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00:00:04
Potapenko
00:00:05
will be, well, Evgeniy is my guest today, a
00:00:08
stranger to the professor and
00:00:11
literary critic, well, what does it
00:00:15
mean or what is the meaning or
00:00:17
jewelry? Let's talk today about jewelry
00:00:20
and what is jewelry, what can be
00:00:23
classified as jewelry, gold-diamonds
00:00:25
or lines, just tattoos that
00:00:28
decorations also play the same role
00:00:31
because now tattoos, according to experts,
00:00:34
have become a form of art that is just
00:00:37
drawing on the body, and many functions that have already been lost
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that came to us from the
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primitive society of tattoos because
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they say that the birthplace of tattoos is generally
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Mesopotamia,
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I will name some books that can
00:00:53
to be interesting,
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that is, this is the Sumerian-Akkadian sewage disposal in
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the courtyard, something is where the Bible was born,
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this is one of the most ancient civilizations, only
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three were this Mesopotamia, the Tiger and the Euphrates,
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this is the Indus River, and this is the Nile, Egypt, it is from
00:01:12
these three ancient civilizations that
00:01:15
our concept of civilization and some
00:01:18
scientists are
00:01:20
subject to the so-called Panova Vela
00:01:22
nismo, I believe that Babylon,
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that is, this Sumerian cass of calcium,
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was born absolutely everything,
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according to Arab historians,
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it was there in the Sumerian-Akkadian
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civilization 2 speeches that the tattoo originated,
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that is, it is as ancient as but
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the truth is said even in in the primitive
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society of widows, the civilized period
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already existed and it goes on par
00:01:52
with jewelry,
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here we must immediately understand
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that everything that concerns modernity, everything
00:02:02
that concerns ours is logical
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or about the logical behavior of jewelry,
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tattoos, among the tsatski-petski, that’s all
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is not logic because it does not
00:02:18
save us from the cold from thirst from hunger,
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it performs only this
00:02:24
logical function and everything that concerns
00:02:27
this is nonsense, it is about lobbying, this is in
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general with my heritage of
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primitive thinking and there are also
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studies, I will name the books they will call the
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sky during our conversation, where
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to emphasize this information only on
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Wikipedia and not only on forums, everything
00:02:47
is possible, I have one friend on
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only on forums, I think that if she
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read it, she knows everything about the
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Bolshevik approach, he I knew a worker, he did
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n’t even understand the ABCs, but he
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heard Lenin and he knew everything, she read
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Wikipedia, she knew everything, like that worker, it was so
00:03:05
clear that
00:03:09
people had been working on this for decades, it was terribly
00:03:13
interesting, especially in France in the
00:03:16
60s, when such
00:03:19
ethnologists and ethnographers as Levi-Bruhl
00:03:22
Levi-Strauss were people of global importance.
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were direct
00:03:26
contemporaries of the
00:03:28
postmodernist paradigm that arose
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then, they
00:03:34
wrote articles in newspapers and magazines
00:03:39
that interested all sorts of gossips
00:03:42
and not only they tried to
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popularize their knowledge,
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their knowledge of primitive thinking,
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they said here are your decorations and
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even brought premieres, they quietly came, they come from
00:03:55
primitive thinking and into In this sense, we are
00:03:59
such a complex phenomenon that not only
00:04:03
belongs to the 20th or 21st centuries, our psyche is
00:04:06
much more complex, and in particular there is such a
00:04:09
wonderful ethnographer
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Levy-Bruhl, I’ll allow myself
00:04:12
to quote him, he perfectly expressed
00:04:16
it in what I think is a very simple
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and clear phrase of descent when he
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says that primitive thinking
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is about lobbying, that is, it is illogical, well,
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myths have their own logic, but it is not
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Aristotle’s logic, he reminded of
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Aristotle’s yg, it is built according to three laws, and
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even then a
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cause-and-effect relationship will come out of it, and we are
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accustomed to this the first law of non-
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contradiction, the law of identity, and the
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third is not given, the
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three basic laws of logic will be arrested,
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prescribed back in the fourth century
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BC, and the man of the clock from that moment seemed to be
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connected to the concept of logic, and
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primitive thinking, long before Lari,
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became it, no such logic of Aristotle I was
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n’t born yet, I didn’t know and didn’t
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know how to formulate this about Aristotle, it turned out
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that our thinking is built under the clear
00:05:15
three laws of logic and in no other way, and
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even in the era of Aristotle, people
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always behaved logically and they
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probably even surprised him very much by this, until
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firstly tattoos were known in ancient Greece,
