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Example of Anthro artwork. Art by Goldenwolf. Anthropomorphism, a form of personification (applying human or animal qualities to inanimate objects) and similar to prosopopoeia (adopting the persona of another person), is the attribution of human characteristics and qualities to non-human beings, objects, or natural phenomena. Animals, forces of nature, and unseen or unknown authors of chance are frequent subjects of anthropomorphosis. "Anthropomorphism" comes from two Greek words, ανθρωπος (anthrōpos), meaning "human", and μορφη (morphē), meaning "shape" or "form". The suffix '-ism' originates from the morpheme '-isma' in the Greek language. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (498x842, 130 KB) Summary Anthropomorphic art. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (498x842, 130 KB) Summary Anthropomorphic art. ...
It has been suggested that prosopopoeia be merged into this article or section. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Personification. ...
[[{{{diversity_link}}}|Diversity]] {{{diversity}}} Binomial name Homo sapiens Linnaeus, 1758 Trinomial name {{{trinomial}}} Type Species {{{type_species}}} Subspecies Homo sapiens idaltu (extinct) Homo sapiens sapiens [[Image:{{{range_map}}}|{{{range_map_width}}}|]] Synonyms {{{synonyms}}} Homo (genus). ...
Phyla Porifera (sponges) Ctenophora (comb jellies) Cnidaria (coral, jellyfish, anenomes) Placozoa (trichoplax) Subregnum Bilateria (bilateral symmetry) Acoelomorpha (basal) Orthonectida (flatworms, echinoderms, etc. ...
The Nature Conservancy - a charitable organization devoted to preserving natural diversity worldwide English Nature UK government organization devoted to preserving natural diversity in the UK Nature Detectives An online research and education project for under 18s in the UK A Guide to Nature and Wildlife Conservation Categories: | ...
In morpheme-based morphology, a morpheme is the smallest language unit that carries a semantic interpretation. ...
Greek (Greek Îλληνικά, IPA â Hellenic) is an Indo-European language with a documented history of 3,500 years. ...
In religions and mythologies
In religion and mythology, "anthropomorphism" refers to the attribution of a human body or of human qualities generally, to God or the gods. Many mythologies are almost entirely concerned with anthropomorphic gods and goddesses who express human characteristics such as jealousy, hatred, or love. The Greek gods such as Zeus and Apollo were often depicted in human form exhibiting both commendable and despicable human traits. ...
God, as a male deity, contrasts with female deities, or goddesses. While the term goddess specifically refers to a female deity, words like gods and deities can be applied to all gods collectively, regardless of gender. ...
Ceres, the Roman goddess of agriculture A goddess is a female deity, in contrast with a male deity known as a god. A great many cultures have goddesses, sometimes alone, but more often as part of a larger pantheon that includes both of the conventional genders and in some cases...
Jealousy is an emotion experienced by one who perceives that another person is giving something that s/he wants (typically attention, love, or affection) to a third party. ...
For the emotion Hatred please see Hate Hatred (Nenavist) is a Soviet film of 1975 directed by Samvel Gasparov. ...
The heart, a frequent modern symbol of love Love has several different meanings in English, from something that gives a little pleasure (I loved that meal) to something one would die for (patriotism, pairbonding). ...
Marked are the 12 gods of Olympus and the gods who reigned the world at one time (Uranus, Cronus and Zeus). ...
Statue of Zeus Phidias created the 12-m (40-ft) tall statue of Zeus at Olympia about 435 BC. The statue was perhaps the most famous sculpture in ancient Greece, imagined here in a 16th-century engraving. ...
For other uses, see Apollo (disambiguation). ...
The ten avatars of the Hindu supreme God Vishnu possess both human and divine forms and qualities, although their divinity varies in degree. In Vaishnavism, a monotheistic faith, Vishnu is omniscient and benevolent, unlike gods of the Greek and Roman religions. See Conceptions of God in Hinduism. The 10 avatars of Lord Vishnu In Hinduism, an avatar or avatara (Sanskrit à¤
वतार), is the incarnation (bodily manifestation) of an Immortal Being, or of the Ultimate Supreme Being. ...
A Hindu (also spelt Hindoo) is an adherent of philosophies and scriptures of Hinduism, also known as Sanatan (सनातन) Dharma, the predominant religious, philosophical and cultural systems of Bharat (India) and Nepal and the island of Bali While almost all Indians were known as Hindus to the outside world till the...
