shamans

(noun)

Spiritual practitioners that reach altered states of consciousness in order to encounter and interact with the spirit world and channel these transcendental energies into this world for healing and divination purposes.

Related Terms

  • Trephination
  • Nazca Lines

Examples of shamans in the following topics:

  • Shang Religion

    • Shang religion was characterized by a combination of animism, shamanism, spiritual control of the world, divination, and respect and worship of dead ancestors, including through sacrifices.
    • Shang religion was characterized by a combination of animism, shamanism, spiritual control of the world, divination, and respect and worship of dead ancestors, including through sacrifice.
  • Southwestern Culture

    • Many of the tribes that made up the Southwest Culture practiced animism and shamanism.
    • Shamanism encompasses the premise that shamans are intermediaries or messengers between the human world and the spirit worlds.
    • Although at present there are a variety of contemporary cultural traditions that exist in the greater Southwest, many of these traditions still incorporate similar religious aspects that are found in animism and shamanism.
  • Animism

    • Shamans, also sometimes called medicine men or women, serve as mediums between the physical world and the world of spirits.
  • Woodland Burial Mounds and Chiefdoms

    • Many works of art seemed to revolve around shamanic practices and the transformation of humans into animals -- particularly birds, wolves, bears, and deer.
  • The Nazca

    • As in the contemporary Moche culture based in northwest Peru, shamans apparently used hallucinogenic drugs, such as extractions from the San Pedro cactus, to induce visions during ceremonies.
    • This plant, Echinopsis pachanoi, has hallucinogenic properties, which shamans of the Nazca culture utilized in ceremonies.
  • Process Art

    • Inspiring precedents for process art that are fundamentally related include: indigenous rites, shamanic and religious rituals, and also cultural forms such as sandpainting, sun dance, and tea ceremonies.
  • Magic and Supernaturalism

    • In general, The term religion is reserved for an organized cult with a priesthood and dedicated sites of worship or sacrifice, while magic is prevalent in all societies, regardless of whether they have organized religion or more general systems of animism or shamanism.
  • Animism

    • It is a belief, such as shamanism, polytheism, or monotheism, that is found in several religions.
  • Religious Experience

    • Characteristic of the shaman, the goal of this type of experience is to leave one's body and experience transcendental realities.
  • Tiwanaku and Wari

    • Some have been found holding severed heads, such as the figure on the Akapana which possibly a puma-shaman.
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