Mythology
Mythology
Mythology
Myth is before philosophy and science. The same questions that our religions
used to ask, now our philosophies and our sciences try to answer. We may be an
enlightened, technological society but we have the same needs as ever:
protection, warmth, food, sex and love and children, happiness, doing good.
Aren't we still fascinated by the truths of these mythic stories and by ancient
peoples' need for magic in their untamed world? And don't we still cry out for
magic in our (apparently) rational world? Don't we seem to crave mystery more
and more to counter our apparent understanding and mastery of the world? Are
we meant to be totally rational, are we meant to be machines?
A culture's mythology is a powerful tool for psychology, casting light on the
culture's shared unconscious. There is no better way to understand a culture
deeply than to know and appreciate its mythos, its stories, its dreams. Indeed,
many of the symbols in our dreams are universal (Jung's archetypes), or at least
culture-wide, symbols whose meaning is invested in the mythic stories that they
inhabit. And there are those who believe that these symbols and these stories are
encoded in the very cells of our species' DNA.
-------------------------------But for many, if not most, mythology is the study of old, meaningless and untrue
stories ("that's just a myth"). The problem for Americans and many in the West is
that so many have no idea that their mythos is just that, stories that inform their
culture, not necessarily historical truth. For many, the Bible, the main sourcebook of the Judaeo-Christian mythology, is the revealed word of God, and other
religions' stories are "no more than myths," just some stupid fiction believed by
ignorant people. Obviously, the same can be said of the Koran for Muslims. The
wars fought over who owns The One Truth are without number in human history;
the hatred engendered over whose God is the real God seems no closer to
solution than it was one-thousand years ago. But few have ever hated or killed or
fought a war over his culture's myths, its own stories; it is over the truth that men
kill each other.
Trekkies recall the rules under which the crew of the Enterprise will explore the
Universe, with respect for alien cultures. Mythologies teach respect for alien
culture. "These are my people's stories, I'd like to hear yours"; rather than "this is
what happened, if you don't believe it, you will toast in Hell forever, and we'll
help you get there." Too-strongly-held religious views makes non-believers
somehow less worthy of the label "human," worthy, instead, of salvation through
coerced conversion, or death, for their everlasting souls sake.
Mythology, on the other hand, makes other peoples interesting, the bearers of
more fascinating stories to listen to around the campfire of dazzlingly bright
colors, languages and customs. Lovers of myth have many books to read, and all
of them are entertaining, if not wondrously enlightening. I personally would feel
poorer if I only had one book to read, only one lake to dip my toes into and to
drink from, only one church, temple or mosque that was the handiwork of God.
It is the diversity implied in the idea of Mythology, not the exclusive Truth of
one's own religion's stories, that can save us, finally, from our mad addiction to
kill those whose brotherhood we are blind to. Myth makes clear every culture's
similarities (e.g., a Resurrection story is common among world mythologies, as is
the secret royal blood of its hero) as surely as it insists on each culture's
uniqueness. Only men of tolerance and good-will, who love hearing, and telling,
the stories -- not the whim of a jealous tribal God -- can save us for a future that
is rich enough to experience and celebrate all of its old mythologies, and secure
enough to help us sew a new, more inclusive and planetary mythology, suitable to
our times and to a future.