Fetichism a Contribution to Anthropology And the History of Religion

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66.
the renewed cravings of hunger coin- pel him again to r< sume his sean h. Thus, if he would support life, he must through the day keep his eyes steadily fixed on the earth.
then the Sun is no sin h obj< i would through the day very forcibly i laiin the attention ol a man whose mind is void "I thought, and whose only ( are is to still the < ries ol hun- ger. All nature is now bathed in light ; there are no dark shadows, no i i mtrasts ; and contrast it is which enables an object to make a ve
...ry deep impression. Day with its light is a very common occurrence — it is in- deed a fact of daily experience. But suppose that the man directs his gaze toward the sun: beyond its daily traversing the heavens, no phases are observable which might readily im- press the savage mind. The Sun changes not like the Moon : those changes whirh we observe in the place of its rising, from solstice to solstice, take place so gradually, and require so long a period, that only close ob- servation can detect them at all : and for this the savage has neither the will nor the perseverance.

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