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・ Mother Mary Lange
・ Mother Mary Louis
・ Mother Mary More
・ Mother may I
・ Mother May I (band)
・ Mother May I?
・ Mother McAuley Liberal Arts High School
・ Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions (album)
・ Mother Meera
・ Mother Mosque of America
・ Mother Mother
・ Mother Mother (disambiguation)
・ Mother Mother (film)
・ Mother Mother (song)
・ Mother Motherland, Kiev
Mother Nature
・ Mother Nature (The Temptations song)
・ Mother Nature Calls
・ Mother Nature Network
・ Mother Nature's Kitchen
・ Mother Nature's Son
・ Mother Nature's Son (album)
・ Mother Nature's Son (disambiguation)
・ Mother Nature's Son (Only Fools and Horses)
・ Mother Neff State Park
・ Mother Night
・ Mother Night (comics)
・ Mother Night (film)
・ Mother o' Mine
・ Mother of a Different Kind


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Mother Nature : ウィキペディア英語版
Mother Nature

Mother Nature (sometimes known as Mother Earth or the Earth-Mother), is a common personification of nature that focuses on the life-giving and nurturing aspects of nature by embodying it in the form of the mother.
==Western tradition history==

The word "nature" comes from the Latin word, "''natura''," meaning birth or character (see nature (innate)). In English its first recorded use (in the sense of the entirety of the phenomena of the world, was in 1266' ''Natura'', and the personification of Mother Nature, was widely popular in the Middle Ages and as a concept seated between the properly divine and the human, it can be traced to Ancient Greece, though Earth (or "''Eorthe''" in the Old English period) may have been personified as a goddess. The Norse also had a goddess called Jord (or ''Earth'').
The earliest written dated literal references to the term "Mother Earth" occur in Mycenaean Greek. ''Ma-ka'' (transliterated as ''ma-ga''), "Mother Gaia", written in Linear B syllabic script (13th or 12th century BC).〔(''Palaeolexicon; Word Study Tool of Ancient Languages'' );〕 The various myths of nature goddesses such as Inanna/Ishtar (myths and hymns attested on Mesopotamian tablets as early as the 3rd millennium BC) show that the personification of the creative and nurturing sides of nature as female deities has deep roots. In Greece, the pre-Socratic philosophers had "invented" nature when they abstracted the entirety of phenomena of the world as singular: ''physis'', and this was inherited by Aristotle. Later medieval Christian thinkers did not see nature as inclusive of everything, but thought that she had been created by God; her place lay on earth, below the unchanging heavens and moon. Nature lay somewhere in the center, with agents above her (angels), and below her (demons and hell). For the medieval mind she was only a personification, not a goddess.

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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