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Primitive Man as Philosopher
Primitive Man as Philosopher
Author: Paul Radin
A classic of anthropology, this volume takes readers directly into an array of aboriginal cultures--Winnebago, Oglala Sioux, Maori, Banda, Batak, the Buin of Melanesia, Tahitian and Hawaiian, Zuni, and Ewe--to explore their belief systems. It examines the conditioning of thought that each society practices upon its members and the freedom of ind...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780486424958
ISBN-10: 0486424952
Publication Date: 11/13/2002
Pages: 512
Edition: 2nd Rev
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 1

4 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Dover Publications
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
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canadianeh avatar reviewed Primitive Man as Philosopher on + 242 more book reviews
From germ of life sprang thought,
And God's own medium came:
Then bird and bloom; and life in space
Produced the worlds of night. - Maori lament

The best part of this book for me was the chapters of poems from non-Christian cultures: Maori, Ojibwa, Hawaiian, and so on. Also the proverbs and expressions collected from civiliations of the Masai, Maori, Samoan, and so on. This book was first published in 1927 and you have to forgive the use of the word "primitive", which was part of the European prejudice of that time. What the author has actually collected is more like evidence of sophisticated belief systems of non-European cultures: world creation and their origins, their belief in the sacredness of life, and their views of themselves in the universe - most of which non-Christians call "mythology". It's a pre-Joseph Campbell drawing together of diverse symbols and universal belief.


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