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  • ...ntary self-sacrifice is going to have to rely on three strategies only: on art, on "great human values," and on the present (2). ...rely contingent necessity. History has been seeking to eliminate privative appropriation ever since the conditions which called for it ceased to exist. But the meta
    24 KB (4,133 words) - 22:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...and reveals that it is based on magic. This magic has to do with privative appropriation. It is expressed through sacrifice. Sacrifice is the archaic form of exchan ...is linked to the survival of primitive hordes in the same way as privative appropriation; both together constitute the fundamental axiom on which the history of man
    17 KB (2,781 words) - 22:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...writing, but may be expressed in other symbolic systems, such as those of art, of sign language, or of gesture. We may conceptualise a narrative work as ...rom purely oral cultures, or for the narratives of science, of history, of art, of the deaf, or indeed of everyday life.
    48 KB (7,546 words) - 13:58, 20 October 2009
  • ...nclude [[collage]], [[found footage]] film, [[music]], and [[appropriation art]]. Open source culture is one in which [[fixation]]s are made generally ava ...ry resulted from a growing tension between creative practices that involve appropriation, and therefore require access to content that is often [[copyright]]ed, and
    31 KB (4,623 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • Although popularly associated with [[art]] and [[literature]], it is also an essential part of innovation and invent ...anifested in the production of a creative work (for example, a new work of art or a scientific hypothesis) that is both ''original'' and ''useful''.
    55 KB (7,689 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • examples of rock art in the world" (Scarre, 1993, p. 45). Stanford anthropologist Klein (2002) n Davidson (1991, 1996) who made a study of cave art and prehistoric sculpture and concluded that languages can be traced back
    55 KB (8,507 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • The historic phase of privative appropriation stopped man being the demiurge he was forced to create in an ideal form and ...l that's left is industrial magnates, gangsters and hired guns, dealers in art and artillery. The adventurer and the explorer are comic-strip characters (
    69 KB (11,658 words) - 22:37, 12 December 2020
  • # Terence McKenna, interviewed on the Art Bell Show, 1997-05-22. Accessed: 2009-09-22. * Milbrath, Susan (1999). Star Gods of the Maya: Astronomy in Art, Folklore, and Calendars. The Linda Schele series in Maya and pre-Columbian
    31 KB (4,597 words) - 23:31, 12 December 2020
  • ...st as much as bourgeois societies, since separation is caused by privative appropriation; but feudal societies have the advantage over bourgeois societies of an ext ...creativity. And humour is surely the best way to express the feeling that art could no longer provide a valid solution. I'm thinking of the beginnings of
    49 KB (8,522 words) - 22:40, 12 December 2020
  • 101:6.10 Through the appropriation of the [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_196 faith of J ...l]] and to the extent that it enriches the [[concept]] of the [[moral]]. [[Art]] is only [[religious]] when it becomes [[diffused]] with [[purpose]] which
    59 KB (8,025 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • 89:1.3 Among the earliest prohibitions were restrictions on the appropriation of [[women]] and other [[property]]. As [[religion]] began to play a larger ...on]. Self-control gave man a new [[philosophy]] of life; it taught him the art of augmenting life's [[fraction]] by lowering the denominator of [[personal
    50 KB (7,363 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • and of natural potency, which is matter. [III Sent., d.2, art. 5, sol.]</blockquote> bodies. [III Sent., d. 15, art. 3, sol.]</blockquote>
    138 KB (23,048 words) - 22:30, 12 December 2020