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  • [https://library.getty.edu/bha '''''BHA (Bibliography of the History of Art)'''''] ...rt from the European discoveries to the present and Christian and European art in Africa, Asia, and Australia. Includes photography & contemporary media,
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  • ...ucts/ovidguide/riladb.htm#top International Repertory of the Literature of Art (RILA)]''''' ...vered from late Antiquity to the present. American art is covered from the European discoveries to the present.
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  • ...raphical, covering artists, thinkers, statesman, and reformers. A table of European ruling houses and a table showing the dates when cities and countries chang
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  • ...ps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleolithic thirty-five thousand years ago] the European blue races were already a highly blended people carrying strains of both [h ..._OF_ADAM post-Adamic period] was a [[unique]] blend of the [[vigor]] and [[art]] of the blue men with the [[creative]] [[imagination]] of the [https://nor
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  • ...and more popular following European [[colonialism]]. So-called "oriental" art emanated from a type of [[primitive]] [[fantasy]] for Western society, refl ...enres]] of this period, notably in [[music]], [[painting]], and decorative art. In music, exoticism is a genre in which the [[rhythms]], [[melodies]], or
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  • ...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iconography iconography] or [[mythological]] art, three separate [[beings]] may [[represent]] either a triad who always appe ==Indo-European theory==
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  • ...colonial period] was the era from the 1500s to the mid-1900s when several European powers (particularly, but not exclusively, Portugal, Spain, Britain, the Ne ...e_Talleyrand Charles Maurice de Talleyrand], once remarked: "Empire is the art of putting men in their place".[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonialism]
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  • [[Image:lighterstill.jpg]][[Image:Chaos-digital-art.jpg|right|frame]] ...nt "the primal emptiness, space". ''Chaos'' is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root ''ghn'' or ''ghen'' meaning "gape, be wide open": [[compare]] "chasm"
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  • In European pre-historic [[societies]], [[sculpture]]s of [[female]] figures with prono ...one breast to become better warriors. The legend was a popular motif in [[art]] during [[Greek]] and [[Roman]] antiquity and served as an antithetical ca
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  • '''Tapestry''' is a form of [[textile art]], woven on a vertical loom. It is composed of two sets of interlaced threa By the 16th century, Flanders had become the centre of European tapestry production. In the 17th century Flemish tapestries were arguably t
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  • ...achieve immortality. The two words appear to be derived from the same Indo-European form *ṇ-mṛ-to- : immortal (n- : negative prefix from which the prefix a Ambrosia is sometimes depicted in ancient art as distributed by a [[nymph]] labeled with that name. In the [https://en.wi
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  • ...nd Classes in the Wikipedia Taxonomy" (paper); (video lecture). 5th Annual European Semantic Web Conference (ESWC 2008). # Jackson, Joab. "Taxonomy’s not just design, it’s an art," Government Computer News (Washington, D.C.). September 2, 2004.
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  • ...n_Philosophy Indic] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Philosophy European philosophy], since antiquity. The [[word]] ''dialectic'' originated in [htt ...ner]] of [[demonstrating]] one's ''arête''. [[Oratory]] was taught as an [[art]] form, used to please and to [[influence]] other people via [[excellent]]
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  • ...[[progress]] of [[civilization]] and greatly advanced all [[phases]] of [[art]], [[science]], and [[social]] [[culture]]. ...tps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asia_Minor Asia Minor] and the central-eastern European lands were held by [[tribes]] that were predominantly [https://nordan.dayna
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  • :b : a department or branch of a craft, [[art]], [[business]], or manufacture; especially : one that employs a large pers ...sense of [[manufacturing]] became a key sector of production and labour in European and North American countries during the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indu
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  • ...important [[cultural]] [[influence]] on [[language]], the [[calendar]], [[art]] and [[mythology]]. The Moon's [[gravitational]] [[influence]] produces th ...nited States, and the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Space_Agency European Space Agency] have each sent lunar orbiters. These spacecraft have [[confir
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  • These themes were reiterated in the European [[Middle Ages]]. In European traditional art and folklore, the heart symbol is drawn in a stylized shape. This shape is
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  • ...umanities]] dealing with the [[language]]s, [[literature]], [[history]], [[art]], and other aspects of the ancient [[Mediterranean]] world; especially [[A ...study of Ancient Greek and Latin language and literature, Greek and Roman art and archaeology, history and philosophy. It is sometimes known as '''Greats
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  • ...iki/Middle_Ages Middle Ages], these creatures were generally depicted in [[art]] and [[literature]] as bearded and covered in hair, and often wielding clu
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  • '''Engineering''' is the [[discipline]], art, [[skill]] and [[profession]] of acquiring and applying [[scientific]], [[m ...essional Engineer, Chartered Engineer, Incorporated Engineer, Ingenieur or European Engineer. The broad discipline of engineering [[encompasses]] a range of mo
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  • ...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mespotamia Mesopotamians], who brought along their [[art]] and [[culture]] to enrich that of the [https://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ ...edents of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europe#Early_modern_period modern European civilization].
