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Discover LudwigThe phrase "material civilization" is correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used to refer to the tangible or physical aspects of a society, such as technology, infrastructure, and material goods. It is often contrasted with "cultural civilization," which refers to the beliefs, values, and practices of a society. Example: The city's rapid development in terms of material civilization has greatly improved the standard of living for its citizens, but some worry about its impact on the city's cultural heritage.
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A material civilization flowered between the 8th and 5th centuries in the northern Abruzzo and in the Marches.
If man has been able to create the arts, the sciences and the material civilization we know in America, why should he be judged powerless to create justice, fraternity and peace?" I taped it to my dorm room wall, but I didn't tell him.
The pastoralists shared the highlands with sedentary communities of non-pastoralists, refugees from the plain, who had fled the hardships of the Ottoman rule and most probably of malaria and plague to create a material civilization as impressive as it was fragile (Koliopoulos 1981).
One wing is physical power and material civilization; the other is spiritual power and divine civilization.
In a lengthy invective against today's state of the arts, the Vasilieva sisters write, "Today we are witnessing the collapse of the basic cultural patterns and mechanisms that determine a spiritual and material civilization over the last century...Spirit of apocalypses holds sway over modern culture and slowly infecting everything around.
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It has been seen above that the area covered by the Indus civilization had a remarkably uniform level of material culture.
Our marshes act as kidneys to the mainland, filtering rainfall runoff that could contain toxic materials from civilization.
The dyestuffs applied onto textile materials past civilizations have been examined to investigate the development and technological advancements in textile dyeing through various archaeological periods.
In "A Short History of Christianity," by John M. Robertson, from 1902, Pessoa wrote in a tiny hand in the margin of one page, "excellent," in English, beside a passage declaring: "the material refinements of civilization" had bred in modern cities "a new neurosis".
The 20th century, however, has seen a tremendous expansion of artificial plantations in all the continents, planned to meet the ever-growing needs for wood and paper as essential materials in modern civilization.
The development of the production and use of different materials by early civilization landmarks the Stone Age (2.5 million BC), the Bronze Age (3500 BC), and the Iron Age (1000 BC) [3].
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