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animism |
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animismIn anthropology, the belief that everything, whether animate or inanimate, possesses a soul or spirit. It is a fundamental system of belief in certain religions, particularly those of some pre-industrial societies. Linked with this is the worship of natural objects such as stones and trees, thought to harbour spirits (naturism); fetishism; and ancestor worship. In psychology and physiology, animism is the view of human personality that attributes human life and behaviour to a force distinct from matter. In developmental psychology, an animistic stage in the early thought and speech of the child has been described, notably by Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget. In philosophy, the view that in all things consciousness or something mindlike exists. In religious theory, the conception of a spiritual reality behind the material one: for example, beliefs in the soul as a shadowy duplicate of the body capable of independent activity, both in life and death.
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But O'Toole suggests that Johnson's bond with the Indians stemmed from a shared "ancient animist religion" predating Christianity--a faith of "sacred trees" and "holy wells," which Johnson was supposedly familiar with in Ireland. According to Jean Nouvel, the garden is meant to function as a sanctuary, designed as a nonlinear, organic space, in order to suggest the "riotous nature of the non-Western and animist world" and to function as the first of several spaces of acclimatization as the visitor starts on this journey from familiarity to otherness. Long before the current wave of genocidal attacks by Arab militiamen against black villages ravaged Sudan's Darfur region, the nation suffered through decades of civil wars between a Muslim military regime in the north and Christian and animist rebels in the south. |
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