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these tattoos already existed then,
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they came to Greece from Egypt and sleeps in
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Persia, first through Persia, the leagues of
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violence were not then the function of a talisman, this is a
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very good question about tattoos in general,
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it arises from the function of a talisman,
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why is this already Levi-bruhl yes and here
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he writes in particular, I want to
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quote, there
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are not two forms of thinking in
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humanity, one about logical, that is, the
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primitive, the other logical, and they are
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not separated from each other by a blank wall,
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but there are different thought structures
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that exist in the same
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society and often maybe always in the
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same consciousness, that is, we are
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simultaneously people of a primitive
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society with a primitive mentality and
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already civilized people who think
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logical one way, as Levi-Bruhl writes,
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and he knows what to say and one does not
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contradict the other, how did we discover
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this very primitive society
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when European humanity
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unexpectedly, probably in the 20th century,
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encountered societies
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that, despite the twentieth century,
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continued to live in the Stone Age, for
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example, the aborigines of Australia are a vivid
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example of the times they live very scary and there are a
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lot of such regions, but
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modern scientists have become
00:07:02
unusually interested in this conflict; this actually
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happened back in the mid-19 when
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taylor's revolutionary book appeared
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called primitive society, it's
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not a joke, they're humiliated and have a humiliating
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connotation, they're just different,
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they're people like us, they're close to
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us, but they
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don't have, roughly speaking, Aristotelian
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logic, and they don't have that heightened
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concept of personality that we inherited
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from Greece
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particular things from the history of theater and so on
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because the primitive
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mentality of man is always collective, he
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always feels like a single connection with
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nature, hence totem animals then there it
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becomes the subject of jewelry and tattoos
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and so on, excuse me, I interrupted you, they are
00:07:56
just writing that pay
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attention that with regard to primitiveness, it was
00:07:59
shamans who decorated themselves first of all, that
00:08:03
is, those people who, in the opinion of the tribe itself,
00:08:06
interacted with the forces of nature, and not in
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the first place, not in the first place, the fact is
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that with tattoos and jewelry
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they participated in the initiation rite, the
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initiation rite is the period of each person
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is when he moves from relatively speaking
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childhood into puberty and the squirt from the
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period becomes an adult and in
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fact this is a terrible interesting thing they didn’t
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assign with jewelry now we
00:08:35
’ll come back to them don’t think that we forgot
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about the necklace so I remembered the
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wonderful ones again Maupassant's short story, the necklace
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of which generally blew up the
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Western world because it was a
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revolutionary idea from the point of view of
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the short story as a genre, the necklace in general,
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jewelry entered world literature and
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gave rise to the text of science fiction, well, let me
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talk about this for now, look, the
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initiation rite is a rite
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that everyone went through tribes are a
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feature of the primitive Ashley, a boy or a
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girl
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entering the period of sexual growth
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had to go through a very painful,
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painful rite of initiation for
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various reasons, the boy had to become
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a hunter and the war the girl had to
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be ready to continue the race and therefore
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no one canceled the birth pangs and so
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on, and tattoos were applied and
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tattoos were applied in a
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painful form
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and there it was necessary to
00:09:48
pass the dyes into the skin, but you know with a needle and
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then yes then it was not those
00:09:53
modern techniques as now even to
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say that the word itself came later
00:09:58
and seems to be from Polynesian word
00:10:00
meaning tapping with a hammer on
00:10:03
idyll
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onomatopoeia, here you have
00:10:09
your body painted to this sound, and in this sense,
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oddly enough, during the initiation rite, tattoos
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could be done in the form of necklaces,
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here you have jewelry in the form of a ring, and so
00:10:23
on, and in the form of, for example, a totem
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animal, etc. other things, there
00:10:29
were different options and also very interesting
00:10:32
options, and when a person underwent the
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initiation rite, this is recorded in
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folklore in the form of a fairy tale, as a
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sample writes in his great work the
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historical roots of a fairy tale
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English for the initiation rite, the
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initiation rite is directly related to the decoration
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from the tatu,
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yes this is one of functions decoration tattoo
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dedication return but remember the girl
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you grow up in the family gets her ears pierced
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yes this is an atavism initiation rites the girl
00:11:02
becomes an adult not really pierced
00:11:04
notice in the gypsy society in which there
00:11:07
is no concept of childhood
00:11:08
her ears are pierced almost from birth
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and she is already ready to get married and other other
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that the product that needs to be
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sold at a higher price and get compliance
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yes yes and this is a rite of passage
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and from the rite of initiation a fairy tale was born
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and a fairy tale is the
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basis of all fiction
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look how it is inextricably connected
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if we take the structure of a fairy tale
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you will see that it really
00:11:34
pulsates in almost all works of
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world literature, I won’t give it now,
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we’ll go away, here’s an initiation rite,
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another rite,
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because of this, about logic and
00:11:46
about lobbying, that is, before logic, so I’m
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addressing this and because of this, the
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absence of a personal principle
00:11:52
then there is a complete idiot of shamans, we
00:11:55
were reminded by the listeners of complete Denin, not
00:11:58
only shamans, complete unity with nature, the
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tattoo performs a very important function, and
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tattoos and jewelry here do not draw the line, a
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very important function of a talisman,
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why because primitive man did
00:12:14
not see a cause-and-effect relationship from the fact
00:12:16
that a person gets sick because
00:12:18
there someone sneezed on him or something else like that,
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everyone is sure that illness and
00:12:24
death are the result of witchcraft,
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that is, there are people, as
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modern people are now expressed, with negative
00:12:33
energy, people are vampires, something else like that, and
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many
00:12:38
folk tales on this is built
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which is the cause of diseases of a
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whole kind
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or earlier booking of an entire person,
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there are specific people who, but due to
00:12:50
various characteristics, consider themselves to be bones
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of sorcerers, no less a
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caste of sorcerers with a positive sign is built on them,
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shamans who take you away from damage,
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and there are people who do not are aware of
00:13:06
witchcraft for whom witchcraft
00:13:08
is a curse, but for example,
00:13:11
Levi-Bruhl cites this
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interesting fact when one of his friends
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went to communicate in what
00:13:19
seems like Africa with a certain tribe
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and it was raining
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this malaria, etc.,
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she said that she had to leave
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home herself and go in the rain and they didn’t let you in,
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saying that if you get sick,
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there is no witchcraft on the saber, not because she got her
00:13:39
feet wet, but because these
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representatives of the tribe allowed her to leave
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and therefore they invited fate on her
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and all our pendants they perform the
00:13:51
function of initiation they all mystical,
00:13:56
they are all connected with the religion of religion or the
00:14:00
function of a talisman because witchcraft in
00:14:03
that era when the personality is not separated,
00:14:05
when the personality does not have
00:14:07
a cause-and-effect logical connection between
00:14:09
one and the other, when there is no what
00:14:11
people now call scientific
00:14:14
thinking, everything is built on the principle of
00:14:16
witchcraft, all negative phenomena in
00:14:18
your life, this is a manifestation of witchcraft,
00:14:21
or for example a warrior whose spear broke
00:14:24
during a battle or during a hunt and this
00:14:27
witchcraft someone thought about it, they
00:14:30
people of that era believed this is
00:14:33
mental strength, colossal forces
00:14:35
that can extend to it is no
00:14:38
less real than strength
00:14:42
and here are all our pendants, they are all of
00:14:45
magical origin, that’s why we are so
00:14:48
attached to them,
00:14:49
why but because, as Shakespeare said,
00:14:52
there are many things in the world, friend Horace, that
00:14:54
our sages never dreamed of,
00:14:56
now there is a TV series on, I even
00:14:59
recently made a series of it on the harp
00:15:01
client stranger king here is a
00:15:05
vivid example of how to carry around in rational
00:15:08
America
00:15:09
there is a detective story written by the king of
00:15:13
horrors about where in fact I
00:15:16
am telling you
00:15:17
about this the revival of no one such a
00:15:21
sorcerer elku k who in fact
00:15:24
can take on any form
00:15:26
according to the laws of this witchcraft of a
00:15:29
primitive society a person could
00:15:31
to become a panther, any tiger, a
00:15:35
bear, any animal, or
00:15:38
cause harm to one’s fellow tribesmen, so
00:15:41
this was manifested, for example, in the fact that the whole
00:15:44
detective story was built on the principle of the works of the
00:15:47
asset, episode 1, or a stranger was looking for
00:15:50
Kolbin, in fact, the plot of the king of every
00:15:53
series is the plot of a primitive society
00:15:57
looking for a sorcerer to find the reason for this
00:16:00
for modern serials plot
00:16:02
modern why is there so far to go
00:16:05
Marvel's so exactly such a life is
00:16:08
absolutely true and you have led to
00:16:10
absolutely right now it's just the whole
00:16:12
mass culture mass fiction
00:16:14
mass cinema is all based on
00:16:16
this mysticism and I will say that this
00:16:22
mysticism has serious reasons there is
00:16:26
such a wonderful American
00:16:28
psychologist Scott and some of his works were
00:16:31
translated, but most importantly, in my opinion,
00:16:33
the work was not translated into Russian,
00:16:35
but he has an amazing book
00:16:37
called people of lies and so he talks
00:16:41
and essentially analyzes the
00:16:43
effect of shamanism or the effect of witchcraft
00:16:46
in modern society when a person
00:16:50
can actually, roughly speaking,
00:16:55
enter into an agreement on his own on a
00:16:58
psychological level with evil, he
00:17:02
calls them people
00:17:03
of lies and he cites fantastic
00:17:07
cases of such illogical behavior as
00:17:11
if a person is possessed just like a
00:17:14
stranger by a king such an abomination yes and we are like
00:17:18
me quoted Levi-Bruhl here
00:17:20
we live not only by logic we live and the
00:17:24
alogism of amku in us or dishes here as
00:17:29
an ethnologist confirms what
00:17:31
both Freud and Jung wrote about the collective
00:17:33
unconscious we are dragging onto our
00:17:36
consciousness such a sorry for such
00:17:37
rudeness great garbage dump that
00:17:40
dumped everyone era, everything that came before,
00:17:43
witchcraft and faith, look at the
00:17:46
fashion now for all kinds of amulets,
00:17:49
all kinds of amulets, look at how all
00:17:51
these points that cast magic remove some kind of
00:17:55
damage from you,
00:17:56
or vice versa, they click on success,
00:17:59
Jacob’s wealth is
00:18:01
not returned, you need to return such
00:18:05
faith in a miracle, infinitely, these clothes on him are
00:18:08
already housing in all historical societies at once
00:18:10
and therefore this
00:18:13
roughly speaking drive is very strong and what
00:18:17
do they do well at the philistine level,
00:18:21
well, let’s say so modernly and mass
00:18:23
consciousness, so you open your favorite
00:18:26
Wikipedia and I opened it too in order not to
00:18:30
break away from the people and about jewelry, we
00:18:32
read on some women’s website
00:18:34
the following modern understanding of
00:18:38
jewelry reveals to us temperament and
00:18:41
character,
00:18:43
then shows the level of protection from
00:18:47
energy drinks, but we give this, this is what it
00:18:51
symbolizes and reflects our
00:18:54
sensitivity,
00:18:55
again, some kind of mysticism demonstrates the
00:18:59
level of sexual energy and tone, so let’s
00:19:02
focus on sexual energy,
00:19:04
tone, these are also ancient,
00:19:06
although the ladies who wrote this I think
00:19:10
were not noticed in this, you know how
00:19:12
bright the bullets are, I wasn’t noticed in drunkenness, but
00:19:15
in the morning I drank cold Volga and so they
00:19:17
apparently greedily drank cold water in
00:19:20
drunkenness were noticed somewhere, so that's what this
00:19:23
sexual energy is, the thing is
00:19:25
that in Babylon where the tattoo came from, the
00:19:28
so-called sacred
00:19:30
prostitution was widespread, yes thank you care in
00:19:34
modern them I should say this when
00:19:37
your neighbor here has been rampaging for a long time here in the
00:19:42
apostolic palace I did
00:19:44
n’t think about my demons he
00:19:47
can’t cope on his own, especially since the
00:19:50
cross doesn’t save the flight, this is
00:19:54
what sacred prostitution is,
00:19:59
take the wonderful novel by Gora Vidal,
00:20:01
it’s called creation creation, it
00:20:08
describes just this example of
00:20:10
sacred prostitution in Babylon,
00:20:13
to serve the goddess Ishtar,
00:20:16
the goddess Ishtar, which in English
00:20:18
became the title Easter Esther
00:20:22
because this is such a world mythology, in general,
00:20:26
all mythology was born in Babylon, it
00:20:28
moved to the territory of the Celts
00:20:30
somehow this is to look for to look for here is the
00:20:33
subject of scientific research a logical path
00:20:35
and 100
00:20:37
English Easter Ishtar it’s all from there
00:20:41
there a wonderful book moringa
00:20:43
angel of the western window they will tell us
00:20:46
something there, therefore, that’s why women
00:20:50
were obliged to simply put on
00:20:53
themselves certain tattoos
00:20:58
on their chests, these should have been stars,
00:21:02
the moon and the sun on the stomach, floral
00:21:05
ornaments,
00:21:07
and below is the king’s palace, and this is the very thing in these
00:21:14
tattoos, yes they should were at the temple of the
00:21:17
goddess Ishtar to sell herself to any
00:21:20
man and she has no right to refuse, he
00:21:23
can give her any coin, take her to the
00:21:27
temple to have intercourse there
00:21:29
and this is a rite of passage and this is
00:21:32
sexuality and these tattoos performed
00:21:36
this very important
00:21:39
religious function for her and now tell me
00:21:42
it left a person but didn’t go anywhere,
00:21:45
look at what tattoos and
00:21:48
where they are applied and some kind of
00:21:50
sexual principle they carry, this is
00:21:52
what they wrote to you in patience and remember
00:21:55
this very sacred prostitution of the
00:21:59
Babylon era, you
00:22:01
really should have accepted
00:22:05
prohibit eating the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of
00:22:08
good and evil, the more a person this fruit
00:22:12
lives there, by the way, listeners
00:22:14
write at what point did tattoos begin to be
00:22:15
considered something sexual, an
00:22:18
integral part of sex, did it happen in the 20th century
00:22:21
or a little, I
00:22:23
would say again that this is generally speaking hoary hoary
00:22:26
antiquity, I can, of course, look into
00:22:28
my conduit and tell you what
00:22:31
millennium before ours,
00:22:33
this is still the same memory that is
00:22:36
seething in us, which again
00:22:38
reminds me of this wonderful phrase of
00:22:42
Levi-Bruhl and this is one of the greatest
00:22:45
anthropologists of our time where he
00:22:47
says don’t think what about logical
00:22:50
thinking and logical thinking, that is,
00:22:52
modern and primitive are separated from each
00:22:56
other by impenetrable environments
00:22:58
by a wall, they are not there, nor to the Chinese wall,
00:23:01
they diffusely penetrate each other,
00:23:04
this is such a movement, therefore even at the
00:23:07
level of the average person writes something without
00:23:09
suspecting that he is in in general, it
00:23:10
reproduces sexuality for you
00:23:13
in general, the history of tattoos as the history of
00:23:16
decoration is terribly interesting and but let’s
00:23:18
start with the fact that in different cultures it
00:23:22
performed different functions more and more
00:23:26
separated from the shore and so on,
00:23:29
turning into an independent art and
00:23:31
one small fact, the
00:23:32
future king of England seems to be a hero
00:23:35
George 4, when he was in Japan, got a
00:23:39
tattoo on himself, our future Nicholas II,
00:23:42
when he was traveling in Japan,
00:23:44
got a tattoo on himself, fire-breathing
00:23:47
dear, his brother Grand Duke Michael
00:23:49
got a tattoo on himself, that is, our
00:23:52
royalty,
00:23:54
it was already such a fashion among the highest
00:23:58
nobility and this is ap the Soviet era then what
00:24:02
was of the highest nobility will go down with a
00:24:04
tattoo will become the absolute property
00:24:06
of the criminal world, and you
00:24:09
can read from the tattoos that they were created in Soviet times
00:24:12
to the roof of NCO V.D.
00:24:15
whole albums of these same tattoos of
00:24:19
criminals in order to read them in order to
00:24:22
understand it was such a
00:24:25
letter and in ancient Greece tattoos were also
00:24:28
used as hidden letters on
00:24:31
the head
00:24:32
shaved drums were worn with a certain
00:24:34
message the hair will grow and the one to whom
00:24:37
this novel was sent was invited to shave his hair to
00:24:40
read and like this here the things of
00:24:43
slaves were branded,
00:24:45
that is, the tattoo still carried a
00:24:49
bad attitude towards civilization to the status of
00:24:53
such a status you have and yes and
00:24:57
you are who you are and what do you imagine yourself to be
00:25:00
in Egypt where tattoos were also known,
00:25:03
Egyptian tattoos were
00:25:06
connected directly with the book of the dead because
00:25:10
determined how which part of this book
00:25:15
the dead man will go through,
00:25:18
well, we know that among the pharaohs and taba the soul is of
00:25:22
divine origin; among
00:25:25
ordinary people it is a
00:25:26
sacred body, and they have completely
00:25:29
different paths in the book of the dead, and the book
00:25:31
of the dead is a cat of the entire Egyptian
00:25:33
civilization and by tattoos who
00:25:36
embodied in the mummy the drawing on the sarcophagus
00:25:39
determined who what it was and so on
00:25:42
Egyptologists passport absolutely absolutely
00:25:46
banana Evgeniy Viktorovich Zharinov
00:25:48
visiting the silver rain friends we
00:25:50
will continue in a few minutes
00:25:51
send your questions plus 7 900 3797
00:25:55
633 Potapenko will be but as promised in
00:26:01
my guests
00:26:02
Evgeniy Viktorovich Zharinov professor
00:26:05
writer lunch and we talk about the meaning of
00:26:08
jewelry crumbled teeth tattoos tattoos
00:26:11
yes because one is no different from the other
00:26:13
in primitive society
00:26:16
jewelry could be all kinds of
00:26:18
shells and there could be tattoo designs in the form of
00:26:22
necklaces in the form of rings and so on so on
00:26:25
here everything that concerns
00:26:27
why the body why she when we talk
00:26:30
about decoration we talk about the body when we
00:26:33
talk about tattoos especially when we talk about the body
00:26:35
because this is the critical
00:26:39
thinking of ancient man assumed
00:26:41
that the
00:26:42
body it is sacred it is directly connected
00:26:46
it belonged to the so-called
00:26:50
material to the sensual cosmos,
00:26:53
he endowed matter with demons, endowed with
00:26:56
soul and body, for example, in this thinking, the
00:27:00
head is space on and the price of approximately
00:27:03
some peoples, the head of the residents
00:27:06
should be Britney as a bend of data, and for
00:27:10
example, the inhabitants of Palestine have this Samson
00:27:14
hair should grow and in any case in
00:27:18
all the ancients in cultures, the head and hair
00:27:21
are a connection with the upper world to the left and
00:27:24
right
00:27:25
it is very left is always wrong
00:27:28
the right is always right yes this is because
00:27:30
Christianity will pass everything plays a
00:27:33
mythical meaning the sky and the sun and the moon
00:27:39
are connected with the eyes yes the eyes of this
00:27:42
tone are of such heavenly origin no
00:27:45
matter what we they took whatever part of the body they
00:27:47
took, it is from the ancient sen of critical
00:27:50
thinking or mentality, it will be
00:27:52
sacred, so decorating this body
00:27:55
with a tattoo on the face is now very
00:27:58
funny, sometimes it happens that people, not like
00:28:02
monkeys, put a tattoo
00:28:05
on their face for beauty, they are taken from some kind of
00:28:07
African tribe, not I advise you
00:28:10
to do this because with every tattoo
00:28:12
it is always, in general, mystical
00:28:15
and the drawing is very together in order and you
00:28:18
can either want it or not, and I will remind you that you
00:28:20
live in two ways of thinking at once, you
00:28:22
call upon yourself the forces
00:28:25
from which these poor inhabitants
00:28:28
protect the African tribe and no one
00:28:31
look listeners writes to us Evgeny
00:28:33
Victor still dear dear
00:28:34
please tell us about the era
00:28:36
when jewelry was actually turned into a
00:28:40
weapon I mean for example rings with
00:28:44
poison the Middle Ages Valentine wrote to us
00:28:47
before the ring with poison poison
00:28:51
generally speaking not even in the Middle Ages
00:28:53
here I want mark poison will gain particular
00:28:58
popularity in the Renaissance and I
00:29:05
made a small historical excursion. Dante, as you know, was not proud of the fact
00:29:08
that he wrote the Divine Comedy
00:29:10
because he wrote the Divine Comedy
00:29:13
somewhere in several copies, almost
00:29:16
like Vene Erofeev in his Moscow-Petushki
00:29:18
when he writes that my book was published
00:29:21
in an edition of one copy and to the great
00:29:24
joy of the author the edition immediately went
00:29:27
here just like that and here the dirt and joys of
00:29:31
Dante the circulation was coming because yes, the
00:29:33
energy of the printing presses is far from the
00:29:36
point that his Tuscan dialect will become
00:29:39
the literary Italian language
00:29:42
yet longer, yes, this is a book for locals,
00:29:46
and in this we carry local ones, and not
00:29:48
all literate ones, not every literate one, he
00:29:51
wrote it as a political pamphlet, I
00:29:55
mean, you don’t think that I was talking,
00:29:57
but he most appreciated that he was running to the
00:29:59
shop of pharmacists, who also owned the
00:30:02
Medici translation of the Medici as doctors
00:30:05
on the coat of arms of the Medici 3 tablets and so on and
00:30:10
this is a privileged society and why
00:30:13
were pharmacists so poisonous they didn’t so much
00:30:18
treat as poison because this is an
00:30:20
excellent solution to all problems there is no
00:30:23
person there is no problem and I’ll give you were proud of the fact
00:30:26
that the pressure on the workshop is pharmacists, that is,
00:30:29
poisoners he was, in general, an
00:30:32
unkind, evil, gloomy person, I would say this is
00:30:36
even visible in his divine comedy and
00:30:39
we look, you read Dumas, look at
00:30:43
how Catherine de Medici uses poisons, and
00:30:46
look at how the book is poisoned,
00:30:50
which one is worth one of the stars sons
00:30:52
by mistake
00:30:54
falconry and turn the page with their finger
00:30:58
and poisoned poisoned and then
00:31:02
this plot will take Umberto Eco into his own and
00:31:04
on the roses and there he will also repeat what
00:31:08
was in the Maraga queen
00:31:10
look the poisons will become very there is even
00:31:14
such a book the history of poisons I unfortunately
00:31:17
won’t name the name of this
00:31:19
French author now maybe next
00:31:21
time I’ll bring it, but I’ll give
00:31:24
whole studies and poisons devoted to you mean
00:31:29
in the ring, but the poison could be gloves, the poison
00:31:33
could be in clothes and a greenhouse through the
00:31:37
skin, by the way, and only pharmacies or
00:31:41
but alchemists were engaged in this matter and
00:31:43
mostly deserve the favor of their
00:31:45
masters not so much because they supposedly
00:31:47
made gold, but because they made
00:31:50
fast-acting poisons, they were driven by competitors,
00:31:53
absolutely right, it was very convenient,
00:31:55
for example, Cesare Borgia
00:31:58
poisoned everyone and everything during the Renaissance and was
00:32:00
very surprised that when they tried to
00:32:03
poison him, he decided that it was his privilege,
00:32:05
in general, he and his dad Alexander the
00:32:08
Sixth poisoned not a single cardinal, this is
00:32:12
beautifully shown in the Borgias series, but
00:32:15
this is what the Burks have before it, the history of the
00:32:20
Italian Renaissance, it is all
00:32:22
described there, this is a historical fact, nothing is
00:32:24
made up, and this is the era of the Renaissance, why in the
00:32:27
era of the Renaissance, but because the era of the
00:32:29
Renaissance is the era of the titans and the reverse
00:32:32
side of otitis media nismo is the era of humanism
00:32:34
which you know how Dostoevsky said
00:32:37
brilliantly humanism
00:32:39
he said that humanism is a phenomenon of
00:32:44
culture and civilization it is not a phenomenon of
00:32:47
human nature
00:32:49
and there is every chance that monism will riot there that is
00:32:53
what humanism is a phenomenon of culture and
00:32:55
civilization here you are and so far the revival
00:32:57
because humanism and dying plays the
00:32:59
opposite side in this sense for a
00:33:03
person titans who had
00:33:06
all the limits of moral prohibitions about
00:33:08
rebirth omitted, we look at how many
00:33:11
corpses of the play Hamlet
00:33:12
look at how many corpses letters from troubles and the
00:33:15
entire revival of
00:33:17
Italy let children read no no this is
00:33:20
such a reading very, very In general, he’s
00:33:22
such a horror there, mom dear,
00:33:25
look how many corpses Othello and
00:33:28
so on, this is all the revival of happiness for
00:33:30
children, they don’t think there’s no reading, then we need
00:33:33
another question,
00:33:34
the person can’t read, teach the children, the
00:33:37
reader needs to learn to read for this,
00:33:39
it’s difficult for ideas, he promised to
00:33:42
give
00:33:43
oh thank you the big one is called cruelly
00:33:45
economics 37 unlearned lessons and
00:33:47
just so that you and I will then butter
00:33:50
next time we will do about economics
00:33:53
about money this is money to the parallel
00:33:55
because money is even more ancient than tattoos
00:33:59
this is proud to callus a long time ago I promised I promised
00:34:03
yes it’s true that’s why I promised this is one
00:34:06
of the first copies that thank you
00:34:08
Bajan with the signature of ask jewelry and
00:34:15
religion and this direct connection is the
00:34:18
decoration of religion, which is primary after all, but you
00:34:20
accept here it’s difficult to say what is the
00:34:26
first and what is the second because
00:34:28
it’s all a man and he’s a man,
00:34:32
so I’m always referring on this popular
00:34:35
book Harare before
00:34:36
homo sapiens paints the history of
00:34:38
mankind, it is very
00:34:40
educational, it is very well written and
00:34:43
there Harare talks about the cognitive
00:34:45
revolution when man invented language and
00:34:47
ceased to be an animal, yes it was he who
00:34:50
ceased to be an animal connections with language and
00:34:52
as soon as he invented language further we can
00:34:54
