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Ontology:Q19,77

From Philosophical Research
  1. pronounced [HAS] Fools Crow (Malls 1979) 1-1-1

Core characteristics[edit]

item type
Z (wiki feature; pronounced C) 1-1-1
pronounced [P] label [string] (L)
pronounced [HAS] Fools Crow (Malls 1979) 1-1-1
E:FoolsCrow1979
QID references [Item] 1-1-1
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color swatch references [Item]
study of countable cultures
title
Fools Crow
citation style
APA
prototype notes
while industrial populations and modern ideologies can be handled flippantly to get people thinking, take the study of indigenous tribal populations seriously, as well as polytheisms with direct continuity from a long time ago to today. we can afford to be slightly less careful with really ancient polytheisms like in Egypt that don't exist any more.

Bibliographic information (Any edition)[edit]

author name string
Thomas E. Mails
inception date
1979

Bibliographic information (1980 paperback)[edit]

edition link
NW
publication date
1980
medium
paperback
page count
266
method
greatest page number
publisher
Discus
Avon Books
Doubleday & Company
ISBN
0-380-52175-X
printed in
United States

Motifs[edit]

  1. subtribe -> I have not actually heard of this before. how do subtribes form? do smaller tribes merge together?
  2. village gods in tribal populations (p. 15-16) -> the motif of distinct polytheistic gods inside particular tribes.
  3. wars between Native Americans (p. 17) -> not to be used for value judgements against anarchism. Take It Seriously. however, it's worth it to characterize the scope and numbers of these as a matter of understanding plural populations. one thing I have to wonder: did Warriors jump to conclusions about how appropriate it is to characterize these as happening all the time? I think the tribal conflicts between the cats read as something more general, a projection of European tribes. but it's worth thinking about the historical patterns
  4. "we must begin at the cradle to put a race beyond itself" / "We must begin at the cradle if we would conquer barbarism and lift a race to a height beyond itself" (Harry King, "The Indian Country", p. 27) -> the motif of United States people insisting on "reprogramming" people-groups that live in older kinds of civilizations. seems very familiar to what was said recently around the Afrikaners. people seem to not even care what form of "primitive culture" people actually have before they start trying to destroy it. there is nothing resembling the kind of effort Marxists go to to characterize different kinds of civilizations or populations before guessing what each one plausibly develops into let alone how it determines itself in that development.

Wavebuilder combinations[edit]

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forming from [Item]
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