For other uses of the name Vishnu, see Vishnu (disambiguation). ...
Vaishnavism is one of the principal divisions of Hinduism. ...
Omniscience is the capacity to know everything, or at least everything that can be known about a character/s including thoughts, feelings, etc. ...
Benevolence is a faculty from the discipline of Phrenology. ...
Religion in ancient Rome combined several different cult practices and embraced more than a single set of beliefs. ...
This article discusses the term God in the context of monotheism and derived henotheistic forms. ...
Numerous religions and philosophies have condemned anthropomorphism for various reasons. Some Ancient Greek philosophers did not condone, and were explicitly hostile to, their people's mythology. These philosophers often developed monotheistic views. Plato's (427–347 BCE) Demiurge (craftsman) in the Timaeus and Aristotle's (384–322 BCE) prime mover in his Physics are examples. The Greek philosopher Xenophanes (570–480 BCE) said that "the greatest God" resembles man "neither in form nor in mind." (Clement of Alexandria, Miscellanies V xiv 109.1-3). The similarity of these philosophers' concepts of God to that of the Bible's facilitated the incorporation of much pre-Christian Greek philosophy into the Medieval Christian world view by the Scholastics, notably Thomas Aquinas. Classical (or early) Greek philosophy focused on the role of reason and inquiry. ...
Plato (Greek: ΠλάÏÏν PlátÅn) (ca. ...
The Common Era (CE), also known as the Christian Era and sometimes the Current Era, is the period of measured time beginning with the year 1 until the present. ...
The term Demiurge (or Yaldabaoth, Yao, Ialdabaoth and several other variants, such as Ptahil used in Mandaeanism) refers in some belief systems to a deity responsible for the creation of the physical universe and the physical aspect of humanity. ...
Timaeus is a theoretical treatise of Plato in the form of a Socratic dialogue, written circa 360 B.C. The work puts forward speculation on the nature of the physical world. ...
Aristotle, marble copy of bronze by Lysippos. ...
The cosmological argument is an argument for the existence of God. ...
Aristotles Physics, frontispice of a 1837 edition Physics (or Physica, or Physicae Auscultationes meaning lessons) is a key text in the philosophy of Aristotle. ...
Xenophanes of Colophon (570 BC - 480 BC) was a Greek philosopher, poet, and social and religious critic. ...
Clement of Alexandria (Titus Flavius Clemens), was the first member of the Church of Alexandria to be more than a name, and one of its most distinguished teachers. ...
The Bible (sometimes The Book, Good Book, Word of God, The Word, or Scripture), from Greek (Ïα) βιβλια, (ta) biblia, (the) books, is the classical name for the Hebrew Bible of Judaism or the combination of the Old Testament and New Testament of Christianity (The Bible actually refers to at least two...
The Middle Ages formed the middle period in a traditional schematic division of European history into three ages: the classical civilization of Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and modern times, beginning with the Renaissance. ...
A world view, (or worldview) is a term calqued from the German word Weltanschauung meaning a look onto the world. It implies a concept fundamental to German philosophy and epistemology and refers to a wide world perception. ...
Scholasticism comes from the Latin word scholasticus which means that [which] belongs to the school, and is the school of philosophy taught by the academics (or schoolmen) of medieval universities circa 1100 - 1500. ...
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Thomas Aquinas Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Thomas Aquinas By Aquinas Summa contra Gentiles Summa Theologiae The Principles of Nature On Being and Essence (De Ente et Essentia) Catena Aurea (partial) Corpus Thomisticum - the works of St. ...
Although the tenets of the Abrahamic religions generally hold that it is improper to describe the God of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as humanoid, the Creation story in the Book of Genesis holds that God created man in his image. However, anthropomorphism would imply that human qualities are given to the God or gods. Instead, the God or gods are practicing the opposite, theomorphism, where the qualities of the divine are given to humans. // In the study of comparative religion, an Abrahamic religion is any of those religions deriving from a common ancient Semitic tradition and traced by their adherents to Abraham (×Ö·×ְרָ×Ö¸× Father/Leader of many), a patriarch whose life is narrated in the Hebrew Bible/ Old Testament, and in the Quran. ...
Over at least the last two thousand years, Judaism has not been monolithic in practice, and has not had any centralized authority or binding dogma. ...
The history of Christianity is difficult to extricate from that of the European West (and several other culture-regions) in general. ...
IslÄm is described as a dÄ«n, meaning way of life and/or guidance. Six articles of belief There are six basic beliefs shared by all Muslims: 1. ...
The term humanoid refers to any being whose body structure resembles that of a human. ...
An origin belief is any story or explanation that describes the beginnings of humanity, earth, life, and the universe (cosmogony). ...
Genesis (Greek: ÎÎνεÏιÏ, having the meanings of birth, creation, cause, beginning, source and origin) is the first book of the Torah (five books of Moses) and hence the first book of the Tanakh, part of the Hebrew Bible; it is also the first book of the Christian Old Testament. ...
Theomorphism is a neologism that literally means God-shaped, corresponding to the Hebrew name Michael. ...
In rhetoric Anthropomorphism in the form of personification consists of creating imaginary persons who are the embodiment of an abstraction such as Death, Lust or War. See the article on the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse for notable examples. A Grim Reaper candle Death personified is an anthropomorphic figure or fictional character which has existed in mythology and popular culture since the earliest days of storytelling. ...
Woodcut by Albrecht Dürer The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are mentioned in the Bible in chapter six of the Book of Revelation, which predicts that they will ride during the Apocalypse. ...
In classical rhetoric, personification is a figure of speech (more specifically a trope) that employs the deliberate use of anthropomorphism, often to make an emotional appeal. In rhetorical theory, a distinction is often drawn between personification (anthropomorphism of inanimate, but real, objects) and figures such as apostrophe, in which an absent people or abstract concepts are addressed. Rhetoric (from Greek ÏήÏÏÏ, rhêtôr, orator) is one of the three original liberal arts or trivium (the other members are dialectic and grammar) in Western culture. ...
A figure of speech, sometimes termed a rhetorical figure or device, or elocution, is a word or phrase that departs from straightforward, literal language. ...
// Linguistic usage A trope is a rhetorical figure of speech that consists of a play on words, i. ...
Apostrophe (from Greek αÏοÏÏÏοÏη, turning away) can refer to several things: Apostrophe (mark) ( â ), a form of punctuation Apostrophe (figure of speech) Apostrophe (), an album by Frank Zappa Apostrophe (television), a French television show about literature Apostrophe (band), punk rock band from...
An example of rhetorical personification: - A tree whose hungry mouth is prest
- Against the earth's sweet-flowing breast. Joyce Kilmer, Trees
An example of rhetorical apostrophe: Joyce Kilmer (full name: Alfred Joyce Kilmer, December 6, 1886 â July 30, 1918) was an American journalist and poet; his best-known work is Trees. The poem is notable for its anthropomorphism: the tree in the poem presses its mouth to the earths breast and looks at God and...
- O eloquent, just, and mighty Death! Walter Raleigh, History of the World
Peter Rabbit and wife being importuned by Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny - anthropomorphic characters from Beatrix Potter books Alternatively, Professor Walter Raleigh was a scholar and author circa 1900. ...
Download high resolution version (785x916, 124 KB)Peter Rabbit + Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny - Beatrix Potter characters - Project Gutenberg eText 14220 - http://www. ...
Download high resolution version (785x916, 124 KB)Peter Rabbit + Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny - Beatrix Potter characters - Project Gutenberg eText 14220 - http://www. ...
Potters illustration of her anthropomorphic rabbits â in this case the married cousins, Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny, from The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies Beatrix Potter, or Helen Beatrix Potter (July 28, 1866âDecember 22, 1943) was a British childrens book author and illustrator. ...
In literature Anthropomorphism is a well established device in literature, notably in books for children, such as those by C.S. Lewis, Beatrix Potter and Lewis Carroll, which involve characters such as Peter Rabbit, the Cheshire Cat, and the fantastical talking animals of Narnia. Clive Staples Lewis (November 29, 1898 – November 22, 1963), commonly referred to as C. S. Lewis, was an author and scholar. ...
Potters illustration of her anthropomorphic rabbits â in this case the married cousins, Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny, from The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies Beatrix Potter, or Helen Beatrix Potter (July 28, 1866âDecember 22, 1943) was a British childrens book author and illustrator. ...
Photograph of Lewis Carroll taken by himself, with assistance Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (January 27, 1832 â January 14, 1898), better known by the pen name Lewis Carroll, was a British author, mathematician, logician, Anglican clergyman and photographer. ...
Peter Rabbit and wife being asked for cabbages by Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny in The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies Peter Rabbit is the main character in a series of childrens books by Beatrix Potter. ...
The Cheshire cat as John Tenniel envisioned it in the 1866 publication The Cheshire Cat is a fictional cat appearing in Lewis Carrolls Alice in Wonderland. ...
The Narnia books Narnia is a fantasy world created by the Anglo-Irish author C. S. Lewis as a location for his Chronicles of Narnia, a series of seven fantasy novels for children. ...
Terry Pratchett is notable for having several anthropomorphic personifications in his Discworld books. Perhaps most well known is the character Death. Piers Anthony also wrote a series regarding the seven incarnations of Death, Nature, Time, War, Fate, Good and Evil. Neil Gaiman is notable for anthropomorphising seven aspects of the world in his series The Sandman - they are called the Endless: Destiny, Death, Dream, Destruction, Desire, Despair, and Delirium. Terence David John Pratchett OBE is an English fantasy author (born April 28, 1948, in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, England), best known for his Discworld series. ...
The Discworld is a series of 35 humorous fantasy novels and a number of shorter works by Terry Pratchett set on the Discworld. ...
Death is a fictional character in Terry Pratchetts Discworld series. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Incarnations of Immortality is the name of a seven-book fantasy series by Piers Anthony. ...
Neil Gaiman (November 2004) Neil Richard Gaiman () (born November 10, 1960 in Portchester, Hampshire) is an English Jewish author of numerous science fiction and fantasy works, including many comic books. ...
Cover of The Sandman #1, by Dave McKean. ...
The Endless are a group of beings who embody various aspects of the universe in the DC comic book series The Sandman, by Neil Gaiman. ...
Destiny is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series, The Sandman. ...
Death is a fictional character from the DC comic book series, The Sandman (1988 - 1996). ...
Cover of The Sandman #1, by Dave McKean. ...
Destruction is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series The Sandman. ...
Desire is one of the Endless, a fictional character from Neil Gaimans comic book series, The Sandman. ...
Despair is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series, The Sandman. ...
Delirium amid fish Delirium is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series The Sandman. ...
The Indian books Panchatantra (The Five priniciples) and The Jataka tales employ this trick of anthromorphized animals very effectively to illustrate various principles of life. The Panchatantra (also spelled Pañcatantra, Sanskrit पà¤à¥à¤à¤¤à¤¨à¥à¤¤à¥à¤° Five Chapters , Kelileh va Demneh or Kalilag and Damnag in Persian) is a collection of Sanskrit fables in prose and verse. ...
Mrs Grundy is a personification of conventional propriety. Mrs. ...
Common usage It is a common tendency for people to think of inanimate objects as having human-like characteristics. Few, if any people, believe this to have real significance. Common examples of this tendency include naming one's car or begging a machine to work. Advances in artificial intelligence are beginning to identify such foibles as a potentially more significant phenomenon, however, as computers begin to reach the point where they can recognize spoken language. Some computers are already very good at displaying very specific and specialized categories of human-like behaviour, such as learning from their mistakes or anticipating certain input; playing chess and other games with human-like capability; and even, in the case of robots, potentially taking on humanlike form. Anthropomorphobia, a phobia traditionally associated with anxiety responses to nonhuman living things displaying human behavior, is now used to define the phobia of nonliving things that exhibit human qualities. Artificial intelligence (AI) is defined as intelligence exhibited by an artificial entity. ...
A drawing of a desktop computer. ...
A chess table is a table with a chessboard painted or engraved on it. ...
A humanoid robot playing a trumpet In practical usage, a robot is a mechanical device which can perform complex tasks either according to direct human control, partial control with human supervision, or autonomously (that is, fully under computer control). ...
Anthropomorphobia is the fear of acknowledging in nonhumans qualities we wish to consider only human. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Technical use Hackers and programmers have always anthropomorphised technology, mostly as a time-saving device. Complex technology, specifically computers, can exhibit complicated behavior that can be lengthy to describe in purely inanimate terms. Hackers, therefore, may use human actions and even emotions to describe a computer system's behavior. For example, in a situation where a program encounters minor errors but can still accomplish its task, it may do so but emit an error message. Especially in cases where the error encountered is thought to be trivial, a hacker might say that the computer is complaining. This human action (complaining) conveys that there is a difficulty while acknowloging the triviality of the difficulty, and perhaps the fact that the program does what was required despite the difficulty. See the section on anthropomorphismin the Jargon File for more information. Hacker is a term used to describe people who create and modify computer software and computer hardware. ...