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  • ...ricide persist in numerous [[references]] and retellings, through medieval art and Shakespearean works up to present day [[fiction]]. The name Abel has been used in many European [[languages]] as both surname and first name. In [[English]], however, even
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  • ...vid]'s ‘[https://www.poetryintranslation.com/PITBR/Latin/Artoflovehome.htm Art of Loving]’). As to its popularity, the [[students]] of the [https://en.w ...langue française'' s.v. pamphlet) and subsequently passed into many other European [[languages]]; [[compare]] e.g. German ''Pamphlet'' (18th cent.), Italian '
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  • In [[law]], it is a term of [[art]] used to identify a legal classification that exists independently of othe In [[political science]], the unparalleled development of the [[European Union]] as compared to other international organizations has led to its des
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  • ...markedly [[influenced]] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_philosophy European philosophy] ever since. ...on]. Self-control gave man a new [[philosophy]] of life; it taught him the art of augmenting life's [[fraction]] by lowering the denominator of [[personal
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  • ...esire]] for self-[[expression]], has led to cultural innovations such as [[art]], [[literature]] and [[music]]. ...ic *mannaz, from a Proto-[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo_european Indo-European](PIE) root *man-, cognate to [[Sanskrit]] manu-.
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  • ...'". (Ultimately derived from the [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] root ''gnō-'', "to know".[https://www.bartleby.com/61/roots/IE177.html] Stories are an important aspect of [[culture]]. Many works of [[art]], and most works of [[literature]], tell stories; indeed, most of the [[hu
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  • ...institutes. London, Edinburgh, Budapest, and Liege — as well as many other European cities - caught up in the sixties. In the 1970s, Germany, Sweden, Switzerla ...conceptual]] principle within various [[fine art]] forms, especially [[pop art]] and [[popular culture]]. Actual works within the 'pataphysical tradition
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  • ''''Scriptorium'''' is commonly used to refer to a room in medieval European [[monasteries]] devoted to the copying of manuscripts by monastic [[scribes * Nees, Lawrence. ''Early Medieval Art''. Oxford: Oxford U Press, 2002.
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  • ...|literary]] output, and the emergence of the [[Film|motion picture]] as an art form greatly enriched philosophical subject matter. ...he [[Russian Revolution of 1917|Russian Revolution]], the near collapse of European parliamentary democracy in the 1930s and 1940s, the [[Holocaust]], the use
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  • ...out and in other ways propagate [[idea]]s. Although the field emerged from European discourses of [[Kulturgeschichte]] and [[Geistesgeschichte]], the historica The social/intellectual context in the writings of western [[European history]] includes:
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  • ...nted in the [[arts]] such as in Greek vase paintings, Indian Miniatures or European [[paintings]]. ...sness research, literary studies, translation studies, philosophy, art and art history.
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  • ...e collections of Judaica, archeological findings, and Israeli and European art. ...kefeller Archaeological Museum]], [[Ticho House]], and the Paley Center of Art.
