LOGICS OF MYTH



ARISTOTLE



Books by Stefan Stenudd:
Cosmos of the Ancients, by Stefan Stenudd.
Cosmos of the Ancients
The Greek philosophers' theories about the gods, the myths, and cosmology, by Stefan Stenudd.
More about the book here.


Life Energy Encyclopedia, by Stefan Stenudd.
Life Energy Encyclopedia
by Stefan Stenudd. Qi, prana, spirit, and other life forces around the world explained and compared.
See the book at Amazon.


Tao Te Ching - The Taoism of Lao Tzu Explained, by Stefan Stenudd.
Tao Te Ching
The Taoism of Lao Tzu Explained. The great Chinese classic, translated and extensively commented by Stefan Stenudd.
See the book at Amazon.


Occasionally I Contemplate Murder, by Stefan Stenudd.
Occasionally I Contemplate Murder
Thoughts on life, death, and the meaning of it all, by Stefan Stenudd.
More about the book here.


QI - increase your life energy, by Stefan Stenudd.
Qi
Increase your life energy, by Stefan Stenudd. The life energy qi (also chi or ki), with exercises on how to awaken, increase, and use it.
See the book at Amazon.




The Logics of Myth

The Logics of Myth

Basic Patterns of Creation Myths



4   Time-space dimensions of creation myths

H owever valuable an instrument the dramaturgy is in examining the story of a creation myth, it is not suitable for dealing with the very cosmology of it. For that, a tool of a less emotionally focused nature is needed - one of the mind, not the heart. We need to turn to the basic space-time of it.

Beginning

     Although a creation myth has a beginning, it is not necessarily so that this is a beginning of time itself, and although it depicts the appearance of a spatial entity, it is by no means automatically the appearance of space itself. Usually, a spatial setting is implied, if not explicitly presented, and there is at least a hint of vast time preceding the moment of world creation.
     The space may be one of primeval water, of darkness and stillness, but there is most definitely a space, in which the world appears and which remains thereafter, but separate, isolated from the world. And the seemingly eternal clock of pre-creational time ticks on, right through and beyond the moment of creation - also way past a moment of world destruction, if one is foretold. This original, everlasting setting, is very much like a universe all of its own, existing somewhere else than where the world is, unaffected by it, though not indifferent to it.

Another
dimension

     In the language of science-fiction, that universe could be described as existing in another dimension. Anyway, it is most definitely a world completely distinguishable from that being created. As it is the very melting pot, containing the forces responsible for making the world created in the myth, it can be said that the world is created out of it, born from it like a child leaving its mother's womb.

The
birth

    The analogy to human existence can be taken further. The time preceding the birth of the world as well as that of the baby, is an unclear one of darkness, covered in water. And before that - an impenetrable eternity. The time following the death of a human being is also one of seemingly impenetrable eternity. Human existence is an alienated, short-time bodily appearance in the midst of all this eternity. The world created tends to be portrayed in the same way.
© Stefan Stenudd 1999

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Stefan Stenudd
Stefan Stenudd
About me
I'm a Swedish writer and historian of ideas, researching the thought patterns and cosmology in creation myths. I've also written books about ancient Chinese and Japanese traditions, as well as fiction.