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AGELESS PURSUITS • UBC 2016 IDEAS OF GOD DR. MICHAEL GRIFFIN UBC CLASSICS & PHILOSOPHY MICHAELJAMESGRIFFIN.COM L E C T U R E 2 : T H E O LY M P I A N S ROMAN WALL PAINTING OF HIPPARCHEIA AND CRATES FROM THE VILLA FARNESINA, ROME. HIPPARCHEIA APPROACHES CRATES CARRYING A BOX, IMPLYING THAT SHE HAS COME TO CRATES AS A POTENTIAL BRIDE BEARING HER POSSESSIONS. OVERVIEW • June 6 Introduction • June 7 The Greek Gods and the Pantheons • June 8 The Abrahamic God and the Rise of Monotheism • June 9 Awakened Beings: Buddhas & Bodhisattvas • June 10 The God of Mathematics & Science, and ‘Proofs of God’ OVERVIEW • Today • 1. Review: Agency • 2. Understanding myth • 3. Hesiod: the First Powers • 4. The Olympians 1 REVIEW: AGENCY AGENCY IN REVIEW • Sentience • Having feelings • Acting for reasons • Being self-aware We’ll call this agency. • May be • First-personal (me) • Projected second- or third- personal (you, she), to humans • Projected to non-humans • Projected to the whole world AGENCY IN REVIEW • Some of us, including children, find entities that are not people or animals to have feelings, wants and needs, to be agents: we take the intentional stance.* Trees want to grow; the sky wants to rain, etc. • As a general projection of agency, the all is endowed with a kind of sentience and agency. This profoundly influences human behaviour, both social (“Big Gods” theory)** and environmental (sustainability). * Dan Dennett: The Intentional Stance ** See Norenzayan 2015: Big Gods (Princeton UP) AGENCY IN REVIEW • Effective projection of “agency” is not necessarily onto tangible beings • One can act differently based on the views of a “god”* • Or lose oneself in a fictional character, adapting one’s own behaviour accordingly** • Or be helped later in life by dialogue with an “imaginary friend”*** * Norenzayan 2015: “Big Gods” ** Libby 2012 *** Davis et al. 2013 AGENCY IN REVIEW • Children already reason that minds before and after embodied life are agents (in this sense)* • “And the part of us that is eternal, we believe, is not our skills or ability to reason, but rather our hopes, desires and emotions. We are, in fact, what we feel… Studies have found that both children and adults believe that bodily needs, such as hunger and thirst, end when people die, but mental capacities, such as thinking or feeling sad, continue in some form.” * Emmons 2014 EXAMPLE BUDDHIST COSMOLOGY Hierarchies develop, with assumed first-person experiences • Animals • People • Trees • Nymphs, dryads • Rivers • River spirits • Heroes • Beings in ‘heaven’ • Social and psychological exemplars: love, justice, war • Natural principles: Sky, Ocean • Cosmos as a Whole • ‘God’ http://2divineways.com/Buddhist-Cosmology.jpg • Places • ‘Sacred’ space “Everything is full of gods.” THALES (C. 600 BCE) QUOTED IN ARISTOTLE, DE AN. 411A7-8 I N D I V I D U A L I S T PA N P S Y C H I S M Every entity is irreducibly unique* • LEIBNIZ There’s ‘something it is like’, 1st-personally, to be anything • CHALMERS • NAGEL People, animals, and the world are all agents We should treat them accordingly: as ends and not means • KANT • SINGER All things therefore deserve reverence, as people do • GREEK VIRTUES * T R Y T O F I N D S O M E T H I N G T H AT I S N ’ T ! 2 • BEGINNINGS U N D E R S TA N D I N G M Y T H W H AT I S M Y T H ? • Can myth be defined? • Greek: mythos (vs. logos) • A “story” or “tale” backed by cultural tradition, which may (or must) be false • Media: Oral, written, painting, sculpture, music, dance, mime… • A division of mythos • Saga: story with historical roots • Legend: story with historical roots, with a moral • Folk-Tale or Fairy-Story: popular story with a moral, often about an “everyman,” with fantastic elements • Myth (proper): tale usually involving gods THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA W H AT I S M Y T H ? • Historicism: Retelling of historical fact, with some distortions. [Ancients, some moderns] • Allegory: Symbolic expression. • Philosophical: Allegory of psychological states, philosophical ideas, or metaphysical facts. [Ancients] • Natural: Allegory of natural processes and phenomena, especially aetiological (explanatory) [Max Müller]. • Myth-Ritual: Accompaniment or explanation of ritual actions • Comparative mythology: Themes revealed by crosscultural comparison (in “Indo-European” context) Continued THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA W H AT I S M Y T H ? • Psychoanalysis: Expression of deeper psychological facts, typically unconscious • Sigmund Freud: Myth reflects our waking effort to systematize the visions and impulses of our dreams. Dreams are (disguised) wish-fulfillment • Carl Jung: Myth projects the symbols of humanity’s collective unconscious: the archetypes • Structuralism: Once analyzed into their structural motifs, myths raise and resolve cultural and social problems (e.g., over-rating of blood relationships). Chronology of sources insignificant. [Lévi-Strauss] • Modern tendencies toward sensitivity to cultural, historical, and ritual context. THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA 3 • HESIOD’S THEOGONY THE FIRST POWERS H E S I O D ’ S TA L E • Hesiod: A farmer-poet • Boeotia, Greece, 8th century BCE • Author of two epic poems • Theogony: beginning of the world • Works & Days: advice on human life HESIOD (PS.-SENECA), ROMAN BRONZE NATIONAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL MUSEUM OF NAPLES • Hesiod’s world • A network of countless small poleis (city- states) around the Aegean Sea, connected by trade, sport, and their common oral myths BOEOTIA IN GREECE And this was the very first thing they told me, The Olympian Muses daughters of Zeus Aegisholder: ’Hillbillies and bellies, poor excuses for shepherds: We know how to tell many believable lies, But also, when we want to, how to speak the plain truth’. So spoke the daughters of great Zeus… And they gave me a staff, a branch of good sappy laurel, Plucking it off, spectacular. And they breathed into me A voice divine, so I might celebrate past and future. And they told me to hymn the generation of the eternal gods, But always to sing of themselves, the Muses, first and last. –HESIOD, THEOGONY 22-34 T H E F I R S T G E N E R AT I O N In the beginning there was only Chaos, the Abyss But then Gaia, the Earth, came into being. Her broad bosom the ever-firm foundation of all, And Tartaros, dim in the underground depths,, And Eros, loveliest of all the Immortals, who Makes their bodies (and men’s bodies) go limp, Mastering their minds and subduing their wills. From the Abyss were born Erebos and dark Night. –HESIOD, THEOGONY 116-125 ( A N T H O L O G Y P. 1 3 5 ) T H E F I R S T G E N E R AT I O N –HESIOD, THEOGONY 116-125 And Night, pregnant after sweet intercourse With Erebos, gave birth to Aether and Day. –HESIOD, THEOGONY 116-125 T H E F I R S T G E N E R AT I O N (Day) –HESIOD, THEOGONY 116-125 The World of Hesiod The World of Hesiod Chaos (A space) The World of Hesiod Er ōs Earth (Gaia) Chaos (A space) Tartarus The World of Hesiod Er ōs Earth (Gaia) Chaos (A space) Erebus Tartarus The World of Hesiod Er ōs Earth (Gaia) ht ig N Chaos (A space) Erebus Tartarus The World of Hesiod Aether Er ōs Earth (Gaia) ht ig N Chaos (A space) Erebus Tartarus The World of Hesiod Aether Er Da ōs y Earth (Gaia) ht ig N Chaos (A space) Erebus Tartarus Earth’s first child was Ouranos, starry Heaven, Just her size, a perfect fit on all sides, And a firm foundation for the blessed gods. And she bore the Mountains in long ranges, haunted By the Nymphs who live in the deep mountain dells. Then she gave birth to the barren, ranging Sea Without any sexual love. –HESIOD, THEOGONY 126-32 The World of Hesiod Aether *** Ouranos Earth (Gaia) Tartarus Er ōs But later she slept with Ouranos and bore Ocean with its deep currents… Question: What is signified by “Earth and Heaven lying together”? –HESIOD, THEOGONY 147-56 The World of Hesiod Works & Days 720-61 Aether *** Ouranos Er ōs 10 days’ fall Earth (Gaia) Ocean 10 days’ fall Tartarus Nut – Reproduction: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Goddess_nut.jpg Map of the cosmos – Egypt Nut – Reproduction: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Goddess_nut.jpg Waters (nu) Sky (nut) Sun-Barque Duat (Underworld) T H E N E X T G E N E R AT I O N : T H E T I TA N S … and [the Titans, namely] … Rheia … After them, she bore a most terrible child, Cronos, her youngest, an arch-deceiver, And this boy hated his lecherous father. –HESIOD, THEOGONY 147-56 Hyperion + Theia Helios (Sun) –HESIOD, THEOGONY 147-56 Selene (Moon) BEGINNINGS: KEY NAMES TO KNOW The First Generation Chaos (Space, Abyss) Eros (Love, attraction) Gaia (Earth; also Gē) The Second Generation Ouranos (Sky, heavens) The Third Generation (Titans) Kronos Rhea Helios & Selene Latin: Cupid Latin: Uranus Latin: Cronus; Saturn R E V I E W : R I S E O F T H E T I TA N S • Ouranos forced his children into Gaia (148-59) • Gaia and Kronos conspire to castrate Ouranos (160-187) • Ouranos calls them “Titans”, over-reachers (209-10) • Ouranos’ genitals, mingling with Ocean, give rise to