cargo cult
English
Etymology
First used in print by N. M. Bird in a 1945 article.[1]
Noun
cargo cult (plural cargo cults)
- Any of several unorthodox religious movements among the people of Melanesia based upon Western manufactured goods.
- (figuratively, also attributive) Any of several philosophies, practices or pseudosciences that are not rooted in experiment, often characterized by an unreflected and ritualistic approach.
- cargo cult science
- cargo cult software engineering
Derived terms
Translations
Melanesian religion based upon Western manufactured goods
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References
- Norris Mervyn Bird (November 1945), “Is there a danger of a post-war flare-up among New Guinea natives?”, in Pacific Island Monthly (in English), volume 16, issue 4, Sidney: Pacific Publications, →OCLC, page 69:
- Stemming directly from religious teaching of equality and its resulting sense of injustice, is what is generally known as “Vailala Madness” or “Cargo Cult.” […] A native, infected with the disorder, states that he has been visited by a relative long dead, who stated that a great number of ships loaded with “cargo” had been sent by the ancestor of the native for the benefit of the natives […]
Further reading
cargo cult on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Portuguese
Noun
cargo cult m (plural cargo cults)
- cargo cult (Melanesian religion based upon Western manufactured goods)
- Synonyms: culto à carga, culto de carga, culto da carga
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