic strip ascendancy of man from Neanderthal to Cro-Magnon, 105974 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
cranks, as to believe that early man wanted to find the solstices and equinoxes and plot the Moon's course,106155 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
in 1919. "They even think he man may have witnessed the later developments of the rifting to which the valley owes its character. 106538 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE -
greatly prolonging the stone age of man's evolution" 7 . 106541 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE -
age and the rejection of Calaveras man in California, 106622 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE : Notes (Chapter 13: The Latecoming Olduvai Gorge)
the Evidence Relating to Auriferous Gravel Man in California," 106624 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 13: THE LATECOMING OLDUVAI GORGE : Notes (Chapter 13: The Latecoming Olduvai Gorge)
The Mercalli scale is the common man and the politician's scale. 106708 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 14: ATHENS QUAKES -
a most common symbol of prehistoric man, 107179 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 16: SANDAL-STRAPS AND SEMIOLOGY -
sure of the exact words. A man calls down for hotel service: " 107197 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 16: SANDAL-STRAPS AND SEMIOLOGY -
they are presented by one particular man in any given area, 107525 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 18: HOLY DREAMTIME IN WONGURI LAND -
evening. "On such occasions, the song man becomes the teacher of a small group of men who are of his own particular clan and linguistic group. 107592 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 18: HOLY DREAMTIME IN WONGURI LAND -
prior changes in the sciences of man and the skies. 107845 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
Fontanelle and Diderot had made of man a mechanical creature, 107846 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
after the publication of Descent of Man. ( 107855 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
to U is that it held man and nature to be forever undergoing a constant slow rate of change. 107863 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
the "soul" and the unity of man and nature. 107944 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
with his ideas of the super-man, 107958 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
of the Artist as a Young Man (1916); 108108 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
7. Charles Darwin. The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex, 108297 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
Alcan, 1898). 35. Carl G. Jung. Man and his Symbols (N. 108371 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
M. Meerloo. Along the Fourth Dimension: Man's Sense of Time and History (N. 108406 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
prior changes in the sciences of man and the skies. 108807 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
Fontanelle, and Diderot had made of man a mechanical creature, 108808 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
the publication of the Descent of Man. 108817 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
of abetting the relentless historical process: "Man is the sole animal capable of working his way out of the merely animal state." (108852 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
descent. XIV. Psychology A. Ethological view (" man is one of the smartest animals"), 109355 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
smartest animals"), etc. B. Uniqueness of man; 109357 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
animals"), etc. B. Uniqueness of man; man creates his perceived world, 109357 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : PART TWO: HOW SCIENCES COPE WITH COSMOGONY
usually a "welfare state," centralized, common-man democracy. 109572 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
behaviors begun in the everyday world. Man can only know himself, 109620 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : FALLACIES ABOUT SCIENTISTS
unknown to other ages and the man on the street; 109696 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : ALL SCIENCE IS SOCIAL SCIENCE
to be called scientific and a man a scientist it must be stipulated that they have as an important high priority preference the ambition to make discoveries about natural and human relations. 109737 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 24: THE OUTLOOK OF SCIENTISTS : THE ADMINISTRATION OF SCIENTISTS
that would appear to a reasonable man of good will to be damaging to the pretenses of scientific institutions, 109908 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 25: 'SCIENTIFIC' REPORTING -
the Enlightenment and Disillusionment of modern man. 109965 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : LIVIO CATULLUS STECCHINI
a compliment, post mortem, for a man: 109989 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : LIVIO CATULLUS STECCHINI
none owned him Such a great man, 109993 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : LIVIO CATULLUS STECCHINI
for all, attest to him, our man. 109996 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : LIVIO CATULLUS STECCHINI
claims, but freedom. He was a man without cliques; 110021 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : LIVIO CATULLUS STECCHINI
s lament of survivors. The great man was buried on Sunday morning, 110158 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY 1895-1979 1
revolution in mankind's view of man's experience. 110192 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY 1895-1979 1
knowledge from the death of a man. 110276 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY 1895-1979 1
and learn now that this prodigious man is gone, 110278 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 26: EULOGIES TO THREE QUANTAVOLUTIONARIES : IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY 1895-1979 1
human ecology. When the skies fell, man was shocked into self-awareness, 110438 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : I.
