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・ Anicius Probinus
・ Anicius Probus
・ Anicius Probus Faustus
・ Anick
・ Anicka van Emden
・ Anicka Yi
・ Anicla
・ Anicla digna
・ Anicla exuberans
・ Anicla forbesi
・ Anicla illapsa
・ Anicla infecta
・ Anicla lubricans
・ Anicla tepperi
・ Anicom
Aniconism
・ Aniconism in Buddhism
・ Aniconism in Christianity
・ Aniconism in Islam
・ Aniconism in Judaism
・ Aniconism in the Bahá'í Faith
・ Anictis
・ Aniculus maximus
・ Anicuns
・ Anicuns Microregion
・ Anicyka Maya
・ Anicée Alvina
・ Anidiops
・ Anidolic lighting
・ Anidulafungin


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Aniconism : ウィキペディア英語版
Aniconism

Aniconism is the absence of material representations of the natural and supernatural world in various cultures, particularly in the monotheistic Abrahamic religions. It may extend from only God and deities to saint characters, all living beings, and everything that exists. The phenomenon is generally codified by the religious traditions and as such becomes a taboo. When enforced by the physical destruction of images, aniconism becomes iconoclasm. The word itself derives from Greek εικων 'image' with the negative prefix ''an-'' (Greek privative alpha) and the suffix ''-ism'' (Greek -ισμος).
==General aspects==
Monotheist religions — The phenomenon of aniconism was shaped in monotheist religions by theological considerations and historical contexts. It emerged as a corollary of seeing God's position as the ultimate power holder, and the need to defend this unique status against competing external and internal forces, such as pagan idols and critical humans. Idolatry is a threat to uniqueness, and one way that prophets and missionaries chose to fight it was through the prohibition of physical representations. The same solution also worked against the pretension of humans to have the same power of creation as God (hence their banishment from the Heavens, the destruction of Babel, and the Second Commandment in the biblical texts).
Aniconism as a construction — A number of modern scholars, working on various cultures, have gathered material showing that the idea of aniconism is in many cases an intellectual construction, suiting specific intents and historical contexts, rather than a fact of the tangible reality (Huntington for Buddhism, Clément for Islam and Bland for Judaism — see below in notes and references).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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