Psyche's Task: A Discourse Concerning the Influence of Superstition

Couverture
Cosimo, Inc., 1 mars 2007 - 200 pages
According to Frazer, superstition may have been responsible for some terrible misunderstandings and even worse misdeeds, but in lending strength to the core institutions of government, private property, marriage, and respect for human life, superstition has played an invaluable role in the increased civility of man. "Surely it is better," he asserts, "that men should do right from wrong motives than that they should do wrong with the best intentions." A treat for students of history and social anthropology, Psyche's Task is a lively, informative defense from the author of the influential The Golden Bough. Scottish anthropologist SIR JAMES GEORGE FRAZER (1854-1941) also wrote Man, God, and Immortality (1927) and Creation and Evolution in Primitive Cosmogonies (1935).
 

Table des matières

RESPECT FOR HUMAN LIFE
4
PRIVATE PROPERTY
20
MARRIAGE
46
INDEX
75
Superstition has been a prop for the Security of Human Life
111
CONCLUSION
154
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