superstitions irrational beliefs or cultural mores

31
SUPERSTITIONS IRRATIONAL BELIEFS OR CULTURAL MORES Подготовила: ученица 8 «Б» класса Абдуразакова Анна Проверил: учитель английского языка Разволяева Алина Валерьевна Project

Upload: addison-morse

Post on 02-Jan-2016

48 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Project. Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores. Подготовила: ученица 8 «Б» класса Абдуразакова Анна Проверил: учитель английского языка Разволяева Алина Валерьевна. Contents: 1. The meaning of the word Superstition 2. The most popular and interesting beliefs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

SUPERSTITIONSIRRATIONAL BELIEFS

OR CULTURAL MORES

Подготовила: ученица 8 «Б» класса Абдуразакова Анна

Проверил: учитель английского языка Разволяева Алина Валерьевна

Project

Page 2: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

Contents:1. The meaning of the word Superstition

2. The most popular and interesting beliefs

3. Superstitions in different countries

4. The origins of common superstitions

5. Conclusion

Page 3: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

THE MEANING OF THE WORD SUPERSTITION

Page 4: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

To medieval scholars the word was applied to and beliefs outside of or in opposition to Christianity;

today it is applied to conceptions without foundation in, or in contravention of, scientific and logical knowledge.

Page 5: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

Superstition, as of today´s understanding, is thought to derive from the both meanings of Latin “superstes” composed on

super (over, beyond) and

sto (to stand):

·

… belief that stands outside the bounds of clerical religion

Page 6: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

Many superstitions can be prompted

- by misunderstanding of causality or statistics.

- “folk beliefs”. - a result of misinterpreting

correlations as causes

- urban legends.

Page 7: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

Many extant superstitions are said to have originated during the plagues that swept through Europe.

Page 8: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

The Roman Catholic Church considers superstition to be sinful in the sense that it denotes a lack of trust in the divine providence of God…

Page 9: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

Yes, we are what we think…our world and the people around us behave the way we expect them to… While as a species, some beliefs are common to us all – many core beliefs and attitudes, like our superstitions, tend to be culturally-based. In fact our superstitions tend to define growth and evolution within our cultural frameworks.

Page 10: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

…Our superstitions say a lot about who we are, how we feel and how we think about our world. Those who choose to believe, find their world delivering what they expect…and those who don´t, are not affected.

Page 11: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

THE MOST POPULAR AND INTERESTING BELIEFS

Page 12: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

3. KNOCK OF WOODWhen you mention how good things are, or

how successfully things have been, knock with your hand on wood.

…..means bad luck, having a quarrel

Page 13: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

2. THROWING WATERWhen someone leaves the house, for travel,

for instance, the one that is left behind throws some water, outside the house in the direction of the person.

Page 14: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

4. BLACK CATSeeing a black cat in the

street, means bad luck…. In England a black cat crossing your path is lucky.

When you sit at the corner of the table you will never marry.

Page 15: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

6. WEDDING RINGOne should never hand over a wedding ring

directly to some else. At first one should put the ring at the table so the other person can pick it up. Similar to this, before the wedding no one should try the ring neither bride nor someone else.

Page 16: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

7. TRAVELLINGIf you travel you should not turn half

way; even when you forget something.

Page 17: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

8. OPENING AN UMBRELLANever open an umbrella in the house.

Page 18: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

9. SIT DOWN BEFORE DEPARTURE

Before leaving, beginning a travel, the person has to sit down.

Page 19: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

10. PRESENT WITH SOMETHING SHARP

It is not good to give a present that contains something sharp, like a fork or a knife.

Page 20: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

FRIDAY THE 13TH SUPERSTITION

Friday the 13th superstitions are among the most pervasive of all bad-luck beliefs. On this day, many people believe bad things are bound to happen, and any luck is bad luck.

Page 21: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

…Learning about the history and evolution of Friday the 13th may relive people and allow them to face their phobia (known scientifically as paraskevidekatriaphobia).

Page 22: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

WHY 13?Numerology has strong pagan and

Christian traditions as well. In early pagan rituals, 13 was a powerful feminine number, linked to the lunar calendar. Pagans traditionally honoured the 13 lunar cycles each years.

Page 23: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

It has been suggested that 13 is an “unlucky” number because Christianity has sought to distance itself from pagan traditions and ostracize the followers thereof….

Page 24: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

In France, Italy, Spain, probably Portugal too 13 is actually a lucky number. Interesting that in Italian culture, the number 17 is their 13. It comes from the Roman numeral XVII, which anagrammed becomes VIXI, Latin for “I lived”, the implied meaning being “my life is now over”.

Page 25: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

WHY FRIDAY?Throughout history,

humans have divided time

into segments to be tracked

and noted. The Western

calendar in its modern form

has its origins in ancient

lunar calendars, with

approximately 30 days.

These days were divided

into 7-day blocks with

named days.

Page 26: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

Noah´s flood started on a Friday, and Christ was crucified on a Good Friday. Christians also noted that twelve witches plus one devil are present at Satanic ceremonies so Friday and 13 make a deadly combination. Friday was traditionally feared as a day of doom.

Page 27: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

As the unlucky association with Friday continued, many people refused to do certain tasks on this day. European ships avoided launching on Fridays, and public hangings in Great Britain were held on Fridays. Today, many people in the Western world still hesitate to invite bad luck on Friday the 13th by avoiding driving, eating our or hosting a party.

Page 28: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

….Too often we are superstitious and interpret signs in negative of hostile ways. Because we don´t believe in ourselves, we tend to think that fate is against us.

Page 29: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

But life isn´t for us or against us. If we are attentive, we will see many signs of promise during each day. Signs of promise, signs of goodness, signs of beauty. And if we trust ourselves and our Higher Power, we will know how to interpret the world and use it to do good.

Page 30: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

One thing we are leaning to be sure of – in this world of signs, we are not alone.

I don´t want to believe in a hostile fate. The world is good and I am finding my way in it by being patient and learning to read the signs.

Page 31: Superstitions Irrational beliefs or cultural mores

INFORMATION SOURCES

[email protected]

.http://www.life123.com/holidays/halloween/superstitions/chinese-.superstitions.shtmlhttp://www.pitt.edu/~dash/superstition.html.http://www.falkor.org/relax/superstitions.htm.http://www.life123.com/holidays/halloween/superstitions/friday-the-13th-superstition.shtml.http://wiki.ask.com/Japanese_superstition