What myths mean to you
How you tend to read myths and legends — as history, lessons, symbols, or stories.
A reflective self-ID of how you tend to read myth and legend — echoing long-standing approaches to myth (euhemerist, moral-allegorical, Jungian-archetypal, religious, cultural and literary). Described even-handedly; there's no right reading. (Approaches to myth (euhemerism, allegory, Jungian archetype, comparative mythology))
Groups
- Echoes of history — Myths preserve real events and ancestors, dressed up in story.
- Moral lessons — Myths are allegories carrying wisdom and warnings about how to live.
- Maps of the psyche — Myths are symbols of inner life — the archetypes and patterns we share.
- Sacred truth — Myths express spiritual or cosmic truths that run deeper than fact.
- Cultural heritage — Myths are the memory and identity of a people, worth keeping alive.
- Great stories — Above all, myths are wonderful tales you love as art and imagination.
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