The Meaning of DeathHerman Feifel |
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Page 8
... symbols . They do not come from the head at all , but from some other place , perhaps the heart ; certainly from a deep psychic level very little resembling consciousness , which is always only the top layer . That is why religious symbols ...
... symbols . They do not come from the head at all , but from some other place , perhaps the heart ; certainly from a deep psychic level very little resembling consciousness , which is always only the top layer . That is why religious symbols ...
Page 160
... symbols . It is in this latter domain that we find their imagination at work . TRADITIONAL SYMBOLS FOR DEATH Some of the traditional symbols for death are the scythe and hourglass borrowed from the god Chronos ( Time ) , the bow and ...
... symbols . It is in this latter domain that we find their imagination at work . TRADITIONAL SYMBOLS FOR DEATH Some of the traditional symbols for death are the scythe and hourglass borrowed from the god Chronos ( Time ) , the bow and ...
Page 162
... symbols borrowed from personifications of death , there had always existed — and still exist - other symbols derived from different pertinent domains . They may be listed in four groups : 1. Motifs drawn from death in other realms than ...
... symbols borrowed from personifications of death , there had always existed — and still exist - other symbols derived from different pertinent domains . They may be listed in four groups : 1. Motifs drawn from death in other realms than ...
Contents
The Soul and Death CARL G JUNG | 3 |
The Fear of Death CHARLES W WAHL | 16 |
The Eternal Now PAUL TILLICH | 30 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
absurd absurd mind accept adolescent afterlife anxiety artist attitudes toward death become beginning behavior Being-there belief bereaved Blood Sausage Burial Camus Cemetery century child clinical Cocopa coffin concept consciousness culture dead person death wishes deceased disease doctor Dry Funeral dying patient EDGAR N emotional eternal event existence existential experience expression facing of death fact fear of death feelings Freud funeral rites future grace grief Heidegger Heidegger's Hopi human illness important individual Kotas living logical meaning Memoirs of Hadrian ment mental modern art motif mourners mourning Myth of Sisyphus nature nonreligious nonreligious group normal one's pain painting past philosophical physical physician Picasso possible present problem psyche psychiatrist psychological question reality religion religious response ritual Schizophrenia sense slametan social society spirit suicide notes symbols theme thing thought tion uncon unconscious village violence wild rats wish York