The Myth of the Machine: Technics and human developmentFor contents, see Author Catalog. |
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Page 17
... creature was a cannibal . Possibly he was . But all we actually know is that the bones of unidentifiable humanoid creatures were cracked open , under special conditions that caused them to be preserved . Apart from marks left by blows ...
... creature was a cannibal . Possibly he was . But all we actually know is that the bones of unidentifiable humanoid creatures were cracked open , under special conditions that caused them to be preserved . Apart from marks left by blows ...
Page 99
... creature with a meager brain and inadequate teeth for chewing raw flesh could or did do the same thing . Is not the answer to this that early man lived mainly by his wits ? At the beginning ' braininess ' stood him in better stead than ...
... creature with a meager brain and inadequate teeth for chewing raw flesh could or did do the same thing . Is not the answer to this that early man lived mainly by his wits ? At the beginning ' braininess ' stood him in better stead than ...
Page 118
... creature : such a knowledge as that which , embodied in the drawings illustrating Vesalius , preceded the advances of surgery and medicine in our own age . One finds a similar magic ritual , Sollas pointed out , among the Ojibway ...
... creature : such a knowledge as that which , embodied in the drawings illustrating Vesalius , preceded the advances of surgery and medicine in our own age . One finds a similar magic ritual , Sollas pointed out , among the Ojibway ...
Contents
PROLOGUE | 3 |
THE MINDFULNESS OF MAN | 14 |
IN THE DREAMTIME LONG AGO | 48 |
Copyright | |
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abstract achieved activities agriculture ancestors ancient animal Aurignacian became beginning Benedictine Bertrand Gille brain Bushmen Çatal Hüyük cave cave paintings century cities civilization command complex consciousness cosmic creature cultivation domestication dream earliest early man's economy economy of abundance effective effort Egypt Egyptian environment established esthetic evidence existence fact functions gods Homo sapiens human development hunter hunting images increase institution interpretation Iron Age king labor language later Leonardo machine Magdalenian magic means megamachine ment merely mesolithic Mesopotamia military mind mode modern myth nature neolithic Oakes Ames observation once organization original paintings paleolithic paleolithic art performed physical plants play possible practice primitive production rational religion ritual sacred sacrifice sexual significant social species speech stone Sumer Sumerian survival symbolic technical Technics and Civilization thousand tion tool-making traits village watermill weapons whole words York