time. It seems unlikely that a man would be made a god unless people had experienced the terrible turmoil of heavenly crashes and interventions upon earth, 110573 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : IV
with social psychology, that treats of man and society. 110642 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : IV
that work is a curse upon man laid by his Fall from God's Grace is more scientifically correct than, 110663 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : IV
physical changes may have occurred in man during the catastrophes that occurred over the last 15,110678 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : V
heroes; fatal flaws; divine ambivalence to man and man to gods; 111137 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
flaws; divine ambivalence to man and man to gods; 111137 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
in two 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 -
the history and pre-history of man extensive natural changes occurred abruptly and catastrophically, 111451 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 29: I.Q.: A UNIVERSITY PROGRAM -
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
upon such an insubordinate creature as man. 111981 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : ANXIETY AND CATASTROPHISM
potentiality is present in nature and man, 112026 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : ANXIETY AND CATASTROPHISM
and fall of different theories of man and nature. 112042 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
new knowledge of what befell ancient man and the skies and earth will be useful in bringing pleasure.112184 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
answered the question of why modern man investigates the structure of the universe. "112220 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
Out of the study of animals, man, 112231 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
the social heat: historical gods, political man-gods, 112253 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
within them. Whenever the question of man's duration on Earth is brought up, 112303 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
had the wisdom of an old man 1 . 112628 KA: - - Chapter 1: AUGURY -
and beekeeper, Corycium senem, an old man from Corycus. 113424 KA: - - Chapter 2: THE ELECTRIC ORACLES -
ashes and soot. Plato refers to man's 'Titanic nature. ' 113587 KA: - - Chapter 3: DIONYSUS -
or fluid, with which the sacred man is charged just as a Leyden jar is charged with electricity; 114022 KA: - - Chapter 4: AMBER, ARK, AND EL -
holiness or magical virtue in the man can be discharged and drained away by contact with the earth,114024 KA: - - Chapter 4: AMBER, ARK, AND EL -
of Erin killed a bull. One man ate some of the flesh, 114868 KA: - - Chapter 6: SKY LINKS -
consider also the poetry of the man of Syros, 114989 KA: - - Chapter 6: SKY LINKS : LEVIATHAN.
gave birth to the Minter, half man, 115004 KA: - - Chapter 6: SKY LINKS : LEVIATHAN.
by the hand of a fit man into the wilderness: 115126 KA: - - Chapter 7: SACRIFICE : THE SACRIFICE OF GOATS.
in time of plague, a poor man was feasted for a year, 115134 KA: - - Chapter 7: SACRIFICE : THE SACRIFICE OF GOATS.
before the time of Thespis a man mounted it and spoke to the chorus. 115231 KA: - - Chapter 7: SACRIFICE : THE SACRIFICE OF GOATS.
520: Just as when a strong man with a sharp axe cuts behind the horns of an ox, 115243 KA: - - Chapter 7: SACRIFICE : MAGIC; SACRIFICE: SOME RELEVANT PASSAGES.
raw meat on them. The old man burnt them on the faggots, 115257 KA: - - Chapter 7: SACRIFICE : MAGIC; SACRIFICE: SOME RELEVANT PASSAGES.
