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单词 animism
释义

animismn.

Brit. /ˈanᵻmɪz(ə)m/, U.S. /ˈænəˌmɪzəm/
Origin: A borrowing from Latin, combined with an English element; probably modelled on a French lexical item. Etymons: Latin anima , -ism suffix.
Etymology: < classical Latin anima life, soul (see anima n.) + -ism suffix, probably after French animisme (1781 in sense 1; 1881 in sense 2); use in Latin by Stahl has not been traced. Compare earlier animist n.
1. Philosophy. Any of various theories postulating that an animating principle, as distinct from physical processes (chemical, mechanical, etc.), directs the energy that moves living beings and governs their growth and evolution; = vitalism n.An influential version was propounded by the German chemist and physician Georg Ernst Stahl (1660–1734) and enjoyed a short-lived revival through the writings of the French philosopher Francisque Bouillier (1813–99).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > pantheism > [noun] > Stahlian animism
animism1832
Stahlianism1842
Stahlism1891
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > soul > doctrines concerning the soul > [noun] > animism
animism1832
1832 Edinb. Rev. 55 472 Discussing the Animism of Stahl.
1864 Sat. Rev. 10 Dec. 726/1 All spiritual belief came to be laughed at... There was no more account of Stahl and ‘animism’. Nothing but sheer materialism remained.
1871 E. B. Tylor Primitive Culture I. xi. 384 I purpose here, under the name of Animism, to investigate the deep-lying doctrine of Spiritual Beings, which embodies the very essence of Spiritualistic as opposed to Materialistic philosophy... The sense of Spiritualism in..the general doctrine of spiritual beings, is here given to Animism.
1901 M. Foster Lect. Hist. Physiol. 173 He [sc. Stahl] thus stands forth at the close of the seventeenth century as the founder of ‘animism’, which doctrine..maintained itself in many minds through the two succeeding centuries, and exists at the present day.
1941 B. J. Stern Society & Med. Progress i. 28 At that time the ‘animism’ of Stahl,..the ‘iatrochemical’ and ‘iatro-physical’ and ‘Old Vienna’ schools were popular in different medical circles.
2002 J. H. Zammito Kant, Herder & Birth Anthropol. vi. 233 The animism of Stahl is one of the linchpins for an effective understanding of what was taking place in the life sciences in the late eighteenth century.
2004 tr. A. Lalande in N. Gross & R. A. Jones Durkheim's Philos. Lect. lxxii. 286 More recently,..animism has been revived with more moderation and good sense by Francisque Bouiller in a book titled The Vital Principle and the Thinking Soul.
2. The attribution of life and personality (and sometimes a soul) to inanimate objects and natural phenomena; = animatism n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > pantheism > [noun] > animism
animism1866
the world > existence and causation > existence > intrinsicality or inherence > [noun] > a property, quality, or attribute > attribution of a character or quality
imposition1532
repute1539
reputationc1555
ascription1600
adscription1604
reference1612
attributinga1631
attribution1651
assignment1690
animism1866
animatism1899
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > soul > doctrines concerning the soul > [noun] > animism > attribution of living soul to inanimate object
psychism1890
animism1999
1866 Fortn. Rev. 15 Aug. 84 The theory which endows the phenomena of nature with personal life might be conveniently called Animism.
1871 E. B. Tylor Primitive Culture I. 45 The animism of the ruder tribes of India.
1877 J. W. Dawson Origin of World i. 15 Polytheism..takes very largely the form of animism.
1941 A. C. Bouquet Compar. Relig. ii. 21 Primitive animism may be extinct in Britain,..but it is very much alive in parts of Assam, Borneo, and Polynesia.
1973 Jrnl. Genetic Psychol. 123 219 Piaget..observed that many preadolescent children tend to ascribe life and consciousness to inert objects, a phenomenon that he called ‘animism’.
1999 Piecework Nov.–Dec. 23 Their folk religion was based on animism or the attribution of a spirit or conscious life to material forms.
3. Spiritualism and Philosophy. Belief in the existence of a spiritual world, and of soul or spirit apart from matter; spiritualism as opposed to materialism.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > [noun] > belief in
spiritualism1749
animism1869
1869 Appleton's Jrnl. 31 July 567/1 Animism is the doctrine of all men who believe in active spiritual beings; it is essentially the antagonist of materialism.
1880 J. Rae in Contemp. Rev. Oct. 615 The universality of what Mr. Tylor calls Animism, the belief in spiritual and unseen agencies.
1900 Folk-lore June 165 Animism..signifies ‘the belief in the existence of Spiritual Beings’, that is to say, of ‘spirits’ in the wide sense that includes ‘souls’.
1931 G. F. Stout Mind & Matter vi. 112 An original animism which the materialist..must regard as illusory.
1967 Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 113 807/1 This new view of neuropsychology..bridges the gap between animism and materialism and transcends both.
1993 T. Conley tr. G. Deleuze Fold (2006) viii. 138 A double operation of transcendental actualization and realization (animism and materialism).
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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n.1832
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