Myth and Science - An Essay by Tito Vignoli
page 66 of 265 (24%)
page 66 of 265 (24%)
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forces. Man's personification of himself, his projection of himself as a
living being into external things, was the result of reflection. In fact, the impersonation of the winds took place in very early times, since they most frequently and universally excited the attention and anxiety of man and animals, whether beneficially or otherwise, and by their mechanical action, their whistling and other sounds, they readily struck the mobile fancy of primitive men, and also of savage and ignorant peoples in our day. Just as the act of respiration is a faint wind which goes on whether in sleep or wakefulness, and only ceases with death, so it was with the phenomenon of nature which attracted their attention, and it was invested by them with life. Since the winds of nature had already been animated and personified by a spontaneous act, so our inmost being was certainly first considered as material, and impersonated as breath and air. This appears from the roots and words of all languages; the Hebrew _nephesh, nshâmâh, ruach_--soul or spirit--are all derived from the idea of breathing. The Greek word [Greek: anemos], the Latin word _animus_, signify breathing, wind, soul, and spirit. In the Sanscrit _âtman_ we have the successive meanings which show the evolution of the myth: breathing, vital soul, intelligence, and then the individual, the _ego_. In Polynesia we find the same process of things. _To think_, which in the Aryan tongues comes from the root _c'i_, and originally meant to collect, to comprehend, in German, _begreifen_, becomes in the Polynesian language, _to talk in the belly_. It is, therefore, an evident historical fact that man first personified natural phenomena, and then made use of these personifications to personify his inward acts, his psychical ideas and conceptions. This was the necessary |
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