of Sophocles the clash is between man and god; 115434 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
the action of Orestes from Apollo. Man is a puppet, 115441 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
with an opposing force (god, hero, man or woman), 115444 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
he undertakes to find the guilty man who has brought pollution. 115455 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
is himself revealed as the guilty man, 115456 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
revealed as the guilty man, a man who has murdered his father and married his mother. 115456 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE -
is in his right senses, every man is incapable of creating and singing prophetic songs). 115620 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE : POETIC INSPIRATION
daughter of Oceanus. He was half man and half horse, 115632 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE : POETIC INSPIRATION
rhapsode and actor, are the middle man, 115639 KA: - - Chapter 8: SKY AND STAGE : POETIC INSPIRATION
big tripod and cauldron from each man. 115789 KA: - - Chapter 9: TRIPOD CAULDRONS -
friend. For with whatever god a man is linked, 116050 KA: - - Chapter 10: THE EVIDENCE FROM PLUTARCH -
context, Fragment 26 is relevant: "When man dies and his eyes are extinguished, 116200 KA: - - Chapter 11: THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS -
unites in happiness with light; living man asleep resembles the dead, 116201 KA: - - Chapter 11: THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS -
he, too, has his eyes closed; man awake resembles a man asleep." 116202 KA: - - Chapter 11: THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS -
eyes closed; man awake resembles a man asleep." 116202 KA: - - Chapter 11: THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS -
justice and all things are reversed. Man's counsels are deceitful, 116220 KA: - - Chapter 11: THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS -
or tearing in pieces of a man or an animal, 116363 KA: - - Chapter 12: MYSTERY RELIGIONS -
Latin and Greek. 'Ka' is a man's double, 116955 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC -
I: 34, uses culmen of a man's head, 116969 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC -
the soul or rational part of man, 117030 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC -
storm god. STATUES AND MUMMIES A man's ka and character could be transferred to an image or statue of a man. 117061 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC : STATUES AND MUMMIES
an image or statue of a man. 117061 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC : STATUES AND MUMMIES
Qadhmi, in Hebrew, is an Eastern man, 117141 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC : STATUES AND MUMMIES
a real one, and seizing a man. 117179 KA: - - Chapter 13: 'KA', AND EGYPTIAN MAGIC : STATUES AND MUMMIES
head. Just as when a skilled man, 117673 KA: - - Chapter 15: LOOKING LIKE A GOD : EXAMPLES, FROM HOMER, OF THE USE OF OLIVE OIL
an account of Proteus, the Old Man of the Sea, 117730 KA: - - Chapter 15: LOOKING LIKE A GOD : AMBROSIA
seals, and applied ambrosia under each man's nose (line 445) to counteract the smell of the seals.117735 KA: - - Chapter 15: LOOKING LIKE A GOD : AMBROSIA
link not only between god and man, 117838 KA: - - Chapter 16: HERAKLES AND HEROES -
Pindar as not being a large man. 117904 KA: - - Chapter 16: HERAKLES AND HEROES -
helpful to blur the distinction between man and god. 117924 KA: - - Chapter 16: HERAKLES AND HEROES -
as the common essence of god, man, 117948 KA: - - Chapter 16: HERAKLES AND HEROES -
raving, a sister and companion of man-slaying Ares. 118158 KA: - - Chapter 17: BYWAYS OF ELECTRICITY : SOME PASSAGES OF INTEREST IN THE ILIAD
at the funeral of a great man. 118528 KA: - - Chapter 18: ROME AND THE ETRUSCANS : ROME, MONARCHY, AND THE GODS
logos (reason) and phronesis (understanding). A man in his right mind uses logos and phronesis to interpret the liver's message. 118875 KA: - - Chapter 19: THE TIMAEUS -
starry home in heaven. If a man eagerly pursues learning, 118898 KA: - - Chapter 19: THE TIMAEUS -
raise; Greek anassein to be king. Man-made fire on an altar, 119094 KA: - - Chapter 20: SANCTIFICATION AND RESURRECTION -
Zeus and Hera as to whether man or woman derives more pleasure from love. 119569 KA: - - Chapter 21: THE DEATH OF KINGS -
traditional view has been that a man whom blindness had made useless for ordinary work might find a niche as a court poet and survive in that way, 119589 KA: - - Chapter 21: THE DEATH OF KINGS -
Was it the suicide of a man who was tired of suffering and wished to end it? 119620 KA: - - Chapter 21: THE DEATH OF KINGS -
electrical theory and practice. ANIMALS, AND MAN'S ATTITUDE TO THEM An object in the sky with two projections was held to resemble a bull, 119686 KA: - - Chapter 22: LIVING WITH ELECTRICITY -
The centaur was a creature half man, 119729 KA: - - Chapter 22: LIVING WITH ELECTRICITY -
give his daughter Hippodameia to the man who could defeat him in a chariot race. 120023 KA: - - Chapter 22: LIVING WITH ELECTRICITY : GAMES
a temple. At other times, a man must be careful what he touched and where he stepped; 120151 KA: - - Chapter 22: LIVING WITH ELECTRICITY : PHILOSOPHY
and ate (blind folly) in modern man's drive for domination. 120261 KA: - - Chapter 22: LIVING WITH ELECTRICITY : POLITICS
Adapa Sum., name of the first man. 120606 KA: - - - GLOSSARY -
Eg. Khnum, the god that creates man; 120972 KA: - - - GLOSSARY -
ankh. light Heb. or; Gk. phos man, 120975 KA: - - - GLOSSARY -
rise, grow up. Gaon, majesty, swelling. man Gk. 121007 KA: - - - GLOSSARY -
was worn by Greek seers. Net-man Retiarius, 121044 KA: - - - GLOSSARY -
cave?); Eg. aner; cf. Gk. aner, man. 121190 KA: - - - GLOSSARY -
to the 'strong goddess'. Egyptian necht man holding a rod, 122304 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 06: ARIADNE -
name. Perhaps King Naxos was a man of more than usual size. 122617 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 09: NAXOS -
that Goliath of Gath was a man of unusual size, 122659 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 09: NAXOS -
