Imagen del autor

Vergilius Ferm (1896–1974)

Autor de An Encyclopedia of Religion

29 Obras 750 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Photograph taken about 1916

Obras de Vergilius Ferm

An Encyclopedia of Religion (1943) 196 copias
A History of Philosophical Systems (1950) — Editor — 124 copias
Classics of Protestantism (1959) 124 copias
Ancient religions (1950) 34 copias
Encyclopedia of Morals (1956) 17 copias
Living Schools of Religion (1956) 15 copias
The Protestant credo (1953) 10 copias
A Protestant dictionary (1951) 9 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Ferm, Vergilius Ture Anselm
Fecha de nacimiento
1896
Fecha de fallecimiento
1974-02-04
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de fallecimiento
Wooster, Ohio, USA
Lugares de residencia
Mercer, Wisconsin, USA
Educación
Doctor of Philosophy
Ocupaciones
professor
author
pastor
Organizaciones
College of Wooster
American Theological Society
Lutheran Church
American Theological Society (President)
Biografía breve
Ferm was long-time Compton Professor and head of the philosophy department in the College of Wooster.

Miembros

Reseñas

This is a fun vintage book I picked up at an estate sale as a kid, full of retro factoids and interesting bits of Americana. Check out that kitschy cover! The author's name is pretty awesome, too. While most of the info in "A Brief Dictionary of American Superstitions" can probably be found online today, it is still nice to have them easily accessible in alphabetical order, from "Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder" to "Young People." The entries are often quite mixed though, with the entries for New Year and New Years Day sharing some superstitions on New Years while the entry for Sweeping also throws in a few more (bad luck to sweep on New Years, you know). Of course, some of them are oddly sexist in that old fashioned way (while it is good luck for a "dark" man to enter your house first on New Years, it is "disaster" if a woman is first, "no matter her hair color"), but there are definitely some amusing stuff.

Did you know, for instance, that a good ointment for sore eyes can be whipped up from some crushed bedbugs mixed with human milk? Just smear a little on the eyelids! Also, "an abundance of hair on the arms is considered a sign of impeding wealth." Must not have come through yet for me, or maybe I need more. Also, it is common opinion that the sting of a "harvest fly" (or cicada) is fatal, which is, as the author points out, ridiculous. Some are just common sense, though, like how "wiping on the same towel as another person at the same time will cause quarrels." It is funny how many of the superstitions just seem to be completely random, and the author has an amusing voice in his asides describing how studies have shown that various of these beliefs are wrong, or in some cases, based on fact
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
Spoonbridge | Jan 2, 2015 |

También Puede Gustarte

Autores relacionados

Gordon H. Clark Contributor
Ledger Wood Contributor
Glenn Negley Contributor
Henry Veatch Contributor
Ray H. Dotterer Contributor
James H. Dunham Contributor
Horace L. Friess Contributor
Arthur Berndtson Contributor
Eugen Kullmann Contributor
Gustave Bergmann Contributor
Paul R. Helsel Contributor
Donald S. Mackay Contributor
Edward J. Jurji Contributor
Charles Hartshorne Contributor
Samuel S. Cohon Contributor
Emil L. Fackenheim Contributor
Charles Frankel Contributor
Van Meter Ames Contributor
Albert E. Avey Contributor
Dorion Cairns Contributor
H. G. Creel Contributor
Alban G. Widgery Contributor
Stephen C. Pepper Contributor
Armand Maurer Contributor
Helmut Kuhn Contributor
Douglas N. Morgan Contributor
Roy Wood Sellar Contributor

Estadísticas

Obras
29
Miembros
750
Popularidad
#33,913
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
28

Tablas y Gráficos