登陆注册
36114400000036

第36章 THE MENTAL CONDITION OF SAVAGES--CONFUSION WITH NA

It is not, therefore, too much to say that, according to the view of the Indians, other animals differ from men only in bodily form and in their various degrees of strength; in spirit they do not differ at all." The Indian's notion of the life of plants and stones is on the same level of unreason, as we moderns reckon reason. He believes in the spirits of rocks and stones, undeterred by the absence of motion in these objects. "Not only many rocks, but also many waterfalls, streams, and indeed material objects of every sort, are supposed each to consist of a body and a spirit, as does man." It is not our business to ask here how men came by the belief in universal animation. That belief is gradually withdrawn, distinctions are gradually introduced, as civilisation and knowledge advance. It is enough for us if the failure to draw a hard and fast line between man and beasts, stones and plants, be practically universal among savages, and if it gradually disappears before the fuller knowledge of civilisation. The report which Mr.

Im Thurn brings from the Indians of Guiana is confirmed by what Schoolcraft says of the Algonkin races of the northern part of the continent. "The belief of the narrators and listeners in every wild and improbable thing told helps wonderfully in the original stories, in joining all parts together. The Indian believes that the whole visible and invisible creation is animated. . . . To make the matter worse, these tribes believe that animals of the lowest as well as highest class in the chain of creation are alike endowed with reasoning powers and faculties. As a natural conclusion they endow birds, beasts and all other animals with souls." As an example of the ease with which the savage recognises consciousness and voluntary motion even in stones, may be cited Kohl's account of the beliefs of the Objibeways. Nearly every Indian has discovered, he says, an object in which he places special confidence, and to which he sacrifices more zealously than to the Great Spirit. The "hope" of Otamigan (a companion of the traveller)was a rock, which once advanced to meet him, swayed, bowed and went back again. Another Indian revered a Canadian larch, "because he once heard a very remarkable rustling in its branches". It thus appears that while the savage has a general kind of sense that inanimate things are animated, he is a good deal impressed by their conduct when he thinks that they actually display their animation.

In the same way a devout modern spiritualist probably regards with more reverence a table which he has seen dancing and heard rapping than a table at which he has only dined. Another general statement of failure to draw the line between men and the irrational creation is found in the old Jesuit missionary Le Jeune's Relations de la Nouvelle France. "Les sauvages se persuadent que non seulement les hommes et les autres animaux, mais aussi que toutes les autres choses sont animees." Again: "Ils tiennent les poissons raisonnables, comme aussi les cerfs". In the Solomon Islands, Mr.

Romilly sailed with an old chief who used violent language to the waves when they threatened to dash over the boat, and "old Takki's exhortations were successful". Waitz discovers the same attitude towards the animals among the negroes. Man, in their opinion, is by no means a separate sort of person on the summit of nature and high above the beasts; these he rather regards as dark and enigmatic beings, whose life is full of mystery, and which he therefore considers now as his inferiors, now as his superiors. Acollection of evidence as to the savage failure to discriminate between human and non-human, animate and inanimate, has been brought together by Sir John Lubbock.

Primitive Culture, i. 167-169.

Among the Indians of Guiana (1883), p. 350.

Op. Cit., 355.

Schoolcraft, Algic Researches, i. 41.

Kohl, Wanderings Round Lake Superior, pp. 58, 59; Muller, Amerikan Urrelig., pp. 62-67.

1636, p. 109.

Western Pacific, p. 84.

Anthropologie der Natur-Volker, ii. 177.

Origin of Civilisation, p. 33. A number of examples of this mental attitude among the Bushmen will be found in chap. v., postea.

To a race accustomed like ourselves to arrange and classify, to people familiar from childhood and its games with "vegetable, animal and mineral," a condition of mind in which no such distinctions are drawn, any more than they are drawn in Greek or Brahmanic myths, must naturally seem like what Mr. Max Muller calls "temporary insanity". The imagination of the savage has been defined by Mr. Tylor as "midway between the conditions of a healthy, prosaic, modern citizen, and of a raving fanatic, or of a patient in a fever-ward". If any relics of such imagination survive in civilised mythology, they will very closely resemble the productions of a once universal "temporary insanity". Let it be granted, then, that "to the lower tribes of man, sun and stars, trees and rivers, winds and clouds, become personal, animate creatures, leading lives conformed to human or animal analogies, and performing their special functions in the universe with the aid of limbs like beasts, or of artificial instruments like men; or that what men's eyes behold is but the instrument to be used or the material to be shaped, while behind it there stands some prodigious but yet half-human creature, who grasps it with his hands or blows it with his breath. The basis on which such ideas as these are built is not to be narrowed down to poetic fancy and transformed metaphor. They rest upon a broad philosophy of nature; early and crude, indeed, but thoughtful, consistent, and quite really and seriously meant."

Primtive Culture, i. 285.

For the sake of illustration, some minor examples must next be given of this confusion between man and other things in the world, which will presently be illustrated by the testimony of a powerful and long diffused set of institutions.