continue this thought in Harare with other
00:34:56
quotes, he invented a myth because mi in
00:34:59
translation from Greek means a word or
00:35:01
story about myths, that is, religions, and he
00:35:04
immediately began to create a different
00:35:07
civilization, not so much materially, but
00:35:09
so which is outside of matter and primitive
00:35:12
man lives with on one side of matter it is
00:35:15
syncretic, yes, but on this matter, here we
00:35:18
come to this, but the mother
00:35:20
perceives it as mystical, for him it is not
00:35:23
just matter for like cats and dogs,
00:35:25
cats and dogs have no concept of witchcraft,
00:35:28
man of antiquity has the concept of
00:35:30
witchcraft, this is his religious consciousness,
00:35:33
primitive religious consciousness and
00:35:35
therefore everything that surrounds him, he will
00:35:38
mystify, transform, delve into,
00:35:43
look for occult practice and decoration,
00:35:46
if you want, armor armor against
00:35:50
evil forces because he cannot
00:35:55
explain the world around him, but he
00:35:57
wants to protect himself from it, he endows it with his
00:35:59
own fears, fear has a
00:36:02
very important function creative
00:36:06
fear is not only negative emotions
00:36:10
it is also positive emotions
00:36:12
to save life absolutely here are children
00:36:14
who are distinguished by their creativity on the site how
00:36:16
they love scary stories
00:36:18
remember your childhood if you are not
00:36:20
upset South Africa Nicole is absolutely right
00:36:23
because the human child's psyche
00:36:26
is very creative it does not find
00:36:28
use
00:36:29
their raging imagination, and look
00:36:32
how children love talismans, amulets, how
00:36:36
they dots on the handle, how they
00:36:39
cuddle up to themselves with their totemic me
00:36:43
chic which are plush, how they love with
00:36:45
these, right up to adulthood, with
00:36:48
these bags that give them
00:36:50
peace of mind, like what - there and or what
00:36:56
protective means do boys have
00:36:58
and so on all these that’s why, for example,
00:37:01
Harry Potter was so popular these
00:37:03
magic wands this is again a
00:37:06
return to primitive thinking in these
00:37:09
magicians so call how children got hooked on
00:37:12
these they start buying these sticks,
00:37:14
some other nonsense,
00:37:16
but how do you put it on yourself, hang it,
00:37:19
they repeat everything that an adult does, so
00:37:22
if we go back to
00:37:24
decoration, then in this everyday life,
00:37:26
decoration is unspeakably defined, it is to
00:37:28
prove that your success or your
00:37:32
status is so the ancients begin to look for with slaves
00:37:36
because tattoos and corresponding
00:37:41
pieces of jewelry determined your status,
00:37:44
but remember when anyone
00:37:49
in his wonderful novel Les Miserables and
00:37:53
Jean Valjean and here on his forehead the seals are
00:37:58
considered an outcast bizarro were
00:38:02
no one accepts him and until
00:38:05
the bienvenue buys his soul for two
00:38:08
silver candlesticks Evgeniy
00:38:10
Viktorovich Zarina in the studio of silver
00:38:11
rain stay with us Potapenko will be
00:38:16
our guest Evgeniy Viktorovich Zharinov
00:38:19
Professor Peter will be poisoned and we are talking about
00:38:22
religious jewelry about how it all
00:38:24
intersects and so we
00:38:27
use literature here is Jean Valjean here is
00:38:31
your status only below yes,
00:38:34
look when you read the three musketeers,
00:38:37
here you were lily slandered by your grandfather’s leftists,
00:38:40
it was very common here Dumas did
00:38:42
n’t lie to anything, yes, here’s the status for you, too,
00:38:45
only below until the
00:38:47
date or decoration is like a curse, and
00:38:51
of course, really the status of the
00:38:54
decoration and other
00:38:56
emphasizing is among but this too
00:38:59
very ancient very ancient
00:39:01
it is for example in China when a person
00:39:04
committed crimes, again tattoos
00:39:06
associated with criminality with marginalized people,
00:39:08
first they carved out 1 part of the hieroglyph,
00:39:12
violation, subsequent other parts
00:39:15
until the hieroglyph appeared on the
00:39:18
dog’s head and then that’s how Jean
00:39:21
Valjean did with this You couldn’t have anything to do with a person,
00:39:23
but here’s
00:39:26
a table for you, too, or just downstairs, and we’ve already
00:39:28
talked about one more thing: officers from under
00:39:34
Hitler’s Germany had their own
00:39:36
tattoos, and by the way, from many of
00:39:39
these tattoos they found war
00:39:41
criminals, they talked about
00:39:44
belonging to the black knighthood to you
00:39:47
because there was mysticism in everything
00:39:51
that related to the Gestapo officers,
00:39:54
they considered themselves black knights and there were
00:39:57
corresponding tattoos, the
00:39:59
corresponding signs ikuzo has his own
00:40:02
tattoos, this is what is now present in
00:40:04
mass culture in mass fiction
00:40:07
everywhere, we have already said
00:40:10
that tattoos are like the decorations of many
00:40:14
jewelry, for example Kohinoor diamonds,
00:40:17
are famous, and the Orlov diamond, and so on,
00:40:20
if you look at the topic of
00:40:22
diamonds and stones, they have their own history,
00:40:25
a curse, look at the bloody rush,
00:40:29
our listeners, so if we