In computing, a programmer is someone who does computer programming and develops computer software. ...
The tower of a personal computer. ...
The Jargon File is a glossary of hacker slang. ...
This form of anthropomorphism is common in other technical fields as well. For example, a chemist might casually explain an ionic bond between sodium and chlorine by asserting that the sodium atom "wants" to merge with the chlorine atom. Desire is, of course, a human emotion that atoms are incapable of. Look up chemist on Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Electron configurations of lithium and fluorine. ...
General Name, Symbol, Number sodium, Na, 11 Chemical series alkali metals Group, Period, Block 1, 3, s Appearance silvery white Atomic mass 22. ...
General Name, Symbol, Number chlorine, Cl, 17 Chemical series halogens Group, Period, Block 17, 3, p Appearance yellowish green Atomic mass 35. ...
Modern occurrences
Characters from the television sitcom, Dinosaurs The use of anthropomorphized animals has a long tradition in art and literature. Frequently they are used to portray stereotypical characters, in order to quickly convey the characteristics the author or artist intends for them to possess. Examples include Aesop's fables, George Orwell's Animal Farm and political cartoons, e.g. Maus. Many of the most famous children's television characters are anthropomorphized funny animals: Mickey Mouse, Kermit the Frog, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Scrooge McDuck, for example. While being "funny" is a common trait, it is not a hard rule; Bert the Turtle, star of Duck and Cover is a children-oriented exception. While children- and family-oriented series have often featured anthropomorphic animals, newer adult-oriented television series such as Family Guy and Father of the Pride also make use of anthropomorphized characters. The human characteristics commonly ascribed to animals in popular culture usually centers around either their perceived personality or disposition (for example, owls are usually designated as wise); their appearance alone (penguins are usually portrayed as plump aristocrats, because their plumage resembles a tuxedo); or a combination of both (raccoons are commonly portrayed as bandits, both because of the characteristic black stripe over their eyes, which resembles the stereotypical mask of a bandit, and because they roam at night, sometimes breaking into peoples' garbage). Image File history File links Charlene and Robbie in Dinosaurs episode Refrigerator Day, first aired December 11, 1991, screen capture from http://www. ...
Image File history File links Charlene and Robbie in Dinosaurs episode Refrigerator Day, first aired December 11, 1991, screen capture from http://www. ...
Charlene and Robbie in the episode Refrigerator Day Dinosaurs was an American television sitcom on ABC, about a family of talking dinosaurs that ran for 65 episodes from April 1991 to July 1994. ...
Aesop, as depicted in the Nuremberg Chronicle. ...
Eric Arthur Blair (June 25, 1903âJanuary 21, 1950), better known by the pen name George Orwell, was a British author and journalist. ...
Animal Farm book cover Animal Farm is a satirical novel (which can also be understood as a modern fable or allegory) by George Orwell, ostensibly about a group of animals who oust the humans from the farm they live on and run it themselves, only to have it corrupted into...
Cover Maus: A Survivors Tale is a graphic novel by Art Spiegelman that recounts his fathers struggle to survive the Holocaust as a Polish Jew. ...
Funny animal is a cartooning term for the genre of comics and animated cartoons in which the main characters are humanoid or talking animals. ...
Mickey Mouse Mickey Mouse is a comic animal cartoon character who has become a symbol for The Walt Disney Company. ...
Kermit has a TV star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 6801 Hollywood Blvd. ...
Bugs Bunny, as seen in the Looney Tunes short Rabbit Transit. ...
Daffy Duck in Duck Amuck. ...
Scrooge McDuck, the Richest Duck in the World, by Carl Barks. ...
This is one use of this term; for otherse, see Duck and Cover (Disambiguation). ...
Main article: List of characters from Family Guy The show revolves around the adventures of Peter Griffin and his family. ...
Father of the Pride. ...
For uses of the word Owl as a three letter acronym, see OWL. Families Strigidae Tytonidae An owl is any of some 220+ species of solitary, mainly nocturnal birds of prey in the order Strigiformes. ...
Wisdom is the ability to make correct judgments and decisions. ...
Genera Aptenodytes Eudyptes Eudyptula Megadyptes Pygoscelis Spheniscus Penguins (order Sphenisciformes, family Spheniscidae) are an order of flightless birds living in the southern hemisphere. ...
See aristocracy (social studies; social classes). ...
Closeup on a single white feather A feather is one of the epidermal growths that forms the distinctive outer covering, or plumage, on a bird. ...