Jacob wrestles all night with a man. 123023 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 12: CATASTROPHE, MYTH AND SKY -
all night with a man. The man touches the hollow of Jacob's thigh and puts it out of joint. 123023 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 12: CATASTROPHE, MYTH AND SKY -
rim. The Minotaur was probably a man wearing a mask, 123118 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 12: CATASTROPHE, MYTH AND SKY -
Roman forum. Pessos, Greek for a 'man' at draughts, 123170 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 12: CATASTROPHE, MYTH AND SKY -
or footprints. A hero was a man with powers so exceptional that they had to be attributed to divine parentage,123183 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 12: CATASTROPHE, MYTH AND SKY -
Minotaur. The latter would be a man wearing a mask that resembled a bull's head, 124121 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 17: ROCKS -
course. At a Roman sacrifice, the man who sacrificed the animal was the popa. 124234 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 18: RITUALS -
the inventor. Greek pessos is a 'man' at draughts. 124396 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 19: LIFE -
speculate that the Greek word anthrop-, man, 125341 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 25: RESURRECTION TECHNIQUES -
to be strong picture of a man holding a stick; 125461 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 26: REVERSALS -
the chairman of the committee the man to whose memory this volume is dedicated, 126290 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : - FOREWORD : ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
reversed his thesis and claimed that man's destiny is triggered by images which exist within the racial memory,126547 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : AMNESIA
one of the defense reactions of man. 126578 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : AMNESIA
before the present era. Because of man's aversion to knowing his past, 126623 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : ARMAGEDDON
through paroxysms. The subconscious desire of man to know his past was the basis of progress which led to the development of science. 126644 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : ARMAGEDDON
complex life forms, as different as man, 126689 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : SUPPRESSION AND REGRESSION
human race and that because of man's sinfulness, 126702 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : SUPPRESSION AND REGRESSION
Voltaire there lived in France a man whose name is probably not familiar to most of you. 126705 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : SUPPRESSION AND REGRESSION
catastrophic past is the source of man's aggression. 126741 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : PLANET GODS
the persistent urge for destruction in man, 126793 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : WAR
the victim. But Freud thought that man was reliving the regularly- repeated drama of the murder of the father by his grown-up sons which occurred in the caves of the Stone Age. 126798 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : WAR
memory of some traumatic experiences dominates man and society to the extent that the human race in his diagnosis, 126802 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : WAR
Books, 1966) pages 80-126. 9. Man and Society in Calamity (Greenwood Press, 126882 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 1: CULTURAL AMNESIA : Notes (Cultural Amnesia)
the nineteenth century discoveries of palaeolithic man. 126913 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY -
many of the early creations of man, 126917 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY -
been nothing but these frustrations, would man be what he is today? 127227 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : FEAR OVERLOAD AND FAILURE
may be correct to say that man was created by disasters. 127257 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : CATASTROPHIC FEAR
of fear-affect that has driven man to create most of his goods and evils, 127260 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : CATASTROPHIC FEAR
uncanny in the whole prehistory of man than his mnemotechnics. ' 127382 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY AS SUCH
coloring still distinguish the life of man and a people, 127386 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY AS SUCH
in us whenever we become 'serious'. Man could never do without blood, 127389 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY AS SUCH
and the slaying of the father, man achieved a (bad) conscience and the need to justify and to punish. 127403 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY AS SUCH
Earth history. We assert therefore that man's memory itself, 127409 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : THE TRAUMATIC ORIGIN OF MEMORY AS SUCH
a psychoanalyst. The ability of this man as an analyst is commonly ignored. 127759 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
as follows: A genius. A great man. 127767 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
the collective mind of present day man) could be reactivated as a result of the compulsion to repeat. 127961 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
forces to stage its own 'Weltuntergang man-made cataclysm on a near cosmic scale. 127971 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
next year, writing about the Wolfe Man case, 128017 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
warn of the danger of a man-made cataclysm, 128225 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
perhaps the finest example of a man whose extremely mad ideas eventually came to be organized and limited to a well defined and clearly circumscribed set of delusions which he was able to cope with, 128433 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
the very effort in which western man was engaged in the century before the uniformitarian dogma took sway. 128712 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
