Pastoralism is the discipline of animal domestication and agriculture practiced by persons who humanely and culturally cultivate food and nutrition for their communities with spiritual knowledge, heritage, and wisdom. Pastors, or pastoralists, are persons who live by the animals that they care for. With different animals such as cows, pigs, lambs, sheep, chickens, and goats as examples, the animals herded and shepherded in pastoralist culture are all unified under the banner of mammalian domestication. Each one can be served as a dish and also groomed to produce milk for the communities where they are herded. The spiritual heritage, culture, and wealth of knowledge that then arises from this artful practice of domestication finds its role within its throes as one that is integral to its mastery and conduction. Within communities where birth, life, and death are actively ongoing, the full cycle of observance is one that seats pastoralism as a unique dimensionality granting of the balance that maintains cyclically holistic health, wealth, and teaching in the communities where it is present. Philosophically, knowledge liken unto that which is described prior naturally exists by the step of the individual skills and techniques needed to maintain it, inforbyfrom all forms that would be applicable. From pastors and pastoralists, there then seeds from a radiantly raw fundamental philosophy, the fundamental integrity of incorporating pastoralist principles into the range of mindings associated with communal wisdoms and their subsequent delineative derivations found universally relevant within doctoral disciplines and practices.
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