varlıkların bedenlerinden ayrı olarak ruh sahibi oldukları inancı

listen to the pronunciation of varlıkların bedenlerinden ayrı olarak ruh sahibi oldukları inancı
Türkçe - İngilizce
animism
A belief that an immaterial force animates the universe
A belief that spirits inhabit some or all classes of natural objects or phenomena
A doctrine that animal life is produced by an immaterial spirit
worldviews and lifeways founded on the understanding that the world is a community of living persons (most of whom are other-than-human) deserving respect, in which people learn through life how to show respect in locally appropriate ways
{i} belief that everything in nature has a soul (i.e. trees, rocks, etc.)
The doctrine, taught by Stahl, that the soul is the proper principle of life and development in the body
the belief that an immaterial force animates the universe
The belief that inanimate objects and the phenomena of nature are endowed with personal life or a living soul; also, in an extended sense, the belief in the existence of soul or spirit apart from matter
the belief that spirits inhabit natural objects or phenomena
the doctrine that all natural objects and the universe itself have souls; "animism is common among primitive peoples
a religion in which animals and plants are believed to have spirits (anima; ANIMAL). Belief in the existence of spirits separable from bodies. Such beliefs are traditionally identified with small-scale ("primitive") societies, though they also occur in major world religions. They were first competently surveyed by Edward Burnett Tylor in Primitive Culture (1871). Classic animism, according to Tylor, consists of attributing conscious life to natural objects or phenomena, a practice that eventually gave rise to the notion of a soul. See also shaman
varlıkların bedenlerinden ayrı olarak ruh sahibi oldukları inancı

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    var·lık·la·rın be·den·le·rin·den ay·rı o·la·rak ruh sa·hi·bi ol·duk·la·rı i·nan·cı