Outline
1. Introduction
2. Fundamental Concepts
Epistemology
Content and Context (Denotation and Connotation)
Logos and Mythos
3. Context and Culture
Paths to Context
Context Through Experience: Recall and Recognition
Culturally Bound Expectations
Context Through Granularity: The Devil’s in the Details
Context Through Modality: Preferences and Biases
4. From Spirituality to Religion
Animism
Spirituality
The Supernatural
Relating Spirituality to Everyday Life
Theism
Pantheism
Panentheism
Polytheism
Hard Polytheism
Soft Polytheism
Religion
Personalized Religion
Organized (Collective/Community) Religion
Mergers of Tradition
Who’s In Charge, Here?
Monotheism
Inclusive Monotheism
Exclusive Monotheism
An Abusive Parent
Enter Dualism
Henotheism
Monolatry
Kathenotheism
Other Relatives of Dualistic Cosmology
Duotheism
Bitheism
Ditheism
Transcendence
Uncertainty and Apathy
Deism
Agnosticism
Voices For the Opposition
Atheism
Antitheism
Humanism
Non-Committal Views
Autotheism
Ietsism
5. Pagans, Heathens, Infidels, and Heretics
Pagan
Heretics and Heresy
Julian the Apostate: Looking Back
From Bumpkin to Sinner
Enter the Heathens
Western Infidels
Jesus (the) Christ
“The Christ”
Christian
Modern Borrowings: Pagans, Wiccans, and Druids
(Neo)Pagan
Wicca
Druidism/Druidry
6. Interpretation and Exploration of Myths
Areas of Focus
As a Belief System
As Disguised History
As Disguised Philosophy or Allegory
As Fables Illustrating Moral Truths
As Allegories of Natural Events or Pre-Scientific Explanations
As Charters for Customs, Institutions, or Beliefs
As Religious Power and Explanations of Religious Rituals
As Psychological Archetypes and Models of Social Norms
As Simple Stories
Joseph Campbell and His Influences
Carl G. Jung (1875 – 1961)
The Structuralists
Claud Levi-Strauss (1908 – 2009)
Vladimir Propp (1895 – 1970)
Walter Burkert (1931 – 2015)
Joseph Campbell (1904 – 1987)
The Monomyth
Mythic Relevance and Crystallization
7. The Four Functions and Their Archetypes
Reading the Mythic Structure Diagram
Imposing Logos on Mythos
The Archetypes of the Functions
The Limits of Labels
8. The Mystical Function and the Primal Goddess
Protology: Automatic Myths of Origin
The First Steps Away from Animism
The Growth of the Goddess
The Demotion of the Goddess
9. The Cosmological Function and the King God
Protology: Architectural Myths of Origin
A Structured, Orderly World
Linear and Cyclical Time
10. The Sociological Function and the Trickster
The Trickster as Admonisher
The Trickster as Counselor
Composite Tricksters
The Most Human of the Archetypes
11. The Pedagogical Function and the Heroic
Vocabulary Notes
The Nature of the Heroic Archetype
The Intentional Heroic
The Accidental (Serendipitous) Heroic
The Reluctant (Forced) Heroic
The Distributed Heroic
The Aggregate Heroic
The Sequential Heroic
The Partite Heroic
12. The Heroic Journey
Early Explorations
Otto Rank’s Heroic Path
Lord Raglan’s Heroic Path
Joseph Campbell
Christopher Vogler: Heroism as a 12-Step Program
The Departure Phase
The Ordinary World
The Call to Adventure
Refusal of the Call
Meeting with the Mentor/Sage/Wise One
Active and Passive Forces
Crossing the First Threshold
The Fulfillment Phase
Tests, Allies, and Enemies
(Approach to) the Inmost Cave
The Ordeal
The Reward
The Return Phase
The Road Back
Resurrection (Purification)
Return With the Elixir
13. The Relatability and Relativity of the Heroic
Legend vs Myth
The Relativity of the Heroic
The Problem of the Superhero
The Problem of the White Hat Hero
The Problem of the Dark Hero/Anti-hero/Sympathetic Villain
14. Bibliography