Seemed to condone r a p e, suicide, and free love (aka lust)
Answer: T
he 4 branches of Musicology are
Historical Musicology is the branch of musicology which includes Musical Theory and can be divided in classical music and comparative music.
New musicology focuses upon the cultural study, aesthetics, criticism, and hermeneutics of music.
Ethno Musicology, also called Comparative Musicology, often from a Eurocentric point of view is the study of music from the cultural and social aspects of the people who make it.
Systematic Musicology, which is highly interdisciplinary, including the fields of Music Philosophy, Music Psychology, Cognitive Music Psychology, Neuroscience, Robotics and AI.
Explanation:
Pixie cut 1 is by Darxu on Deviant Art
Pixie cut 2 is by Derek Hetrick on Twitter
Mohawk 1 is by Ficeaxx (at least I think that's what the signature says) source is unknown
Mohawk 2 is by Little-Noko on Deviant Art
Yes ..........................
Answer:
Egyptian Gods
Ancient Egyptian Gods and Goddesses
Ancient Egyptian Gods and Goddesses
For all ancient people, the world was filled with mystery. Much of what they experienced in the world around them was unknowable and frightening. The ancient Egyptian gods and goddesses represented aspects of the Egyptians’ natural and “supernatural” surroundings and helped them understand its many aspects.
Ammut
Ammut
Demons
Demons were more powerful than human beings but not as powerful as gods. They were usually immortal, could be in more than one place at a time, and could affect the world as well as people in supernatural ways. But there were certain limits to their powers and they were neither all-powerful nor all knowing. Among demons the most important figure was Ammut – the Devourer of the Dead – part crocodile, part lioness, and part hippopotamus. She was often shown near the scales on which the hearts of the dead were weighed against the feather of Truth. She devoured the hearts of those whose wicked deeds in life made them unfit to enter the afterlife. Apepi, another important demon, (sometimes called Apophis) was the enemy of the sun god in his daily cycle through the cosmos, and is depicted as a colossal snake.
KhepreKhepre
Also known as, Khepri, Khepra, Khepera, Khepre was a creator god depicted as a Scarab beetle or as a man with a scarab for a head. The Egyptians observed young scarab beetles emerging spontaneously from balls of dung and associated them with the process of creation. Khepre was one of the first gods, self-created, and his name means “he who has come into being,” Atum took his form as he rose out of the chaotic waters of the Nun in a creation myth. It was thought that Khepre rolled the sun across the sky in the same way a dung beetle rolls balls of dung across the ground.
Explaination:
Egyptian gods are often described as jealous, petty, angry, bitter, and violent. How could this principle influence Egyptian life?