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  • '''Drawing''' is a [[visual art]] which makes use of any number of drawing instruments to mark a two-dimens ...m has also become popular as a means of public expression via [[graffiti]] art, because of the easy availability of permanent [[markers]].
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  • 80:0.1 Although the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europe#Prehistory European blue man] did not of himself [[achieve]] a great [[cultural]] [[civilizatio ...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mespotamia Mesopotamians], who brought along their [[art]] and [[culture]] to enrich that of the [https://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
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  • European Organization Transformation Association in Switzerland New England Art Teachers Association Lincoln Center
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  • ...hard "c", pronounced as "k"), is a modern term used to describe any of the European peoples who spoke, or speak, a Celtic language. (Celtic Culture : A Histori * Laing, Lloyd and Jenifer Laing. ''Art of the Celts'', London: Thames and Hudson, 1992 ISBN 0-500-20256-7
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  • ...he subject derives from Antoine Arnauld and Pierre Nicole's Logic, or 'The Art of Thinking', better known as the ''Port-Royal Logic'', first published in === European views ===
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  • ...one/documents/corpo-diplomatico_index_en.html Holy See Press Office] the [[European Union]], and the [[Sovereign Military Order of Malta]]; 69 of the diplomati The Holy See is the only European subject of international law to have diplomatic relations with the Republic
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  • ...ns, using "real" noises, seem to point to interesting possibilities" ('The Art of Sound' (1929)). Alberto Cavalcanti uses noise as a synonym for natural s *[https://osha.europa.eu/topics/noise Noise at work] European Agency for Safety and Health at Work ([[EU-OSHA]])
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  • ...and processes become embedded. For the, culture thus includes technology, art, science, as well as moral systems. ...n of culture reflected inequalities within European societies, and between European powers and their colonies around the world. It identifies "culture" with "[
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  • ...and processes become embedded. For the, culture thus includes technology, art, science, as well as moral systems. ...n of culture reflected inequalities within European societies, and between European powers and their colonies around the world. It identifies "culture" with "[
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  • ...nishads, to [[Advaita Vedanta]], is तत् त्वं अिस "Tat Tvam Asi" (That thou art). Vedantins believe that in the end, the ultimate, formless, inconceivable === European Scholarship ===
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  • ...at least to some extent, into many psychology departments in American and European Universities. Transpersonal therapies are also included in many therapeutic ...oucovolas' paper cites Breccia (1971) as an early example of transpersonal art, and claims that at the time his article appeared, philosopher [[Ken Wilber
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  • ...e up sovereignty to a central European government, or perhaps to a central European bank? *The European Economic situation
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  • ...ements may be without significance in themselves, such as in [[ballet]] or European [[folk dance]], or have a [[gesture|gestural]] [[vocabulary]]/symbolic syst [[Choreography]] is the art of creating dances, and the person who does this is called a choreographer.
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  • The [[art]] of translation is as old as written [[literature]]. Parts of the Sumerian ...ferre," "to carry" or "to bring"). The modern Romance, Germanic and Slavic European languages have generally formed their own equivalent terms for this concept
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  • ...tems, like ''[[stare decisis]]'', ''culpa in contrahendo''<ref>In Germany, Art. 311 BGB</ref> or ''[[pacta sunt servanda]]''. ...ot of modern [[tort law]]. However, Rome’s most important contribution to European legal culture was not the enactment of well-drafted statutes, but the emerg
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  • ...ry departments, scientific laboratories, botanical gardens, observatories, art museums, marine biological stations, and ethnographical institutes. Librari *Anderson, Robert D. 2004. European Universities from the Enlightenment to 1914. New York: Oxford University Pr
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  • ...ure most responsible for bringing issues of [[sexuality]] to the center of European and North American [[consciousness]]. A medical doctor, Freud studied nervo ...s about [[art]] and [[science]] developing in the early twentieth century. Art and scientific [[research]] represented the sublimation of erotic energies
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  • ...History and Methodology, (Indiana University Press, 1988, 1992); Immanent Art: From Structure to Meaning in Traditional Oral Epic (Bloomington: Indiana U ...Indiana University Press, Bloomington and Indianapolis, 1988. ''Immanent Art'' (1991); ''Traditional Oral Epic: The Odyssey, Beowulf and the Serbo-Croat
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  • ...sidered a [[science]] with regard to its prescribed set of rules, and an [[art]] because meaning is not found in a [[mechanical]] and rigid application of ...developed his Symbolic Hermeneutics as the Mediterranean response to north European Hermeneutics. His main statement regarding the symbolic understanding of th
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  • [[Roland Benedikter]] (b. 1965) is a European academic and Professor for Cultural and Socio-Educational Sciences who has ...tists may have been influenced by integral thinkers, or developed integral art independently.
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  • Although popularly associated with [[art]] and [[literature]], it is also an essential part of innovation and invent ...ological]] root of the word in [[English language|English]] and most other European [[language]]s comes from the [[Latin]] ''creatus'', literally "to have grow
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  • ...[[progress]] of [[civilization]] and greatly advanced all [[phases]] of [[art]], [[science]], and [[social]] [[culture]]. ...tps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asia_Minor Asia Minor] and the central-eastern European lands were held by [[tribes]] that were predominantly [https://nordan.dayna
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  • *[[Art History]]: the study of changes in and social context of art. ...ml WWW-VL: History Central Catalogue] first history on the WWW, located at European University Institute
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  • The purposes and arguments in support of secularism vary widely. In European laicism, it has been argued that secularism is a movement toward modernizat *Nash, David (1992). Secularism, Art and Freedom. London: Continuum International. ISBN 0-7185-1417-3 (paperback
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  • ...ly high cost of paper there, the earliest printed mass-medium was probably European popular prints from about 1400. Although these were produced in huge numbe [[Public relations]] is the [[art]] and [[science]] of managing [[communication]] between an organization and
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  • ...mplate]] the [[inheritance]] of great accomplishments in [[philosophy]], [[art]], [[literature]], and [[political]] [[progress]]. But with all these achie ...]] on [[religious]] [[rituals]], [[education]], [[magic]], [[medicine]], [[art]], [[literature]], [[law]], [[government]], [[morals]], [[sex]] regulation,
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  • ===European Enlightenment=== # Baruss, I. (2001). The art of science: Science of the future in light of alterations of consciousness.
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  • ...metimes not. Romance is still sometimes viewed as an expressionistic, or [[art]]ful form, but within the context of "romantic love" relationships it usual ...mation itself is comparable to romance, where the [[spirituality]] of both art and egalitarian [[ideal]]s is combined with strong character and emotions.
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  • ...urished, and Hindu and Buddhist [[text]]s were first being translated into European languages. Early influential scholars included [[Friedrich Max Müller]], i ...o the cultural anthropologist of religions are rituals, beliefs, religious art, and practices of piety.
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  • ...eir own traditions of the epic and the shorter story into the field of the European novel. ...vel took another turn. The late seventeenth century saw the emergence of a European market for scandal, with French books now appearing mostly in the Netherlan
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  • ...hich had been increasing since the 15th century as a result of the [[First European colonization wave]]. The traditions of [[jurisprudence]], [[history]], [[ph ...In some ways, studying the language, culture, physiology, and artifacts of European colonies was not unlike studying the flora and fauna of those places.
