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  1. Body, brain, and culture.Victor Turner - 1983 - Zygon 18 (3):221-245.
    Recent work in cerebral neurology should be used to fashion a new synthesis with anthropological studies. Beginning with Paul D. Madean's model of the triune brain, we explore Ralph Wendell Burhoe's question whether creative processes result from a coadaptation, perhaps in ritual itself, of genetic and cultural information. Then we examine the division of labor between right and left cerebral hemispheres and its implications for the notions of play and “ludic recombination.” Intimately related to ritual, play may function in the (...)
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  • Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism. [REVIEW]Bernard J. Bamberger - 1943 - Philosophical Review 52 (4):420-421.
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  • The myth-ritual complex: A biogenetic structural analysis.Eugene G. D'aquili - 1983 - Zygon 18 (3):247-269.
    The structuring and transformation of myth is presented as a function of a number of brain “operators.” Each operator is understood to represent specifically evolved neural tissue primarily of the neocortex of the brain. Mythmaking as well as other cognitive processes is seen as a behavior arising from the evolution and integration of certain parts of the brain. Human ceremonial ritual is likewise understood as the culmination of a long phylogenetic evolutionary process, and a neural model is presented to explain (...)
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  • Dialogue with deviance: the Hasidic ethic and the theory of social contraction.Mordechai Rotenberg - 1983 - Lanham: University Press of America.
    Mordechai Rotenberg, who is well known for his work on the pessimistic impact of Protestant ethics on the Western social sciences, presents here a systematic study derived from, and based on, Judeo-Hasidic ethics. Proceeding from the cabalistic-Hasidic concept of contraction (tzimtsum), according to which God's voluntary withdrawal into Himself to evacuate space for the world serves as a model for human behavior, Professor Rotenberg shows that it is not personal-social construction, but self- and social contraction, that explains how the "is" (...)
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  • Man is Not Alone.Milton R. Konvitz & Abraham J. Heschel - 1952 - Philosophical Review 61 (4):600.
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  • Man is not alone.Abraham Joshua Heschel - 1951 - New York,: Octagon Books.
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