In one way the modern society has encroached over the living space of indigenous people then their festivals has become exibitions for tourists and the value which the given for that festivals has lost in one way . Every thing has comercialized and they have lost the real spirit of believes because the cusoms and rituals has become for shows
Modern civilization has had little impact on the spiritual lives of indigenous peoples. They continue to practice indigenous religions. There are thousand of people groups who have not been evangelized.
Modern civilization both replaces indigenous life for many people and also incorporates ideas from the people that it interacts with.
modern warfare
You bet we have. "We" being us westerners. Western culture's biggest influence was the Bible and Christianity. Though there are exceptions, most westerners sought to help civilize the Native American by introducing him to Jesus, the God of the Bible who taught man to loving and kind and generous. Many Indians accepted this as they had always been a religios people and found in the Bible the answers to many of their spiritual musings.
It's native to a particular area or country. Certainly there have been different impacts in different areas and countries. But overall one could say that modern civilization has effected the spiritual lives of indigenous peoples by exposing them to ideas and viewpoints that their spiritual traditions had not previously encountered. A simple example would be air travel. Ancient mythologies typically tell of supernatural beings or spirits who fly through the air. Exposure to airplanes and the perfectly ordinary human beings flying in airplanes necessarily changes the meaning of "one who flies." Other modern technologies have changed the way all people, not just indigenous peoples, think about the difference between what is spiritual and what is "natural." Considering how accustomed we have become to special affects and pyrotechnics, any "god" would have a hard time impressing 21st Century Humanity. Many things which we consider quite ordinary in modern civilization would have been considered miraculous and signs of deity only a relatively short time ago: talking at a distance .... telephone appearing in a crystal... television music / voices from the air ... radio traveling across the world in a single day healing deadly diseases plucking fire from "nowhere" ... matches killing / wounding at a distance ... gun powder seeing through solid material ... x rays, sensors
NO. Phoenicians are a people who are indigenous to modern Lebanon, but who established colonies throughout the Mediterranean, most notably Carthage in modern Tunisia. The Ancient Egyptians were a completely different, but contemporaneous civilization that existed in modern Egypt.
No it is not a modern civilization. It is an ANCIENT civilization!
The modern hippo is indigenous only to Africa.
The last major civilization to emerge in a significant historical context was often considered to be the Western civilization, which developed in Europe and North America from the Renaissance onward, particularly after the Industrial Revolution. However, when discussing indigenous or non-Western civilizations, various cultures such as the Maori in New Zealand or the Indigenous peoples of Australia maintained their traditional societies into modern times, adapting to colonial influences. In contemporary terms, the concept of civilization is fluid, with ongoing developments in global societies rather than a clear "last" civilization.
Yeats prophecy for modern civilization is that Western civilization will enter a period of decline. The prophecy comes from the poem The Second Coming.
Kay Kirchmann has written: 'Verdichtung, Weltverlust und Zeitdruck' -- subject(s): Civilization, Modern, Culture, Modern Civilization, Philosophy, Social aspects, Social aspects of Time, Time 'Blicke aus dem Bunker' -- subject(s): Civilization, Modern, Criticism and interpretation, Modern Civilization, Technology and civilization
Peter Fry has written: 'Beyond the mechanical mind' -- subject(s): Civilization, Modern, Civilization, Western, Consciousness, Modern Civilization, Western Civilization 'Caring to order'