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241 results for "sacred animal" — page 10 of 13
B_1_06 — Inanna / Ishtar — Queen of Heaven and Earth
Inanna (Sumerian: 𒀭𒈹, d.INANNA) / Ishtar (Akkadian: 𒀭𒌋𒁯, d.IŠTAR) is the most important goddess of ancient Mesopotamia — the divine personification of love, sexuality, war, and political power, identified with the planet
B_1_19 — Love and Beauty Deities: Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
Deities governing love, beauty, fertility, and sexuality appear across virtually every documented religious tradition, often combining erotic power with martial or funerary functions that modern Western categories would
B_3_19 — Mountain and Earth Spirits: Geological Guardians Across Cultures
Mountain and earth spirits — supernatural beings that inhabit, personify, or guard specific geological features — represent one of the most fundamental layers of human religious thought: the conviction that landscape is
B_3_03 — Mami Wata and Pan-African Water Spirit Traditions
This document examines Mami Wata and Pan-African Water Spirit Traditions, a topic within the Beings and Entities research area. Key areas of investigation include Overview of the Tradition, Etymology and Naming, Visual I
B_3_10 — World Tree Guardians and Cosmic Serpents
The World Tree — a colossal tree (or pillar, mountain, or vine) connecting the layers of the cosmos (typically underworld, earth, and heavens) — is one of the most widespread cosmological concepts in human mythology, app
B_3_13 — Sphinx Entities: Guardian Riddle-Keepers Beyond Giza
The Sphinx — a composite creature with a lion's body and a human (or divine) head — appears as a guardian being across multiple civilizations of the ancient world, functioning as a liminal protector stationed at threshol
L_3_07 — Behavioral Genetics: Nature and Nurture
Behavioral genetics — the scientific study of how genetic and environmental factors contribute to individual differences in behavior — has transformed our understanding of human psychology over the past half-century. Thr
Y_4_19 — Ritual-Induced Ecstasy
Ritual-induced ecstasy — altered states of consciousness produced through collective ceremonial practices including dance, chanting, drumming, fasting, pain ordeal, and rhythmic movement — is one of the oldest and most u
Y_3_13 — Visionary Art: Depicting Altered States from Hildegard to Grey
Visionary art — artistic creation inspired by, depicting, or emerging from altered states of consciousness — spans the entire history of human image-making, from Paleolithic cave paintings (whose geometric patterns David
Y_3_01 — Kundalini and Serpent Energy Traditions
Kundalini ("coiled one" in Sanskrit) describes a dormant serpent-like energy said to reside at the base of the spine, which, when "awakened" through meditation, breathwork, or spontaneous experience, rises through a cent
P_1_06 — Personal Identity and Continuity
Personal identity — the question of what makes you you over time, and under what conditions you would cease to exist — is one of philosophy's most ancient and practically urgent problems. The core puzzle is persistence:
ZE_5_19 — Environmental Ethics & Deep Ecology
Environmental ethics is the branch of philosophy examining the moral relationship between humans and the natural environment — whether non-human entities (animals, plants, ecosystems, species, the biosphere) have intrins
ZE_3_01 — Environmental Ethics and Deep Ecology
Environmental ethics examines the moral relationship between humans and the natural environment — Do non-human entities have intrinsic value? Do we have moral obligations to ecosystems, species, and future generations? T
ZE_2_11 — Liminality, Ritual Transition, and Ethics of Transformation
Liminality — from the Latin limen (threshold) — describes the ambiguous middle phase of ritual transitions where participants are "betwixt and between" established social categories. Arnold van Gennep (Les rites de passa
N_1_16 — Ancient Mystery Schools — Comparative Survey
The mystery schools (Greek: mysteria, from myein — "to close" or "to shut," referring to closed lips and closed eyes of initiates) constituted the esoteric religious tradition of the ancient Mediterranean world for over
N_1_03 — Pythagorean Brotherhood as Proto-Secret Society
Pythagoras of Samos (~570-495 BCE) was a Greek philosopher, mathematician, and mystic who founded a communal religious-philosophical society in the Greek colony of Croton (modern Calabria, southern Italy) around 530 BCE.
N_5_04 — Secret Initiatory Traditions in Indigenous America
The indigenous peoples of the Americas developed an extraordinary diversity of secret initiatory societies — ceremonial organizations with restricted membership, graded initiation, guarded esoteric knowledge, and defined
N_3_05 — Gurdjieff, the Fourth Way, and Esoteric Schools
George Ivanovich Gurdjieff (c. 1866-1949) was one of the most enigmatic and influential spiritual teachers of the 20th century, whose "Fourth Way" system proposed that ordinary human beings live in a state of mechanical
N_4_06 — African Secret Societies (Poro, Sande, Ogboni, and Initiatory Traditions)
African secret societies — more accurately described as initiatory societies or power associations — are among the most widespread and functionally important social institutions in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly in Wes
R_5_07 — Ethnobotany: Plants, People, and Traditional Knowledge
Ethnobotany — the study of the relationships between plants and people across cultures and throughout history — documents how human societies have used plants for food, medicine, shelter, textiles, tools, dyes, poisons,
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