See homo ludens on Wiktionary
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{ "coordinate_terms": [ { "word": "homo faber" } ], "etymology_templates": [ { "args": { "1": "en", "2": "Johan Huizinga", "nat": "Dutch", "nocat": "1", "occ": "cultural historian" }, "expansion": "Coined by Dutch cultural historian Johan Huizinga", "name": "coin" }, { "args": { "1": "en", "2": "la", "3": "homō lūdēns", "t": "playful man" }, "expansion": "Latin homō lūdēns (“playful man”)", "name": "bor" } ], "etymology_text": "Coined by Dutch cultural historian Johan Huizinga in Homo Ludens (1938), which introduces the concept, from Latin homō lūdēns (“playful man”).", "head_templates": [ { "args": { "1": "?", "nolinkhead": "1" }, "expansion": "homo ludens", "name": "en-noun" } ], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [ { "categories": [ "English countable nouns", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English multiword terms", "English nouns", "English nouns with unknown or uncertain plurals", "English terms borrowed from Latin", "English terms derived from Latin", "English terms with quotations", "Pages with 1 entry", "Pages with entries" ], "examples": [ { "ref": "1989, Yishai Tobin, editor, From Sign to Text: A semiotic view of communication, John Benjamins Publishing, →ISBN, page 196:", "text": "To a homo ludens, playing is an aim in itself and justifies any effort. A real homo ludens does not fuse “ordinary life” with playing. He transforms “ordinary life” into something qualitatively different.", "type": "quote" }, { "ref": "2000 April 13, Marina Warner, “A New Twist in the Long Tradition of the Grotesque”, in London Review of Books, volume 22, number 08, →ISSN:", "text": "The sandpit, mud, lollipop sticks, goo, plasticine, oozing clay and, later, petri dishes and test tubes: playing with such stuff, Hall argues, has clearly influenced the materialisations of contemporary art, so much of it three-dimensional, inherently transient and labile, and playful. Homo ludens has supplanted homo faber.", "type": "quote" }, { "ref": "2001 [1999], Luciano Floridi, Philosophy and Computing: An Introduction, Routledge, →ISBN, page 221:", "text": "It takes a homo ludens to eat the only fruit forbidden by God, unthinkingly and playfully. The afterlife is never seriously conceived of as a workshop, a library or a laboratory.", "type": "quote" }, { "ref": "2017 April 18, Philip Oltermann, quoting Jürgen Schmidhuber, “Jürgen Schmidhuber on the robot future: ‘They will pay as much attention to us as we do to ants'”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:", "text": "“Homo ludens has always had a talent for inventing jobs of the non-existential kind. The vast majority of the population is already doing luxury jobs like yours and mine,” he says, nodding towards my notepad.", "type": "quote" } ], "glosses": [ "The human being viewed as primarily concerned with play, seeing it as an aim in itself." ], "links": [ [ "human being", "human being" ], [ "play", "play" ] ], "wikipedia": [ "Homo Ludens" ] } ], "synonyms": [ { "word": "Homo ludens" }, { "word": "Homo Ludens" } ], "word": "homo ludens" }
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2025-01-06 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2025-01-01 using wiktextract (f889f65 and 8fbd9e8). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.
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