Wave Dancing Chinese Calligraphy--Chinese Calligraphy Art, lessons, Tattoo Design and Unique Gifts.

Home | Master calligraphy | Scripts | History | Calligraphers | Lessons | Calligraphy Library | Search


Calligraphy gallery

Tattoo design

Chinese name

Custom calligraphy

Wedding calligraphy

Gift ideas


Chinese calligraphy love
Love
¡¡
Order now!

Chinese calligraphy dream
Dream
Order now!



¡¡
Order now!

View Cart

Art
Art institute martial
Animation art disney walt
Indian elephant art
Child art gallery
Wild flower clip art
Tropical wall art
American modern art
Art nouveau tattoo
Martial art weapon in japan
Ancient history art
Martial art equipment
Martial art video
Martial art style
Martial art weapon
Japanese martial arts
Martial arts clip art
Martial art schools
Martial arts magazine
Martial art movie
Martial arts clip
Martial art trick
Martial art uniform
Free martial art clip art
Martial art technique
Russian martial art
Best martial art
Martial art shoes
Martial art clip art
Century martial art supply
Martial art store
Flame picture tattoo
Temporary tattoo stencil

Mixed martial art

If there's no mixed martial art in the world, there will be no human.

mixed martial art give people beauty. Beauty can adjust people's mood. A good mood will improve people's work. The word becomes more beautiful because of mixed martial art.

Art works inspire people. Everybody in the world need inspiration. That's how people affect each other. That is how dead people affect living people. That's the wealth of human inherited from ancestors.


Visit our Chinese calligraphy art gallery now!

Enter to win a free Chinese calligraphy art work or tattoo design ($40 value)!

Chinese calligraphy--Art, lesson, services and tattoo design.

Chinese calligraphy art gallery -- High quality calligraphy art works.

 Tattoo design-- Chinese calligraphy tattoo design and pictures.

Chinese name calligraphy-- Discover how beautiful your name looks in Chinese calligraphy.

Custom Chinese calligraphy -- Customize the Chinese calligraphy works as you like. Select the size, script and content on the calligraphy work.

Gift ideas -- You will get great gifts to make someone happy.

Chinese calligraphy lessons -- Chinese calligraphy lessons for beginners. Free!

My aim in making the comment was actually just to provide an example that could give voice to other potential points of view, which is to say that of those who are more inclined to cite actor more instinctual urges, which might be construed as the impetus for headhunting activity in some cultures, and how I could see why people might reasonably draw that conclusion as well.

Though Boas?stated goal was to determine the dynamic conditions under which art styles grow up? and was not necessarily an attempt to nail down the evolutionary, psychological and behavioral impetus for artistic endeavor itself, none the less the cross discipline implications seem relevant.

There's a wonderful book on the subject, called On Aggression. The author's name has momentarily left the page that my brain is scanning - one of the interesting phenomena that occurs with age. I'm completely confident that I will recall it in a little while, so the memory trace isn't gone, it's just temporarily inaccessible.

Today, sports really out perform art works. People will pay more than $1000 to a ticket of basketball game. And not a lot of people will pay that amount to buy an art work. NBA players seems like to make more money than artists. It's really a pity.

I just like to add that in the seminal work, rimitive Art? By Boas, which was first published in 1927 I believe, Boas repeatedly cites the pleasure of virtuosity and the satisfaction of aesthetic creativity as one of the principal motivations for creating art.

The sort of most dramatic of the other plausible scenarios is that he became the victim of Asmat headhunters and all that implies. If that was how it happened, the bitter irony naturally is that the young Rockefeller was passionate about the area and had a great interest and respect for a smart people and culture.

In any case, as you say, tales of headhunting and cannibalism can be quite jarring. The really astonishing part of it in my opinion however, is just how relatively common such practices were around the planet.

This gradually resulted in the Homo sapien brain developing with these unique capacities that would foster creativity and the resultant sexual allure was on par, in terms of developmental importance, with those processes that are emblematic of natural selection responses to environmental factors such as geography, climate, predators, etc.

Boas was on to something, and Miller’s ideas strike me as complimentary and mutually reinforcing. While Boas only mentions the personal creative satisfaction of the artisan him or herself, the idea that creative virtuosity could serve as an appeal to prospective mates, seems like a fairly reasonable extension of his conclusions on art motives? and one that could reinforce the artisans own pleasure in the aesthetically creative act.

A final comment or two on head hunting? for the majority of us who will read this discussion, I think it is safe to say that if this phenomenon is of interest at all, then at most we may possibly gain an intellectual understanding of why various societies might indulge in headhunting, but our own deeply ingrained cultural praxis will prevent us from ever looking at headhunting the way someone who is an autochthonous member of a headhunting society might.

Anyway, the general theme of the book is that breeding without adequate resources leads to starvation, so females inherently select males that control adequate territory with which to support the offspring. He documents a large number of examples of territorial competition among males, with death of one of the competitors being extremely rare.

As I mentioned I tend towards a nature and nurture explanation for a behavior, with a preponderance of weight on social conditioning for the category of behavior in question.


About us | FAQ | What's new | Suggestions | Partners | Resources

Quesions? Email calligraphy@wavedancing.net .
Copyright © 2003 of Lixin Wang. All rights reserved.  Permission should be granted before any use of Chinese calligraphy articles, pictures and videos on this site.
Last modified: Tuesday October 18, 2005.