Thanatos$82684$ - traduzione in spagnolo
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Thanatos$82684$ - traduzione in spagnolo

PERSONIFICATION OF DEATH IN GREEK MYTHOLOGY
Thanotos; Tanatos; Tanathos; Thánatos; THANATOS
  • Depiction of Thanatos by Mexican artist [[Mauricio García Vega]]
  • Winged ''Eros Thanatos'', with reversed torch and crossed legs (3rd century BC, [[Stoa of Attalus]], Athens)
  • calyx]]-[[krater]], 515 BC.
  • the battlefield]] of [[Troy]]; detail from an Attic [[white-ground]] [[lekythos]], ca. 440 BC.
  • [[Hypnos]] and Thanatos: ''Sleep and His Half-Brother Death'', by [[John William Waterhouse]], 1874.

Thanatos      
n. Tanátus (encarnación de la muerte en al mitología griega)
pulsión de muerte         
  • dualismo pulsional]] a partir de la distinción entre pulsión de vida y pulsión de muerte.
CONCEPTO PSICOANALÍTICO
Pulsion de muerte; Impulso de la muerte; Pulsion de vida; Thánatos (psicoanálisis); Tánatos (psicoanálisis); Pulsión de vida; Pulsión de muerte
= death-wish
Ex: The main character in the novel viewed his death as the solutions to his problems and was therefore motivated enough by the death-wish to kill with the hopes of retributive capital punishment.

Definizione

Thanatos
['?an?t?s]
¦ noun (in Freudian theory) the death instinct. Often contrasted with Eros.
Origin
from Gk thanatos 'death'.

Wikipedia

Thanatos

In Greek mythology, Thanatos (; Ancient Greek: Θάνατος, pronounced in Ancient Greek: [tʰánatos] "Death", from θνῄσκω thnēskō "(I) die, am dying") was the personification of death. He was a minor figure in Greek mythology, often referred to but rarely appearing in person.

His name is transliterated in Latin as Thanatus, but his counterpart in Roman mythology is Mors or Letum.