suspected or decided in regard to man," 128756 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
earth were remade because of something man did." 128757 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
gods feel thus and so, unless man does this or that, 128759 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
shall they see the Son of man coming in the clouds with great power and glory. 128912 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
original sacrifice was not of a man but of a god. 129001 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
that it was some fault in man, 129066 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 4: STRUCTURING THE APOCALYPSE: : Old and New World Variations
narrative art and the nature of man. 129204 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
are universal. If we look at man's art as Jung looked at man's dreams, 129227 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
s art as Jung looked at man's dreams, 129228 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
as Jung did with dreams, that man as a species shows a tendency to produce such archetypes in his art, 129230 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
dowager, Long withering out a young man's revenue. 129293 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
spring, summer follows winter, and no man knows season or time; 129478 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
the country proverb known, That every man should take his own, 129605 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
Jill; Nought shall go ill; The man shall have his mare again, 129609 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
quadrangle in its proper state, each man attached to the right woman, 129639 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
of nature in order to discover man's unique position in it 9 . 129718 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
reliable than it seems 13 . Although man cannot understand or affect the forces of nature which control his societal existence, 129741 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
Day to develop a metaphor relating man and nature 16 . 129777 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
stability and concord. The mind of man, 129971 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
a dream, past the wit of man to say what dream it was. 130025 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
to say what dream it was. Man is but an ass, 130026 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
successfully than Bottom. The eye of man hath not heard, 130036 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
hath not heard, the ear of man hath not seen, 130036 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
ear of man hath not seen, man's hand is not able to taste, 130037 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
was not with enticing words of man's wisdom, 130053 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
have entered into the heart of man, 130071 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
deep things of God. For what man knoweth the things of a man, 130076 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
man knoweth the things of a man, 130076 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? 130076 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
the things of God knoweth no man, 130077 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
speak, not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, 130082 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
things with spiritual. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; 130085 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
he himself is judged of no man. 130088 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
hidden wisdom is available to spiritual man, 130092 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
is attuned to deep things. Natural man, 130093 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
we watch the last act - natural man or spiritual man. 130095 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
last act - natural man or spiritual man. 130095 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
explain the ways of God to man. 130291 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
civilized world, for the territory of man. 130350 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
Antony is not a mere average man, 130855 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
by suppressed catastrophic experiences. Imagine that man, 130950 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
longs no longer for any earthly man, 131223 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
of the mind and imagination of man, 131234 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
be the sum or repository of man's noteworthy collective experiences. 131318 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
then wonder what collective defense mechanisms man might erect so that the horrible memory of the catastrophes, 131326 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
folklore are an unconscious attempt by man to sublimate repressed unbearable fact into conscious bearable illusion. 131334 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
new interpretation of what happens when man reacts to art. 131378 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
whether there are subterranean reasons why man creates art, 131389 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
as old as the mind of man. 131396 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
so The great artist ... is the man who possesses "the primordial vision," 131453 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
Jung decides that ..... the artist is "man" in a higher sense - "collective man" - and that "the work of the poet comes to meet the spiritual needs of the society in which he lives." 131460 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
man" in a higher sense - "collective man" - and that "the work of the poet comes to meet the spiritual needs of the society in which he lives." 131460 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
