| archetype |
An original idea, symbol, pattern and/or design upon which all other similar things are patterned. Collectively, and over time, mankind's collective-conscious has come to collaborate a full library of visual understandings by which to communicate.
Ãâó: www.katiestanley.com/resources/dd/a.htm
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| archetype |
a universal character modeled upon those that have been appearing in stories since the time of our ancient ancestors.
Ãâó: www.austin.cc.tx.us/sbramme2/Glossary.htm
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| archetype |
[L:97] A guide to the use of the understanding. The archetype is "the idea of the universe", and is not a constitutive principle of the empirical use of the understanding, but a regulative principle required "for the sake of the all-pervasive coherence" of the use of our understanding. (A question: is the archertpe supplied by erason?)
Ãâó: www.texttribe.com/text/kant_glossary.htm
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| archetype |
According to Carl Jung, archetypes are characters, images, plot patterns, rituals, and settings that are shared by diverse cultures. Jung believed that archetypes are part of humanity's "collective unconscious" and that they appear in literature, myth, folklore, and rituals from a wide range of cultures. They also manifest themselves in the subconscious thoughts and dreams of people. Literary critic Northrop Frye argued that literary archetypes are recurrent images and symbols in literature. ...
Ãâó: wps.ablongman.com/long_longman_mylitlabdemo_1/0,96...
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| archetype |
Stem. (sensu stricto) The most recent common ancestor of all extant manuscripts in an textual tradition. Stem. (sensu lato) The most recent common ancestor of a particular set of manuscripts under discussion.
Ãâó: www.mindspring.com/~scarlson/tc/glossary.htm
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