同类推荐
  • 台湾文献清史列传选

    台湾文献清史列传选

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 漱玉词

    漱玉词

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说蓱沙王五愿经

    佛说蓱沙王五愿经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 翠虚篇

    翠虚篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大乘二十颂论

    大乘二十颂论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 少年游

    少年游

    甫跃辉,1984年生,云南保山施甸县人,复旦大学首届文学写作专业小说方向研究生毕业,师从作家王安忆。在《人民文学》《大家》《花城》《中国作家》《青年文学》《上海文学》《长城》等文学期刊发表中国短篇小说。获得2009年度“中环”杯《上海文学》短篇小说新人奖。
  • 暮夜繁星北极光

    暮夜繁星北极光

    寒夜漫漫,繁星闪耀,冰心溶动,跨越千山万水的追爱!穆倩兮的未婚夫落海失踪,苦寻半年无果。 再见时,他已成她人未婚夫。 霍亦霆不顾一切,追爱穆倩兮。 “倩兮,做我女朋友!” “嗯!” 两人心心相惜,突破万难迎接美好生活之时,霍亦霆惨遭大哥霍锦逸陷害,身陷囹圄。 生死归来,霍亦霆满心期盼 "倩兮,我回来了!” 穆倩兮却含泪转身, “对不起,亦霆,我结婚了!”
  • 三国之蝎龙太尉

    三国之蝎龙太尉

    汉末!便如一汪即将沸腾的深潭,黄巾祸乱天下、内侍糜烂宫闱、军阀割据四方,更甚至,无数隐藏在历史黑暗深处的门派宗室蠢蠢欲动,假借仙人之名四处蛊惑天下。千万人中所出唯一的英豪,方能冠以‘龙’之名,而这个时代,却诞生出了华夏千年中最多的龙!鳞爪牙角,翻云覆海!吾等要让这天下诸国,因吾等惊怖!吾等要让这世间群王!因吾等战栗!吾等要让这名为苍穹的蓝色石子!再也绊不了吾的脚!!
  • 初爱

    初爱

    龙连冽,他是万人爱戴的君王;龙连贺,他是一个无心的王爷;龙碧影,他是一个高高在上的太子。蓝拉,她是一个平凡的打工一族,爱情,她要的是平淡而专一,可是谁能给?
  • 逆境中的政策制定

    逆境中的政策制定

    《逆境中的政策制定》出版于1986年,我们是根据原作者提供的1988年平装本译出的。我社请原作者、译者进一步修改后再次公开出版。作者在本书中总括回答了五个方面的问题:(1)对逆境进行考查的方法论。(2)把高质量的政策制定作为应付逆境的重要手段。(3)逆境中政策制定的原则。(4)逆境中政策制定的素质要求和必要条件。(5)政策制定系统和统治方式改进与重建的方法论。在本书的末尾作者还向各国高层决策者提出了九点建议,使得本书的主题能得到具体的实现。作者在本书中所阐明的逆境中政策制定的方法论,以及对政策制定系统重建的方法论对我国是有现实意义的。
  • 腹黑女的爱情大作战

    腹黑女的爱情大作战

    被家人宠的不知天高地厚的混小子江佐佑和老爸对抗选择逃家,巧遇邻家花美女,说到这个花美女,额……江佐佑第一次进到邻居家的时候,就被季熙儿顽强的生命力所折服了,这个女人是如何在这么恶劣的环境中生存下来的。对声音格外敏感的典型宅女季熙儿在远离城市喧闹的郊区租了一间小窝,心想,这下总能安静了。可天偏偏不随人愿,隔壁住进了一个专门制造噪音的小子,那个小子还砸了隔开两家的小门,说要一起住,生活是有所改变。不过……我季熙儿发誓!一定要让那个臭小子跪在我的帆布鞋下连声求饶!我江佐佑发誓!一定要让那个死女人趴在我的运动鞋下痛哭流涕!第一次不愉快的见面就注定了他们两个人势不两立的爱情追逐战即将
  • 拯救反派大佬们

    拯救反派大佬们

    反派大佬们和男女主的争斗从未停止,但反派终究会输。一无所有后,大佬们以同归于尽的方式结束恩怨。于是崽崽出现了,本该炮灰的崽崽被天道所救活,用爱感化各路大佬们。ps:亲情向日常,爸爸就是爸爸,哥哥就是哥哥,不是骨科,就是亲人之间爱的日常。霸总爸爸ing
  • 厚黑教主集大成之作:宗吾臆谈

    厚黑教主集大成之作:宗吾臆谈

    旧中国的政治,人人皆知其腐败;旧中国的社会,人人皆知其黑暗。然而,若问其究竟如何腐败?究音如何黑暗?其原因如何?手段如何?结果又如何?很多人便只知其然,而不知其所以然。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 倾城流年谁执手

    倾城流年谁执手

    每一世的轮回,每一世的相遇,每一世的相爱,最后一世的轮回,他们再次相遇,忆起了几世的记忆,几世的虐恋爱情,使最后一世的他们颤抖,同时,他们也期待着他们十世的记忆