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Article contents
From Rupert Lodge to Sweat Lodge*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 April 2010
Extract
This book is presented as “a study in ethno-metaphysics,” an exploration of the worldview of Canada's Native peoples. In offering this as a work of philosophy rather than of cultural anthropology or Native spirituality, authors Rabb and McPherson take as their point of departure anthropologist A. I. Hallowell's claim that a cultural worldview is a “cognitive orientation” from which a set of metaphysical claims might be deduced—even if it is not consciously recognized as such by those who live within it (p. 3). In other words, the guiding premise of this work is that something recognizable and significant as a metaphysical theory can be massaged out of the cultural belief-systems of Canada's Native peoples.
- Type
- Critical Notices/Études critiques
- Information
- Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review / Revue canadienne de philosophie , Volume 34 , Issue 4 , Fall 1995 , pp. 747 - 753
- Copyright
- Copyright © Canadian Philosophical Association 1995
References
Notes
1 Nietzsche, Friedrich, The Antichrist, in The Portable Nietzsche, edited and translated by Kaufmann, W. (Markham, ON: Penguin, 1982), p. 589.Google Scholar
2 Parkman, Francis, The Oregon Trail (Boston, MA: Francis, Little, and Brown, 1885), p. vii.Google Scholar
3 Ibid., p. 270.