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347 results for "SHA" — page 1 of 18
A_4_32 — Siberian & Turkic Shamanic Texts
Siberian and Turkic shamanism represents the ur-tradition from which the very concept of "shamanism" derives — the word shaman (šaman) comes from the Tungusic (Evenki) language of eastern Siberia, entering European schol
A_4_14 — Shan Hai Jing (Classic of Mountains and Seas)
The Shan Hai Jing (山海經, "Classic of Mountains and Seas") is one of the most extraordinary texts of the ancient Chinese literary corpus — an encyclopedic compendium of mythological geography, zoology, mineralogy, and cosm
U_2_22 — Shamanic & Entoptic Art
The neuropsychological model of shamanic art proposes that much of humanity's oldest visual art — from Upper Paleolithic cave paintings in Europe to San Bushman rock art in southern Africa to Aboriginal art in Australia
U_2_11 — Landscape Painting: Shanshui, Hudson River, and the Natural Sublime
Landscape painting — the artistic representation of natural scenery — is among the most culturally revealing genres in the history of art, because the way a culture depicts nature reveals its deepest assumptions about th
U_4_01 — Sacred Dance — Ritual Movement from Shamanism to Sufi Whirling
Sacred dance represents one of humanity's oldest and most widespread forms of religious expression, predating written language and formal theology. From the Sufi sema (whirling ceremony) of the Mevlevi order to the Lakot
X_1_06 — Shamanic Healing Traditions: Global Survey
Shamanic healing — the use of altered states of consciousness, ritual action, and spirit interaction for therapeutic purposes — represents humanity's oldest and most globally distributed medical tradition. Found on every
W_2_08 — Korean Shamanism (Muism / Musok)
Korean shamanism (Muism or Musok, 무속) is one of the oldest continuous spiritual traditions in East Asia, predating the introduction of Buddhism (4th century CE) and Confucianism to the Korean peninsula. Centered on mudan
W_2_10 — Hmong Cosmology, Shamanism, and the Shaman's Journey
The Hmong — a Hmong-Mien-speaking people originating in highland southern China with diaspora communities across Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, and the United States — maintain one of the most elaborate shamanic traditions sur
W_5_07 — Sami Shamanism and Circumpolar Traditions
The circumpolar world — the vast band of Arctic and subarctic territory stretching from Scandinavia across Siberia to Alaska, Canada, and Greenland — is home to indigenous peoples whose spiritual traditions represent som
W_5_03 — Mongol Tengrism and Central Asian Shamanism
Tengrism is one of the world's oldest continually practiced sky-god religions, centered on Möngke Tengri ("Eternal Blue Sky") as the supreme cosmic deity. Originating among the Turkic-Mongol peoples of the Central Asian
W_5_06 — Siberian Shamanism and the Origin of the Word 'Shaman'
Siberian shamanism is the mother tradition from which the very word "shaman" enters Western scholarship — derived from the Tungusic (Evenki) term šaman. This vast, diverse tradition spans the taiga and tundra from the Ur
C_1_17 — Shadow Archetype in Mythology
The shadow archetype — the dark, rejected, and unconscious aspect of the personality — was theorized by Carl Gustav Jung as a universal feature of the human psyche that manifests across mythological traditions as the dar
C_4_07 — Inuit and Arctic Cosmology — Sedna, Shamanic Flight, and Survival Knowledge
The Inuit, Yupik, and Aleut peoples of the Arctic — collectively known as Eskimo-Aleut or Inuit-Yupik-Unangan — developed one of humanity's most extraordinary spiritual-ecological systems in the world's harshest habitabl
C_5_18 — Sami Nordic Shamanic Traditions
The Sami (historically "Lapp," now considered pejorative) are the indigenous people of Sápmi, spanning northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and the Kola Peninsula of Russia. Their shamanic tradition, centered on the noaidi
C_3_14 — Central Asian Shamanic Traditions
Central Asian shamanism represents one of the oldest continuously practiced spiritual systems on Earth, with roots extending to at least the Neolithic period across the vast steppe, taiga, and mountain regions from the U
K_4_01 — Shamanism, Entheogens & Serpent Visions
Shamanism as a cross-cultural altered-state practice is Tier 1 anthropology (Eliade 1964, Winkelman 2010). Clinical psilocybin and DMT research is Tier 1 (Griffiths 2006/2019, Strassman 2001, Davis 2021). The consistent
INTERDOC_40 — Shapeshifting as Universal Constant: Therianthropy Across Time
[KEY FINDING] The Lion-Man (Löwenmensch) — a 31.1 cm mammoth ivory figurine excavated from Hohlenstein-Stadel cave, Swabian Jura, Germany — was carved approximately 40,000 years ago. It is the oldest known representation
B_5_02 — Shape-Shifting, Therianthropy, and Human-Animal Transformation
The belief that humans can transform into animals — and that some beings exist in hybrid human-animal forms — is one of the oldest and most widespread motifs in human culture. The famous "Lion-Man" of Hohlenstein-Stadel
B_2_23 — Shapeshifter: Transformation Mythology Across Cultures
The shapeshifter — a being that can alter its physical form, often between human and animal — is arguably the single most universal mythological motif, appearing in every documented human culture with sufficient mytholog
Y_4_03 — Shamanic Practices / Altered States Synthesis
Shamanic practices represent humanity's oldest spiritual technology, attested across every inhabited continent from at least 30,000 BCE (Upper Paleolithic cave art) to the present day. Despite vast cultural distances — g
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