Black tie is a dress code for formal evening events that are not formal enough to require white tie. ...
Type species Ursus lotor Linnaeus, 1758 Species Procyon cancrivorus Procyon insularis Procyon lotor Raccoons are mammals native to the Americas in the genus Procyon of the Procyonidae family. ...
Butch Cassidy, a famous Western American outlaw An outlaw, a person living the lifestyle of outlawry, meaning literally outside of the law. ...
Since the 1980s, furry fandom has focused on the appreciation, promotion, and production of stories and art about anthropomorphic animals, as well as the exploration, interpretation and examination of humanity and human values through anthropomorphic expression. Furry fandom and the Furry subculture it is part of have only recently come to the attention of the media. Shanda the Panda #12, an example of a furry comic Furry fandom is a subculture of the science fiction and fantasy fandoms. ...
In logical reasoning Using anthropomorphized caricatures or projecting human qualities on conceptual entities or inanimate objects in reasoning is also known as committing a pathetic fallacy (not a pejorative term). Download high resolution version (1540x1170, 240 KB)Dog wearing baseball cap and shades. ...
Download high resolution version (1540x1170, 240 KB)Dog wearing baseball cap and shades. ...
Trinomial name Canis lupus familiaris (Linnaeus, 1758) The dog is a canine mammal of the Order Carnivora. ...
[[{{{diversity_link}}}|Diversity]] {{{diversity}}} Binomial name Homo sapiens Linnaeus, 1758 Trinomial name {{{trinomial}}} Type Species {{{type_species}}} Subspecies Homo sapiens idaltu (extinct) Homo sapiens sapiens [[Image:{{{range_map}}}|{{{range_map_width}}}|]] Synonyms {{{synonyms}}} Homo (genus). ...
Fashion accessories and theur jewelry counterpart referred to as costume jewelry are items that used as fashions complementary. ...
This article discusses humour in terms of comedy and laughter. ...
Reasoning is the act of using reason to derive a conclusion from certain premises. ...
The pathetic fallacy is a term from literary criticism used to denote the description of inanimate natural objects in a manner that endows them with human emotions, thoughts, sensations and feelings. ...
Opposite view While anthropomorphism is the practice of giving animals human qualities, Zoomorphism is the practice of giving humans animal qualities. These qualities can include everything from physical shape or movements ("She moves like a cat", "He looks as strong as a bear") to mentalities ("He is savage as a lion", "She's a dumb bunny") or a mix of the two ("I sting like a bee"). Zoomorphic decoration from the Book of Kells Zoomorphism, from Greek ζÏον zÅon, meaning animal, and μοÏÏη, morphÄ, meaning shape or form, refers to the representation of animal forms in ornaments, or to the representation of gods in the form, or with attributes, of non-human animals, and also to the transformation...
Anthropomorphism often leads to the humanizing of animals normally used for food. Movies like "Chicken Little" separate agricultural production from reality. Many people are ignorant today of where their food comes from due to anthropomorphism. In the sense that anthropomorphism can include the giving of human qualities to deity, the opposite is Theomorphism, the giving of divine qualities to humans. Theomorphism is a neologism that literally means God-shaped, corresponding to the Hebrew name Michael. ...
See also Anthropomorphobia is the fear of acknowledging in nonhumans qualities we wish to consider only human. ...
Anthropopathy (Greek ανθρωπος, anthropos, human, παθος, pathos, suffering) is the attribution of human emotion to a non-human being, generally a god. ...
A figure of speech, sometimes termed a rhetorical figure or device, or elocution, is a word or phrase that departs from straightforward, literal language. ...
Avarice Wrath Lust Gluttony Sloth Envy Pride The Four Winds Chastity Humility Dawn Night Winter Day Famine War Pestilence Chaos Death, the Grim Reaper Destruction Despair Desire Destiny Delirium Delight Fortune Lady Luck Mother Nature Father Time Temperance Justice Victory Europa Venetia Jack Frost Spring Flora Summer Autumn Mania Melancolia...
Rhetoric (from Greek ÏήÏÏÏ, rhêtôr, orator) is one of the three original liberal arts or trivium (the other members are dialectic and grammar) in Western culture. ...
The Uncanny Valley is a principle of robotics concerning the emotional response of humans to robots and other non-human entities. ...
Shanda the Panda #12, an example of a furry comic Furry fandom is a subculture of the science fiction and fantasy fandoms. ...
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