- Contents
- Title Page
Abstract
0. Preliminaries
0.1. Mottos
0.2. Note on spelling conventions
0.3. Abbreviations
1. Introduction to "Sex and the Meaning of Life"
1.1. The background discourse: sexuality and culture theories
1.2. In the Beginning: Vilem Flusser, Adamah, and the male myth of in-formation / in-saemination
1.3. The "meaning" of life: Pattern cognition and propagation, morphology, and the cultural memory system CMS
2. Pattern propagation in nature and culture
2.1. The significant structural equivalence of the sex act and writing
2.2. Pattern propagation and immortality complexes
2.3. Structural equivalences of male mythologies of in-saemination
2.4. The ovum-sperm fallacy
2.5. Critique of the phallogokrator replicator principle and the "selfish gene" figment
2.6. Of Pro-metheans and Epi-metheans
2.7. An alternative hypothesis on the origin of the phallogokrator syndrome
3. The onoma-semaiophonic webwork method: Sinn-Klang, Sing-Lang, Song-line
3.1. The academic consensus theories on the origin of writing
3.2. An outline for counterarguments to the consensus position
4. Tri-gyno-maetrics
4.1. The Ur-pattern of the gyno- / gono- triangle sign
4.2. Hypotheses of cross-cultural symbolic traffic in ancient cultures
4.3. The goni- yoni-, gynae- gena- connection
4.4. The matter, materia, maeter, chthon-, ge, gea, and gaia connection
4.5. The chalice, chalix, kylix, kyllos, kylae, kytos, kyttaros, kyphella connection
4.6. The tri-gyno-goono-maetria
4.7. The cunneiform- cunnus- cunt- kunti- conchita- connection
4.8. The kinae- / klystae- / klostae- connection
5. The aleph-bayt connection
5.1. The aleph - A connection
5.2. The bayt - B connection
5.3. The ghimel - Gamma - C - K connection
6. Materials
6.1. The Aborigine songline tradition
7. Conclusion
8. Literature
Table of contents (Omitted in WWW Version)