King of the Americas
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2001
- Messages
- 6,513
Well, I'm trying to become a medieval historian (MA so far) and what I do a lot of is look at mythology and what it teaches us.
From a historical perspective, it's typically simple speculation to say that cyclops et al where taken from a specific erroneous observation. While some do have some evidence (like the medieval Beastiaries for example), most are pastiches of various beliefs. It is also somewhat irrelevant. Mythology is best seen as informing us on the society that spawns it and it's concerns and culture. Gods are always a reflection of ourselves.
If you take Christianity for example, you can see the shift in beliefs through the ages as it comes to reflect the current cultures and people who adopted it. From a mono-racial, paternalistic culture, the Yahweh of the Jews, we see it's alteration by the more philosophically inclined Greeks where we get the ideas of God as omniscient, omnipresent, etc. Zoroastrianism gives Christianity it's very defined dualism and the Roman empire gave the idea of governance through hierarchy.
In the Middle Ages you get the legions of Angels and Demons, in feudal array with specific names and duties along with a Heaven and Hell at war with each and us.
Of course, I am massively oversimplifying a very complex subject but I hope the idea is presented. Whenever you see Mythology (or religion), you see the people, not the Gods.
What I am trying to do here is draw a distinction between god and religion. Religion being the art used to depict the subject.
There's a universally accepted 'god of the heavens'...what is it?