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  • ...a craft or vehicle from one place to another.[1] It is also the term of [[art]] used for the specialized [[knowledge]] used by navigators to perform navi ...s are users of the system, including the United States, Japan, and several European countries. Russia uses a nearly exact system in the same frequency range, c
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  • ...ions have even more intricate cultures, including literature, professional art, architecture, organized religion, and complex customs associated with the ...e of such cultures were the original inhabitants before being displaced by European settlers, they use the term "[[First Nations]]." Generally, these people do
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  • ...atural sciences, are historically valid, so long as they are describing an art or organized body of knowledge which can be taught objectively. The use of ===European enlightenment===
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  • ...ing in...is partly you. That's that wonderful oriental expression of "Thou art that". And that, out there, is partly you. ...ood it would not stick to your ribs, like sitting down to an old-fashioned European-American style Thanksgiving dinner with the turkey and the dressing, mashed
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  • *7. Great or complete proficiency in an [[activity]], [[art]], or skill. ...work consists in its forcing the recipient to be active—to complement the art work by an effort of mind and imagination.[6]
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  • ...hman, F. (1961). Notched Cards. In R. Shaw (Ed.), The state of the library art (Volume 4, Part 1, pp. 11-55). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers, The State Univer ===European documentation===
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  • ...the widely observed phenomenon of burning that led to [[metallurgy]]- the art and science of processing ores to get metals (e.g. [[History of metallurgy ...erives from the old French ''alkemie'' from the Arabic ''al-kimia'' - "the art of transformation". The Arabs borrowed the word "kimia" from the Greeks whe
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  • ...ast (up to 90 images per second - permitting one to see the flicker of the European 50[[Hz]] TV images). Elements of the visual field are thus grouped automati *<center>"'''Vision''' is the [[art]] of seeing the invisible." - Jonathan Swift</center>
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  • ...o hold the viewpoint of the Professional Philosopher would likely answer, "European, American and Asian philosophy alone shall be called philosophy". Professio ...ation; political organization; economic organization; creative production (art, music, literature, dance, etc.) and ethos. It also involves creating a lan
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  • ...disappears from sight. Nobody seems worried that joy has been absent from European music for nearly two centuries; which says everything. Consume, consume: th ...were philosophers and wise men who explained to the worlds of science and art that suffering had to do with the collective life of men, the inevitable pr
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  • ...the titles of international organizations, as European Defence Community, European Economic Community.) ...nberra in Australia, and Brasília in Brazil. It was also common during the European colonization of the Americas to build according to a plan either on fresh g
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  • An alternate name for the main deity in the tentatively Indo-European pantheon of the [[Yazidi]], Malek Taus, is Shaitan.[https://www.avesta.org/ In [[art]] and [[literature]], Satan has been depicted in numerous ways throughout [
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  • ...minine, in μαγική τέχνη (''magike techne'', Latin ''ars magica'') "magical art." ...of [[Romanticism]] cultivated a renewed interest in exotic spiritualities. European colonialism, which put Westerners in contact with [[India]] and [[Egypt]],
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  • ...been made at 26,000 BCE, contemporaneous with the Upper Palaeolithic art of Western Europe; the Lascaux cave paintings date from 17,000 BCE). Initia For the Bushman his rock art is a unique record of altered states of consciousness, even alternate state
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  • examples of rock art in the world" (Scarre, 1993, p. 45). Stanford anthropologist Klein (2002) n Davidson (1991, 1996) who made a study of cave art and prehistoric sculpture and concluded that languages can be traced back
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  • ...erialistic]] conquest brought much of the Americas, Asia, and Africa under European control, leading to later struggles for [[independence]]. The [[Scientific ...]] and interconnected. Although this has encouraged the growth of science, art, and technology, it has also led to culture clashes, the development and us
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  • ...lessly, was the nucleus of the neurosis and the foundational source of all art, myth, religion, philosophy, therapy – indeed of all [[human]] [[culture] ...psa.org American Psychoanalytic Association] and the [https://www.efpp.org European Federation for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy], have established procedures a
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  • themselves, but usually begin their output through the art of automatic writing coupled with the ...st part of the nineteenth century passed, more and bigger wars between the European States
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  • ...and ''literary'' modes of interpretation focus on Revelation as a work of art and imagination, viewing the imagery as symbolic depictions of timeless tru
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  • ...the parts of Libya within the columns of Heracles as far as Egypt and the European continent as far as [[Tyrrhenia]], and subjected its people to slavery. The ==Art, literature and popular culture==
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  • ...great improvement in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_art Egyptian art]. ...losophic [[thought]] to its greatest [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europe European] heights.
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  • ...n the United States, and the referendum of the British people to leave the European Union. We have no comments regarding either development, except that these *The art of asking questions as we go forward
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  • ...]], such as the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudalism feudalism] of the European [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_Ages Middle Ages]. During these dark *10. Promotion of [[science]] and [[art]].
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  • ...be an easy-to-learn language for people familiar with similar, mostly Indo-European, languages. Other constructed languages strive to be more logical ("logla ...generally come to identify a collection of [[writing|text]]s or [[works of art]], which in Western culture are mainly [[prose]], both [[fiction]] and [[no
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  • ...markedly [[influenced]] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_philosophy European philosophy] ever since. ...on]. Self-control gave man a new [[philosophy]] of life; it taught him the art of augmenting life's [[fraction]] by lowering the denominator of [[personal
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  • ...eation]] of the [[physical]] being is a [[miracle]] of creation, a work of art -- exquisite in its manufacture, and delightful in its variation. That your ...d in this very unbalanced situation today in your [[culture]]. Even in the European cultures (as compared to more [[tribal]] countries), the appreciation for l
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  • ...s a school, a lyceum, a church and a square (''[[plateia]]''). The [[Trans European Footpath E4]] passes through the east end of the town. In addition to the a *[[Greek art]]
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  • # Terence McKenna, interviewed on the Art Bell Show, 1997-05-22. Accessed: 2009-09-22. ...the Société des Américanistes de Belgique with the Collaboration of Wayeb (European Association of Mayanists), Brussels, 16-17 November 2002. British Archaeolo
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  • ...[[animal]] [[ancestors]] in his [[ability]] to [[appreciate]] [[humor]], [[art]], and [[religion]]. [[Socially]], man [[exhibits]] his superiority in that ...[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selective_breeding selective breeding], an art which has made great [[progress]] since the days of [[Dalamatia]].
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  • ...Greece]. Even the making of images to the gods became more of a work in [[art]] than a matter of [[worship]]. ...heology], still forms the basis of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occident European] [[ethics]].
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  • ...ts and archeological sites are often overlooked in many North American and European universities, just as ancient "Western" and monotheistic claims are also ov Every animal portrayed and worshipped in ancient Egyptian art, writing and religion is indigenous to Africa, all the way from the predyna
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  • ...d [[work]] of certain kinds; the [[leisure]] of the [[priests]] promoted [[art]] and [[knowledge]]; the [[race]], in the end, gained much as a result of a ...ghly [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occident Occidentalized] that many non-European peoples very naturally look upon [[Christianity]] as a strange [[revelation
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  • ...hey foresaw that Bablot would become a great [[center]] of [[commerce]], [[art]], and [[manufacture]]. ...tential]] which later blossomed into [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europe European civilization].
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  • to the European world. His pre-eminent status is due to his exceptional philosophical systematic investigations exerted on European thinkers until the early 1600s.27 He
    138 KB (23,048 words) - 22:30, 12 December 2020
  • ...[[India]]n, [[Persian Empire|Persia]]n, [[Greece|Greek]], [[Arab]]ic and [[European]] astronomers, to record the motion of planet [[Earth]]. Newton was able to * [[William I. B. Beveridge|Beveridge, William I. B.]], ''The Art of Scientific Investigation'', Vintage/Alfred A. Knopf, 1957.
    54 KB (7,840 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...ies within which a composition had to move in order to correspond with the European concept of what music was. In contrast, none of the systems projected in th ...y were aimed primarily at training continuo players in the improvisational art of thoroughbass realization, while the greatest thoroughbass treatise of th
    125 KB (19,232 words) - 22:31, 12 December 2020
  • ...is affiliated with other blueblood organizations, mostly originating from European roots, but its goals and objectives are not aligned to the Incunabula.” ...American. They are global forces – albeit with dominance from American and European interests, but they’re not party affiliations like democrats and republic
    119 KB (20,243 words) - 22:13, 21 January 2010
  • ...n as Charles, the European is Charlemont. Babs, you are known as Ruby, the European is Ruben. Your names are not [[male]] or [[female]] as you know it. The [[art]] of [[conversation]], of teaching in this [[method]], has long past. It is
    156 KB (26,965 words) - 22:56, 12 December 2020