In a message dated 11/22/2004 3:20:14 PM Eastern Standard Time, "Charles Carrigan" <CCarriga@olivet.edu> writes:
>Rich,
I can live with your use of the terms myth and metaphor, myth meaning there is still some historical significance (although it may be extremely minor, of course). Do you apply this same definition of myth to other mythological writings (e.g., greek, roman, egyption, etc.)? would make sense for greek mythology.
however, I dont' get the impression that this is what Don meant. Don, care to clarify your position on myth vs. metaphor, given Rich's comments?
Best,
Charles
--------------------
Hi Charles,
I will wait patiently for Don's clarification. I would use myth when referring to Greek, Roman, Egyptian texts where a historical precursor is suspected and/or evident. I have interpreted events in Genesis from a Darwinian perspective and am always interested in how others view Genesis. I don't see Genesis as myth but as allegory deliberately fashioned to convey theological structure and natural processes.
rich faussette
Received on Mon Nov 22 17:38:45 2004
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Mon Nov 22 2004 - 17:38:46 EST