Escape from EvilFrom the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Denial of Death, a penetrating and insightful perspective on the source of evil in our world. “A profound, nourishing book…absolutely essential to the understanding of our troubled times.” —Anais Nin “An urgent essay that bears all the marks of a final philosophical raging against the dying of the light.” —Newsweek “Brilliant and challenging…adds another bit of reason to balance destruction…It is, in the best sense of the words, both scientific and philosophical…of the highest importance.” —Los Angeles Times |
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Page 96
... enemy ; often it was a kind of disorganized , childish , almost hysterical game in which one went into rapture if he brought back a trophy or a single enemy for torture . Anyone was liable to be snatched out of his hut at daybreak , and ...
... enemy ; often it was a kind of disorganized , childish , almost hysterical game in which one went into rapture if he brought back a trophy or a single enemy for torture . Anyone was liable to be snatched out of his hut at daybreak , and ...
Page 98
... enemy . This was the start of the large - scale scapegoating that has consumed such mountains of lives down through ... enemies . In short , the oppressor and the oppressed , instead of fighting it out within the [ ancient ] city ...
... enemy . This was the start of the large - scale scapegoating that has consumed such mountains of lives down through ... enemies . In short , the oppressor and the oppressed , instead of fighting it out within the [ ancient ] city ...
Page 107
... enemy , in the form of his scalp or even his whole head or whole body skin.18 These could be worn as badges of bravery which gave prestige and social honor and inspired fear and respect . But more than that , as we saw in Chapter Two ...
... enemy , in the form of his scalp or even his whole head or whole body skin.18 These could be worn as badges of bravery which gave prestige and social honor and inspired fear and respect . But more than that , as we saw in Chapter Two ...
Contents
Ritual as Practical Technics | 6 |
Economics as Expiation | 26 |
12 | 32 |
Copyright | |
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A. M. Hocart achieve aggression already ancient animal anthropology appetite basic body Brown causa sui project Chapter Claude Lévi-Strauss continue cosmic Crowds and Power cultural death denial Denial of Death divine dynamics earth economic enemy Ernest Becker eternal evil evolution experience expiation fear feces feel force Freud give gods guilt hero system heroic victory heroism Hocart Homo Ludens human condition Ibid ideology illusion immortality individual inequality invisible Kenneth Burke kill kind king kingship leader live logical magic man's mankind Marxist means modern motives Mumford one's organism organismic Otto Rank person potlatch primitive society primitive world problem psychoanalysis psychology Rank Rank's religion religious represents ritual Rousseau sacred sacrifice scapegoating seems self-perpetuation sense shaman simple social theory spirits summed things thought tion transcend tribe trying understand universal victimage visible whole York