psychic instincts "are older than historical man ... 131494 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
outright. If we accept that collective man has produced various delusional defenses against the fear engendered by the collective trauma, 131543 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
to come close to it. But man is a rational animal, 131550 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
scientists, or academics, but as people, man, 131565 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
as people, man, frightened and neurotic man unwilling to face the truth, 131565 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
partial truth, revealing enough to keep man happy, 131588 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
keep man happy, but concealing what man should not know. 131588 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
go further, for, if we consider man in this light - striving to erect what appear to be perfectly rational intellectual disciplines, 131591 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
myth, as a product of collective man in response to our collective nature and experiences; 131634 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
events or conditions, a product of man bearing a relation to other different human products - and therefore it must be analyzed not simply by a literary approach, 131647 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
about human nature, about what constitutes man. 131668 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
gain insight into the nature of man. 131672 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
and Veliovsky) 1. See, for instance, Man and his Symbols, 131679 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Notes (Shakespeare and Veliovsky)
brought down the Deluge to punish man for his sins. 132035 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART I:
had not introduced catastrophes to punish man for his sins, 132079 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY 19TH CENTURY GEOLOGY Chapter 6: CATASTROPHISM AND UNIFORMITY : PART I:
this work removes the study of man from its present scientific, 132323 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
in a cataclysmic universe, and that man already may have experienced global collisions.132340 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
roots of these perceptions. Western, industrial man, 132343 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
extensive geological records), is the same man whose philosophy and religious tenets became bankrupt, 132345 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
When we consider that this same Man devised the atomic holocausts of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 132349 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
the proper study of mankind is man." 132364 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
his thesis of the symbiosis of man and his use of tools; 132366 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
survival potential. ... Surprises ... is what we (man) are here for. 132451 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
the godhood of humanity and challenges man to accept the responsibility. 132459 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
the conscious inhabitants of this globe, Man is awakened from his lethargy by the sound of alarm bells: 132466 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
in the eastern spiritual teachings. Eastern man has honed his consciousness as assiduously as we have developed our technology. 132478 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
into the void. "THE VOID?!" Western man declares, " 132480 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
the most terrifying prospect for material man to envision. 132481 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
of nothingness. Rational Apollonian scholarly Western man needs more than the ecstatic revelations of an Eastern mystic to reveal the nature of the cosmos. 132483 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
reaction to the confining vision of man that science imposed. 132511 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
under stand. Praise ignorance, for what man has not encountered he has not destroyed. 132529 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
moral decay and the inadequacy of man to hold up his part in the song of creation; 132557 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
in history 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
to go beyond the idea of 'man's survival' or 'the survival of the biosphere' and to draw our strength from the realization that at the heart of things is some kind of serene and ecstatic process which is actually beyond qualities and certainly beyond birth-and-death. '132600 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
perhaps not very much of the man himself. 132978 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX I ABOUT THE AUTHORS : IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY
ideas of Velikovsky and not the man himself. 133149 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX I ABOUT THE AUTHORS : WILLIAM MULLEN
this is a distinction: Not every man who has an Honourary Degree (and some have fifty Honourary Degrees) will see his work studied during 'his lifetime. 133465 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
mentioned now. Somebody once said A man of talent is one who can, 133503 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
he must follow the call. A man's name becomes great because of what he does, 133515 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
does, degrees do not make a man great. 133515 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
case. But the integrity of the man and the value of his thinking and his careful research had their effect and slowly but surely a more rational and appropriate examination and acceptance of Velikovsky and his ideas has occurred.133633 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
says so little about this remarkable man. 133637 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