Aphrodite, goddess of love and sexuality (188-210) • Note that according to another genealogy, Aphrodite is daughter of Zeus and Dione; on a later Greek rationalization, that’s the “younger” Aphrodite. • Kronos forces himself on Rhea, his sister, and swallows down the next generation of his children – the Olympians (456-471) • Rhea saves the youngest, Zeus (472-508) THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA Z E U S ’ E A R LY D AY S • 503-508: Zeus frees the Cyclopes, who give him thunder and lightning • 510-22: The Titan Atlas holds up the heavens (cf. 751-54) • 509-72: The Titan Prometheus appears to trick Zeus into granting human beings the more edible part of the sacrifice (540-62), and Prometheus later steals fire for mortals (565-72) • Zeus punishes Prometheus, but later allows Heracles to free him (522-36) • 573-620: The creation of Pandora (“All-Gift”) (cf. W&D 58-125) THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA T I TA N O M A C H Y • 621-33: Zeus frees the Hundred-Handers to fight on his behalf • 634-725: Zeus leads the Olympians from Mount Olympus (hence their name); Kronos leads the Titans from Mt. Othrys … Then both sides’ hands flashed with power, And the unfathomable sea shrieked eerily, The earth crashed and rumbled, the vast sky groaned And quavered, and massive Olympos shook from its roots Under the Immortals’ onslaught… And the sound Of each side shouting rose to starry heaven As they collided with a magnificent battle cry. –HESIOD, THEOGONY 680-89 R U B E N S , S T U R Z D E R T I TA N E N C. 1637-38 And now Zeus no longer held back his strength. His lungs seethed with anger and he revealed All his power. He charged from the sky, hurtling Down from Olympos in a flurry of lightning, Hurling thunderbolts one after another, right on target From his massive hand, a whirlwind of holy flame. And the earth that bears life roared as it burned, And the endless forests crackled in fire, The continents melted and the Ocean streams boiled, And the barren sea… As if broad Heaven Had fallen on Earth. And the battle turned. –HESIOD, THEOGONY 690-715 A F T E R M AT H : Z E U S I N P O W E R • 726-825: The Titans are locked in Tartaros, vividly described here • On one tradition, Zeus later frees Kronos to rule over the Blessed Isles (Elysian Fields) • 826-885: Earth and Tartaros give birth to Typhoios (Typhon, Typhoon), a powerful monster, and Zeus’ last great challenge. They duel, and Zeus is victorious. • 886-969: Zeus swallows Metis (Wisdom) and gradually gives rise to the next generation of Olympians, who will rule the world. THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA THE WORLD OF GREEK MYTH • The Greek landscape is shaped (and remembered) through myths. • The cultivated world is civilized: Demeter • The rustic world is less civilized: Pan, Nymphs • The wild is more frightening: Artemis • Beyond is the unknown, distant lands • Especially in the wild, monsters pose challenges for heroes like Heracles or Odysseus. THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA 4 THE O LY M P I A N S T H E O LY M P I A N S Hestia Aphrodite Hermes Ares Demeter Hephaestus Poseidon Zeus Hera Athena Apollo Artemis FRAGMENT OF A HELLENISTIC RELIEF (1ST CENTURY BC – 1ST CENTURY AD) : THE TWELVE OLYMPIANS (WALTERS ART MUSEUM) Source: Wikimedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_tree_of_the_Greek_gods) ZEUS • Lord (and father) of gods and men • Realm: Sky (as world divided with Poseidon and Hades) • Wife Hera: “sacred marriage” • Passionately amorous • Also god of justice • Allegorically associated with lightning H E S I O D ’ S PA R A B L E : T H E H A W K & T H E N I G H T I N G A L E ( 2 0 2 - 2 1 7 , D I F F. N U M . ) Piteously she, transfixed by his crooked claws, was lamenting When the imperious hawk addressed her in arrogant parlance, "Why, little lady, such shrieks? One stronger than you now has got you; Where you are going I'll take you myself, though you are a songstress, For as I please I'll make you my dinner or give you your freedom. Witless is one who attempts to strive against those who are stronger: When he is stripped of the prize it's injury added to insult." Thus said the fast-flying hawk, that bird with the generous wing-span. Pay more attention to justice and curb high-handedness, [brother]; Violence ill suits men who are lowly; not even the noble Man can lightly endure it; it weighs on a person who's fallen Into affliction. It's better to take your way on the other Road which conduces to right. For outrage (hubris) surrenders to justice (dikē)… HERA • Guardian of family, women, marriage, and childbirth • Wife and mother • Guardian of queenship and royalty • Beautiful • Sometimes allegorically associated with air HESTIA • Eldest daughter of Kronos and Rhea • Goddess of hearth • Domesticity • Family • State DEMETER • Spheres of influence: nature, fertility, the earth • Daughter: Persephone • When Persephone is abducted into the underworld by Hades, Demeter goes into grieving • The world’s crops don’t grow during her grief POSEIDON • Consort: Amphitrite • Realm: Ocean (as world divided with Zeus and Hades) • Master of the Sea and Water • Earth shaker • Possibly in historical origins a sky-god National Archaeological Museum of Athens • Primary symbol: Trident POSEIDON • Master of the Sea and Water • Ovid’s flood narrative (MLS 102-3) • He called together the rivers and, when they had entered the dwelling of their master, said, “… Pour forth your strength, this is the need: open wide your domains, and all barriers removed, give full rein to your streams.” … Neptune himself struck the earth with his trident; it trembled and with the quake lay open paths for the waters. The streams… rushed over the open fields and swept away, together and at once, the trees and crops, cattle, human beings, houses, and their inner shrines with sacred statues. HADES • God of the underworld (after world divided with Zeus and Poseidon) • Often invisible • Governs psychai in the underworld • After Hermes has conveyed them • Consort: Persephone HEPHAESTUS • Divine craftsman • Born from Hera by parthenogenesis • Associated with fire • Husband of Aphrodite • Cast down from Olympus, lamed, returned victorious (and drunk) • Linked with Athena in creative art ARES • God of warfare • Partner of Aphrodite; in character a “divine swashbuckler” • Ambiguous attitude from other gods APOLLO • Spheres of influence: the Sun and light; music and culture; oracles, archery, medicine and disease • Symbols: Lyre, laurel wreath, bow and arrows • Parents: Zeus & Leto • Twin sister: Artemis ARTEMIS • Spheres of influence: the Moon, the hunt, the wilderness, childbirth, virginity, young girls • “Mistress of animals” • Symbols: Bow, arrows, stags, hunting dog and moonSister: Artemis • Parents: Zeus and Leto • Twin brother: Apollo AT H E N A ( M I N E R VA ) • Primary symbols: Olive trees, owls, spear, Aegis • Parents: Metis and Zeus • Provinces: Wisdom, craft, and battle HERMES • Spheres of influence: Messengers and heralds; travellers; mediation between humans and gods; guide of souls ("psychopomp"); speech and oratory; commerce; trickery and thieves • Attributes: winged sandals, caduceus, rounded hat (petasus), cloak, lyre • Spheres of influence: the harvest; wine; ritual and mystic madness; fertility; and theatre • Symbols: the thyrsus (fennel staff with a pinecone crown); the grape and grapevine; animals, especially great cats • Birth: from Zeus and Semele, by way of Zeus’ thigh • Essential characteristics • “Release” through music and dance • Possession of followers (Maenads & Satyrs) Michelangelo’s Bacchus DIONYSUS DIONYSUS DIONYSUS Birth of Athena (Attic black-figured tripod), ca. 570–560 BCE. Helper of heroes: Athena, Perseus & the Gorgon (5th C BCE) APHRODITE • Two ‘levels’: Aphrodite Ourania (Heavenly) and Aphrodite Pandemos (Common) • Primary symbols: Dolphin, rose, dove, mirror • Parents: Ouranos (Heavenly) or Zeus & Dione (Pandemos) • Provinces: Love and beauty, pleasure, procreation Pistoxenos Painter, Kylix with: Aphrodite Riding on a Goose c.470-460 BCE APHRODITE • Born from foam of the sea (aphros), or from Zeus and Dione (a titaness) • Shifting portrayal of her from a highly sexualized fertility figure (pre-archaic) to a beautiful clothed woman (archaic) to nude (classical and later) • Attended by the Graces and the Hours • Son: Priapus Pistoxenos Painter, Kylix with: Aphrodite Riding on a Goose c.470-460 BCE Birth of Venus, Ludovisi Throne, 5th century BCE Birth of Venus, Pompeian Wall Painting, 1st century BCE The Birth of Venus, Alexandre Cabanel, 1863 The Birth of Venus, William-Adolphe Bouguereau 1879 Birth of Aphrodite, (1485) Botticelli Sun Hunting Earth Control Agriculture Moon Travel Sky Procreation Trade Drunkenness Marriage War Wisdom Hospitality Family Healing Death Thievery The state Beauty Competition Household Skilfulness Sexuality Virginity Ocean Immortality Craft Love Ecstasy Justice Motherhood Wildness Underworld Adventure Royalty Life FOCI OF AGENCY • Reverence is due to every god • And through this, to some people (e.g., strangers, beggars) • Failure of reverence is hubris • