Humanities

Humanities
Humanities are academic disciplines that study aspects of human society and culture. In the Renaissance, the term contrasted with divinity and referred to what is now called classics, the main area of secular study in universities at the time. Today, the humanities are more frequently defined as any fields of study outside of professional training, mathematics, and the natural and sometimes social sciences.[1]
Resources
Humanities Categories
Humanities (22 cats, 55 pgs)
African studies (1 cat, 4 pgs)
Anthropology (10 cats, 29 pgs)
Classics (1 cat, 5 pgs)
General humanities (3 cats)
History (21 cats, 164 pgs)
Humanities courses (13 cats, 74 pgs)
Humanities/Courses (3 pgs)
Humanities/Lectures (48 pgs)
Humanities/Resources (1 cat, 6 pgs)
Language studies (3 cats, 1 pg)
Law (14 cats, 27 pgs)
Humanities literature (8 pgs)
Medical ethics (5 pgs)
Nigerian Pidgin (empty)
Philosophy (33 cats, 225 pgs)
Public humanities (5 cats, 10 pgs)
Real Good Religion (7 pgs)
Religion (17 cats, 26 pgs)
Religions (12 cats, 20 pgs)
Surveillance (1 cat, 3 pgs)
Synesthetic Explorations: An Autoethnographic Study on Music, Color, and Creativity (13 pgs)
Theology (32 cats, 46 pgs)
See Also
- Portal: Humanities
- Wikipedia: Humanities
References
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