Found 190 posts tagged ‘symbolism’ |
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Restoring the Lost Sense –
April 15, 2018 |
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The Right Word –
December 26, 2017 |
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The Right Word –
September 10, 2017 |
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From Pure Logic by William Stanley Jevons, 1864. The text reads, "Let it be borne in mind that the letters A, B, C, &c., as well as the marks +, 0, and =, afterwards to be introduced, are in no way mysterious symbols." However, we found some rather mysterious meanings of A, B, C for our One-Letter Words: A Dictionary, and some even more mysterious meanings of &c for our book entitled Ampersand.
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Restoring the Lost Sense –
April 28, 2017 |
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The Right Word –
December 5, 2016 |
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Restoring the Lost Sense –
December 2, 2016 |
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The Codex Vaticanus explains that these ancient Mexican symbols are the twenty figures that rule over men [deer or stag, wind, rose, earthquake, eagle, vulture, water, house, skull or death, rain, dog, rabbit, flint, air, monkey, cane, grass or herb, lizard, tiger, and serpent] and that cure in a corresponding manner those who become ill or suffer pains in any part of the body. "The sign of the wind is assigned to the liver; the rose to the breast; the earthquake to the tongue; the eagle to the right arm; the vulture to the right ear; the rabbit to the left ear; the flint to the teeth; the air to the breath; the monkey to the left arm; the cane to the heart; the herb to the bowels; the lizard to the womb of women; the tiger to the left foot; the serpent to the male organ of generation, as that from which their diseases proceed in their commencement; for in this manner they consider the serpent, wherever it occurs, as the most ominous of all their signs." From the Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1889.
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I Found a Penny Today, So Here's a Thought –
October 4, 2016 |
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This is the symbol left in the crib after the Lindbergh baby was famously taken away. "There has been no genuinely convincing analytic work done on [this symbol] with respect to the Lindberg story" (Jerry Kroth, The Lindbergh Kidnapping, 2011). [Note that the three black rectangles are actually holes that were punched in the paper and are not technically part of the design.] The shaded object in the center is, of course, the "black egg" of alchemy, symbolizing the nigredo (a stage of putrefaction; the final step toward the "philosopher's stone" of enlightenment) and expressing "the precarious balance of the hermaphrodite, exalted by a [threatened] equilibrium" (Johannes Fabricius, Alchemy: The Medieval Alchemists and Their Royal Art, 1994).
This 1932 photo of the symbol is courtesy of the Boston Public Library.
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