A History of Human Responses to Death: Mythologies, Rituals, and EthicsE. Mellen Press, 1990 - 508 Seiten This study examines death and its impact on human thinking from a biological and historical viewpoint. It finds that fear of death is the motive behind the human need to accomplish anything. It also discusses care of the terminally ill, mercy killing, suicide, and the death penalty. |
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Seite 8
... body of the dog . During its life , the animal continually exchanges old atoms with new ones through the normal metabolic processes while a conglomerate of atoms ( constituting its body ) continues to exist as long as the dog lives ...
... body of the dog . During its life , the animal continually exchanges old atoms with new ones through the normal metabolic processes while a conglomerate of atoms ( constituting its body ) continues to exist as long as the dog lives ...
Seite 71
... body is intact . The question is , would it be possible to transplant the intact head on the intact body and save one life ? From a purely technical point of view the feat is possible . Many experiments have been made in animals over ...
... body is intact . The question is , would it be possible to transplant the intact head on the intact body and save one life ? From a purely technical point of view the feat is possible . Many experiments have been made in animals over ...
Seite 234
... body , starting also around 3000 B.C. , mummification became a characteristic Egyptian practice . The techniques varied with time . Although the first attempts may go back to the time before the First Dynasty ( 3110- 2884 B.C. ) , it is ...
... body , starting also around 3000 B.C. , mummification became a characteristic Egyptian practice . The techniques varied with time . Although the first attempts may go back to the time before the First Dynasty ( 3110- 2884 B.C. ) , it is ...
Inhalt
Man and death | 3 |
b The necessity of death The Second | 11 |
c The impossibility of death | 19 |
Urheberrecht | |
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A History of Human Responses to Death: Mythologies, Rituals, and Ethics Plinio Prioreschi Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1990 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abortion afterlife ancient animals annihilation Atman Attitudes Toward Death become belief body brain death Buddha Buddhism burial buried called cause century Christian Church committed concept concerning considered continue corpse course cremation crime D.J. Enright D.S. Brewer Davidson and W.M.S. dead Death and Existence Death and Western death penalty deceased disease doctrine dying Elizabeth Kübler-Ross energy entropy Erwin Panofsky eschatology eternal euthanasia evident example fact fear of death feeling Folklore of Ghosts funerary Herman Feifel Hinduism human Ibid individual Jacques Choron John McManners Judaism killed living Macmillan Company man's maximum life span means Middle Ages mortal murder nature Oxford pain patient person Philippe Ariès Philosophical Library Plinio Prioreschi primitive problem of death punishment Quoted reason religion religious Renaissance resurrection Roman samsara sculpture Second Law Sheol soul span spirit suffering suicide survival thou tombs tradition Translation University Press usually W.M.S. Russell Western Thought words York