The Myth of the Machine: Technics and human developmentFor contents, see Author Catalog. |
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Page 27
... brain that first brought it into existence . At the animal level , brain and mind are virtu- ally one , and over a large portion of man's own existence they remain almost undistinguishable - though , be it noted , much was known about ...
... brain that first brought it into existence . At the animal level , brain and mind are virtu- ally one , and over a large portion of man's own existence they remain almost undistinguishable - though , be it noted , much was known about ...
Page 28
... brain . The mind could not come into existence without the active assistance of the brain , or indeed , without the whole organism and the environing world . Yet once the mind created , out of its overflow of images and sounds , a ...
... brain . The mind could not come into existence without the active assistance of the brain , or indeed , without the whole organism and the environing world . Yet once the mind created , out of its overflow of images and sounds , a ...
Page 43
... brain . Even when the brain is not called upon for effort , the electro - encephalograph indicates that this organ is swept by electric impulses that suggest some underlying mental functioning . This predisposition holds , as the ...
... brain . Even when the brain is not called upon for effort , the electro - encephalograph indicates that this organ is swept by electric impulses that suggest some underlying mental functioning . This predisposition holds , as the ...
Contents
PROLOGUE | 3 |
THE MINDFULNESS OF MAN | 14 |
IN THE DREAMTIME LONG AGO | 48 |
Copyright | |
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abstract achieved activities agriculture ancient animal anxiety Aurignacian became beginning Bertrand Gille brain Bronze Age bureaucracy Çatal Hüyük cave cave paintings century cities civilization collective command complex consciousness creature cultivation daily destruction divine domestication dream earliest economic effective effort Egypt Egyptian environment established esthetic evidence existence fact functions gods human machine hunter hunting images institution interpretation king kingship Kurt Goldstein labor language later Lower Egypt Magdalenian magic Marduk means megamachine ment merely mesolithic Mesopotamia military mind mode modern myth nature neolithic Oakes Ames observation once operations organization original paleolithic performed physical plants play possible practice primitive production pyramid of Djoser rational religion ritual sacred sacrifice Sargon of Akkad sexual significant social speech stone Sumer Sumerian survival symbolic technical thousand tion took tool-making traits turn village watermill weapons whole words York