Yet though magic is thus found to fuse and amalgamate with religion in many ages and in many lands, there are some grounds for thinking that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone for the satisfaction of... Folklore - 365. oldalSzerkesztette: - 1904Teljes nézet - Információ erről a könyvről
| James George Frazer - 1900 - 510 oldal
...tiffin J'opii/airet dc la Gasccjtc (Agen, si/q. ; D. Monnier, Tratiitiom />'/*«• iSSj), p. 16 sy. and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings. In the first place a consideration of the fundamental notions of magic and religion may incline us... | |
| Folklore Society (Great Britain) - 1904 - 588 oldal
...object often belong to it as the abode of a spirit. Spirits are indeed often the agents of magic. It is hardly too much to say that there is no magical...merely the idee mire of magic ; it is also the idee mbre of religion. In other words magic and religion are not opposed to one another as Dr. Frazer would... | |
| William Isaac Thomas - 1909 - 956 oldal
...ages and in many lands, there are some grounds for thinking that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings. In the first place a consideration of the fundamental notions of magic and religion may incline us... | |
| Robert Ranulph Marett - 1910 - 36 oldal
...simultaneously;5 though Dr. Frazer discovers grounds for thinking ' that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings '.6 Now it may perhaps be granted that a certain masterfulness is inseparable from the 1 The Golden... | |
| Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve, Charles William Emil Miller, Benjamin Dean Meritt, Tenney Frank, Harold Fredrik Cherniss, Henry Thompson Rowell - 1912 - 620 oldal
...ages and in many lands, there are some grounds for thinking that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings." JG Frazer, The Golden Bough (1911) I, p. 233 ; cf., pp. 234-235 and p. 235, n. ; " La magie sympathique... | |
| Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve, Charles William Emil Miller, Benjamin Dean Meritt, Tenney Frank, Harold Fredrik Cherniss, Henry Thompson Rowell - 1912 - 662 oldal
...ages and in many lands, there are some grounds for thinking that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings." JG Frazer, The Golden Bough (1911) I, p. 233 ; cf., pp. 234-235 and p. 235, n. ; " La magie sympathique... | |
| Robert Ranulph Marett - 1914 - 296 oldal
...simultaneously; 3 though Dr Frazer discovers grounds for thinking " that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings." 4 Now it may perhaps be granted that a certain masterfulness is inseparable from the attitude of one... | |
| Maurice Arthur Canney - 1921 - 416 oldal
...many ages and in many lands, there are reasons for thinking that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone for the satisfaction of his higher cravings. " In the first place a consideration of the fundamental notions of magic and religion... | |
| Alexander Goldenweiser - 1922 - 466 oldal
...runs Frazer's argument, "there are some grounds for thinking that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings. In the first place a consideration of the fundamental notions of magic and religion may incline, us... | |
| James George Frazer - 1927 - 468 oldal
...ages and in many lands, there are some grounds for thinking that this fusion is not primitive, and that there was a time when man trusted to magic alone...wants as transcended his immediate animal cravings. In the first place, a consideration of the fundamental notions of magic and religion may incline us... | |
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