00:40:31
disassemble every piece of jewelry, guys, you won’t
00:40:33
have enough time there for not a curse,
00:40:35
how long to leave - under
00:40:37
and we are just leading, we will note and maybe we
00:40:39
remind a little of schizophrenics, but we will
00:40:43
introduce all of our digressions to the main
00:40:45
theme that everything that concerns our life is
00:40:48
connected with our past and without
00:40:51
religiosity, which has a
00:40:52
very ancient
00:40:56
pre-Christian history
00:40:57
and so on, people live in these
00:40:59
spaces
00:41:00
he actually drags them a new memory of
00:41:03
pre-Christian pagan theory into
00:41:05
Christianity,
00:41:07
oddly enough, because without going into
00:41:10
details, but any serious historians of
00:41:12
religion will tell you this, or read
00:41:14
books at least two or three, take a
00:41:16
wonderful book by an American
00:41:18
historian, woman Armstrong, called
00:41:21
the history of God look how
00:41:24
brilliantly she describes all the dogmas of
00:41:27
Christianity and Islam, where they
00:41:29
come from, how they lead the book, it reads like a
00:41:32
novel, I assure you,
00:41:34
educate yourself, be smart and
00:41:36
free on that, education in the
00:41:39
announcement, let me, my dears, want
00:41:42
to make an announcement now, wait one
00:41:47
minute, February 26 next Wednesday
00:41:51
when we don’t share we won’t meet here
00:41:55
on the silver rain there will be my lecture
00:41:58
the new pope paul cheese entina
00:42:01
and what does it have to do with the same
00:42:05
religious consciousness in modern times
00:42:07
that we talk about all the time about how a
00:42:09
person is essentially religious although he gets
00:42:12
confused in this other things and here the lectures
00:42:15
will be this is an analysis of the second season
00:42:18
the new pope how is he connected with the first then
00:42:20
there will be lectures survived then the Institute of
00:42:22
Journalism of Literary Creativity 1
00:42:24
then the scale red hall at Kalashny
00:42:28
Lane house 3
00:42:29
this is opposite the Dutch embassy the
00:42:32
lecture will be in 1930 all the details
00:42:36
on Facebook Instagram also on
00:42:39
Zharinov’s telegram channel,
00:42:42
don’t miss lectures and announcements, friends, thank you
00:42:45
Evgenia again, of course, the listeners
00:42:47
fully support the idea of
00:42:48
finally making a broadcast about money and the school is
00:42:51
hooked on poisons about poisons and the
00:42:54
loudest poisonings, we’ll just edit
00:42:59
with huge screams, we’re waiting you always
00:43:04
visit me where there is no owner visiting the
00:43:06
silver rain with Dmitry Potapenko
00:43:08
we say goodbye until tomorrow until eight
00:43:11
o'clock in the morning, I will remind you that all the details are
00:43:13
lectures by Evgeniy.
00:43:15
can be found on his Facebook page,
00:43:17
Instagram and Telegram channel,
00:43:19
stay with us, don’t switch off
00:43:23
[music]

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mobile menu iconWhich format of "«Потапенко будит!», Евгений Жаринов, Какое значение имеют наши украшения" video should I choose?mobile menu icon

  • The best quality formats are FullHD (1080p), 2K (1440p), 4K (2160p) and 8K (4320p). The higher the resolution of your screen, the higher the video quality should be. However, there are other factors to consider: download speed, amount of free space, and device performance during playback.

mobile menu iconWhy does my computer freeze when loading a "«Потапенко будит!», Евгений Жаринов, Какое значение имеют наши украшения" video?mobile menu icon

  • The browser/computer should not freeze completely! If this happens, please report it with a link to the video. Sometimes videos cannot be downloaded directly in a suitable format, so we have added the ability to convert the file to the desired format. In some cases, this process may actively use computer resources.

mobile menu iconHow can I download "«Потапенко будит!», Евгений Жаринов, Какое значение имеют наши украшения" video to my phone?mobile menu icon

  • You can download a video to your smartphone using the website or the PWA application UDL Lite. It is also possible to send a download link via QR code using the UDL Helper extension.

mobile menu iconHow can I download an audio track (music) to MP3 "«Потапенко будит!», Евгений Жаринов, Какое значение имеют наши украшения"?mobile menu icon

  • The most convenient way is to use the UDL Client program, which supports converting video to MP3 format. In some cases, MP3 can also be downloaded through the UDL Helper extension.

mobile menu iconHow can I save a frame from a video "«Потапенко будит!», Евгений Жаринов, Какое значение имеют наши украшения"?mobile menu icon

  • This feature is available in the UDL Helper extension. Make sure that "Show the video snapshot button" is checked in the settings. A camera icon should appear in the lower right corner of the player to the left of the "Settings" icon. When you click on it, the current frame from the video will be saved to your computer in JPEG format.

mobile menu iconWhat's the price of all this stuff?mobile menu icon

  • It costs nothing. Our services are absolutely free for all users. There are no PRO subscriptions, no restrictions on the number or maximum length of downloaded videos.