" The law of the jungle " is an expression meaning "everyone to himself", "whatever", "survival of the fittest", "kill or be killed" eat dog "or" eat or eat ". The Oxford English Dictionary defines the Law of the Jungle as "the code of survival in the forest, now usually by reference to the superiority of brute force or self-interest in the struggle for survival." This is also known as jungle law or border justice.
The expression is used in a poem by Rudyard Kipling to illustrate the welfare and behavior of the wolf in the package. However, the use of the term has been defeated by the other interpretations above.
Video Law of the jungle
The Jungle Book
In the The Jungle Book novel, Rudyard Kipling used the term to illustrate the actual series of legal codes used by wolves and other animals in the jungle of India. In Chapter Two of the Second Forest Book , Rudyard Kipling provided a poem, displaying Forest Laws known to the wolves, and as taught to their children.
In the adaptation of the Disney novel 2016, the wolf often chants a poem called "the law of the jungle" and when Baloo asks Mowgli if he has ever heard a song and he starts reading this anthem, the bear replied by telling him that it was not a song, propaganda.
Maps Law of the jungle
See also
- Anarchism
- Evolutionary psychology
- Nature law
- Stateless community
- Social Darwinism
- Wild West
References
External links
- Second Forest Book in Project Gutenberg
Source of the article : Wikipedia