Jumi
Well-Known Member
Finnish.BTW: Which is your native culture?
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Finnish.BTW: Which is your native culture?
-------------I'm pretty sure ancients had taken in what was around them and placed in their own interpretation through intentional and unintentional embellishment and fabrication.
There are so many creation stories and so many variations evidencing that. I think a commonality would be that it's clear we all are under the same observable cosmos from which they gave birth to so many stories , like looking at a vivid painting before you that captures your imagination and mind.
Let me be clear: you see no difference between, on the one hand,ancient stories of creation are comparable with the modern formation stories and sometimes they confirm each other and sometimes they don´t.
By your definition, the one derived from the reasoned study of nature, surely?But which are closest to a natural "truth"?
They saw the same earth, sea and sky as we see but they thought what they saw was created by magic, and sometimes wondered Who? and Why? We don't think magic works or explains anything so we use physics and are much concerned with What? and How?The big question for me in this thread, is whether ancient and modern stories tells the same basic story and which of these stories are the most natural and logical.
-------------They saw the same earth, sea and sky as we see but they thought what they saw was created by magic, and sometimes wondered Who? and Why? We don't think magic works or explains anything so we use physics and are much concerned with What? and How?
We can tell what our distant ancestors thought by for example looking at their creation myths (>here's< a list of some of them). They weren't stupid but they weren't scientific.-------------
"But they thought"? How can you tell what they thought? Regarding their cosmological/mythical thoughts they told everything in a symbolic language and different markings of their astronomical observations and knowledge.
. Genesis 1 says God created heaven and earth but doesn't say how. A clue is provided when God creates light using magic words. If you disagree, I'd be interested to hear your views on what method of creation they attributed to their gods.If and when somebody thinks they thought that everything was "created by magic"
I'm not clear what point you're making. Surely you agree that in the Bronze Age, people thought the earth was flat, and at the center of creation, and that the sun and stars went round it, just as their senses told them? And that they believed in ghosts, and spirits, and gods, and magic?underestimates our ancestors and this is just because they don´t understand the mythical language of our ancestors.
Hello!Hello All
It is my opinion that ancient stories of creation are comparable with the modern formation stories and sometimes they confirm each other and sometimes they don´t. But which are closest to a natural "truth"?
Again IMO ancient stories of creation speaks of a cyclic creation process of creation, dissolution and re-creation, where modern theories mostly speaks of a beginning of the Universe and a linear time of about 13.8 bill. years.
When considering how much our ancestors could observe of the cosmos in day- and night time, the physical limits would at the most be observations of the Milky Way, which most likely would be included in their stories.
Besides this, some persons also would consider the possibility of the human spirit/mind to sense the cosmic realms in the Milky Way and beyond. (Most of us have read of persons in the Bible and elsewhere, who had a "close encounter with the force of creation")
Modern cosmology have gone far out in space and shown lots of marvelous images of galaxies and even earthly planets around stars. All over the place modern cosmology have made hypothesis and theories, right from the Solar System formation to galaxies, clusters of galaxies and superclusters of galaxies.
The big question for me in this thread, is whether ancient and modern stories tells the same basic story and which of these stories are the most natural and logical.
What do you think of this?
Note: I am NOT a creationist but I have studied cultural Myths of Creation and Modern Cosmology
----------------. Genesis 1 says God created heaven and earth but doesn't say how. A clue is provided when God creates light using magic words. If you disagree, I'd be interested to hear your views on what method of creation they attributed to their gods.
--------------I'm not clear what point you're making. Surely you agree that in the Bronze Age, people thought the earth was flat, and at the center of creation, and that the sun and stars went round it, just as their senses told them? And that they believed in ghosts, and spirits, and gods, and magic?
-------------If and when somebody thinks they thought that everything was "created by magic", they underestimates our ancestors and this is just because they don´t understand the mythical language of our ancestors.
-------------I am a lover of scientific method, and also a great lover of mythology and creation stories. A scientific theory is not the same thing as a creation story. A creation story comes out of our right brains, our creative religious imagination -- we use these stories not just to explain natural occurrences to ourselves (a very base explanation of myths) but to convey deep eternal truths about the universe that are apparent on an intuitive level.
I agree that some cultures were patriachal, like the Canaanites and Greeks, and some were more egalitarian. I think we've given up the notion that Çatal Hüyük was matriachal. But that's not the issue.----------------
This is just the Biblical part of the numerous cultural stories of creation. The mythical part and symbolism is largely left out, especially the female part of creation.
All the evidence I've seen says the opposite. But if you have quotes from the Bronze Age saying the world is spherical and the stars are distant suns, please lay them out for me.I don´t agree that the Bronze Age people generally thought that the Earth was flat and neither the thought the Earth was the center OF creation, but rather the center IN creation from where they physically observed everything.
Interesting. What's the reference to that quote, and about when was it written?In the Hindy mythology it is said about the holy Mount Meru, that "the Sun and its planets orbits this center as one unit".
I'll be interested to look at this apparent exception you mention, but one example wouldn't equate to 'our ancestors'.Modern scholars have problems of understanding this cosmological myth, but taken for granted, this center in question cannot be a center on the Earth. So our ancestors were not geocentric as such.
Do you have a nice clear example handy?Agreed, this was a bit of "word salad". I just meant that we have to understand how our ancestors described their world in symbols and that these symbols represented real cosmological facts where the myth and it´s symbols describes real objects and celestial motions in the day- and nighttime.
Very nice to make the aquaintence of someone into shamanism -- very rare in real life.-------------
Hello IndigoChild and welcome
Me too. But deep in my mind ancient myths of creation very well can be compared to modern science, since both areas describes the same.
You:
" . . . A creation story comes out of our right brains, our creative religious imagination . . "
Yes sort of, but IMO this story derives from REAL physical or/and spiritual observations and inspirations/visions. The creation story is build up by these physical and spiritual senses, where humans communicates with the creation as such.
I agree with your " . . . to convey deep eternal truths about the universe that are apparent on an intuitive level".
This is very difficult for modern humans to understand how we can achieve knowledge via our intuitive skills. Most modern humans uses all kinds of instruments in order to examine and discover this and that instead of using our most direct and embedded skill for gathering knowledge.
-----------------All the evidence I've seen says the opposite. But if you have quotes from the Bronze Age saying the world is spherical and the stars are distant suns, please lay them out for me.
-------------Interesting. What's the reference to that quote, and about when was it written?
---------I'll be interested to look at this apparent exception you mention, but one example wouldn't equate to 'our ancestors'.
--------------And do we have any issue as to whether the ancients believed in magic or not? Or do we agree that they did?
---------Make no mistake, science has earned our respect because it delivers the goods, and I have absolutely enormous respect for it. But materialism is not my bag of tricks. To me the things that we touch, see, and measure are not nearly as real as ideas such as love and justice. I have developed my sense of reason, but I have learned that if my reason and my intuition are telling me two different things, the odds are that my intuition has it right. I deeply value creative imagination, especially in story telling. I don't think of myth as synonymous with "lies." Rather, myth is the most powerful genre of literature there is, slipping past our censors to influence us on an unconscious level.
It is easy to intuit a cyclical concept of time. After all, the seasons are cyclical, day and night are cyclical, the moon is cyclical, life and death are cyclical... But we know from science that factually there was a beginning to the universe and its space/time, and that this time, however relative it may be, flows in one direction.---------
I couldn´t have said it better myself IMO ancient myths of creation have more logical explanations. mostly because of the ancient cyclical world perception instead of the linear ideas in a Big Bang.
-------------. . .But we know from science that factually there was a beginning to the universe and its space/time, and that this time, however relative it may be, flows in one direction.
------------And do we have any issue as to whether the ancients believed in magic or not? Or do we agree that they did?
I have no trouble in principle with the idea that ancient rock carvings may correspond with constellations. Still, the ancient understanding of the sky would have had little in common with ours; and the gods of a great many peoples are said to life 'in the sky', so the carvings are possibly be religious - a divine nexus would be a strong candidate for motive, no?BTW:
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Back in 1991 I visited a large Rock Art area in Bohuslen, north of Gøteborg, Sweden. One day a director of a Rock Art Museum and I were visiting a location where lots of smaller and larger "cup marks", were carved in the rock surface.
The popular standard archaeological explanation of these cupmarks is that our ancestors used these holes in "magical offering rituals for good hunting and other things".
Already at this time I was interested in "astroarchaeology" and I immediately observed a recognizable figure on the rock surfase. When I told the director what I meant about this figure, he just turned me off and asked me to stop with that nonsense.
The figure I found, was the significant image of the Orion Star Constellation as illustrated here on my website.
This just shows that ancient knowledge isn´t all about ritual incantations but also of real celestial observations which our ancestors back in the Stone- and Bronze Age carved into the rock surfaces as an early kind of "bible"
Alternatively, some of the ancient stories (Genesis) were presented as literal fact. God did indeed create the universe in six days 6000 years ago. He created Man just as it is written.
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I wouldn´t take the biblical 6 days creation literary but rather as "stages of creation".
Although my country is a Christian one, it was a shock to us in school religion classes when we learned about fundamentalism in the US. I believe this was around 8th grade. But then again our state church has now female priests and bishop, heavy metal and has LGBT-themed gatherings and gives shelter to refugees... I'm not a member or Christian so I'm not selling anything. Just showing that the perspectives are not as limited as "two choices".