Honoris Causa) in recognition of a man of intellectual vision and courage; 133649 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
of intellectual vision and courage; a man who has indeed attempted to shed a little more light on our ignorance and who has challenged and stimulated in many parts of the world, 133650 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX III ADDRESS TO THE CHANCELLOR'S DINNER -
of three made it", and the man answered: " 133743 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : APPENDIX IV ADDRESS TO THE CONVOCATION DINNER -
me more than once about a man named Dr Velikovsky who also lived in Princeton and had been victimized by the scientific establishment. 133923 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: - SCIENTISM VERSUS SCIENCE - INTRODUCTION TO THE 2ND EDITION -
new Velikovsky theories, but against the man himself. 134240 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: - SCIENTISM VERSUS SCIENCE - INTRODUCTION TO THE 1ST EDITION -
the present; tells something of the man and his works. 134281 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: - SCIENTISM VERSUS SCIENCE - INTRODUCTION TO THE 1ST EDITION -
research among the ancient records of man - records ranging from unequivocal statements in written documents, 134449 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
led him to conclude that modern man's snug little world, 134453 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
9, 1960, 'In one exciting week, man has learned more about the near reaches of the space that surrounds earth than the sum of his knowledge over the last 50 years. 135295 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
highest possible admiration for the first man to suggest that the earth is not only not the centre, 136182 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 2: AFTERMATH TO EXPOSURE - - -
order, reliability, purpose, constancy... Wherefore, that man who holds that the astounding orderliness and the incredible precision of movement of these celestial bodies, 136293 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
7 asks on what foundation does 'man build the feeling of security with which he armours himself against the dangers both of the external world and of human environment. ' 136323 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
Bring perils to the Earth, and Man's unrest. 136415 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
absolute reason and an obedience of man to absolute ethics. 136465 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
them relief: what would become of man himself, 136480 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
by natural agents observed, that no man denieth but those things which nature worketh are wrought, 136487 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
the needs of living creatures, especially man. 136564 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
and penetrating essay on 'Newton the Man, ' 136733 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
necessary to begin again, as if man had been newly placed upon the earth. 136897 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
under the name of zeal makes man believe that he has the right to torment those who do not adore with him the same celestial monarch, 137203 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
progress - all qualities that appeal to man-the-thinker if not always to man-the-animal.137408 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
the-thinker if not always to man-the-animal. 137408 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
by which the Greeks called the man who supposedly survived it and repopulated the land). 137663 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 4: CUNEIFORM ASTRONOMICAL RECORDS AND CELESTIAL INSTABILITY - - -
swear to anything. Nonetheless, every scientific man, 138876 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
anything. Nonetheless, every scientific man, every man who devotes his life sincerely to the advancement of knowledge, 138876 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
suspicion. In the same way, the man who accepts one or two scientific 'long shots' is perfectly reasonable, 138903 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
is perfectly reasonable, but when a man accepts too many of them, 138904 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
standards. Now, moving from the common man to the scientist, 139288 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
jargon of avant-garde statistics, the man material 'takes a random walk. ' 139356 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
intuition, creativeness and genius of a man. 139398 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
is difficult to achieve and hold. Man can no more live by power alone than by bread alone.139525 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
enabled him to be a 'normal' man who could still pursue tremendous hypotheses through many thousands of hours against many adversities, 139649 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
science had abandoned. Profound experiences of man's ancestors are revealed anew. 140198 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
has given us new understanding of man's nature. 140199 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
times smaller than their weight. A man of 160 lbs would experience a forward push of 5 ounces. 140296 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 6: THE SCIENTIFIC RECEPTION SYSTEM - - -
Ice Age and the Antiquity of Man') that the last glacial period ended less than 10,140527 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 7: ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF CORRECT PROGNOSIS - - -
Royal Astr. Soc. 121 6 (1960); Man's View of the Universe, 140659 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 7: ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF CORRECT PROGNOSIS - - -
and could read them; if every man were his own Assyriologist and habitually studied the Bible in the Hebrew and Septuagint versions, 140949 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: APPENDIX 2: VELIKOVSKY 'DISCREDITED': A TEXTUAL COMPARISON - - -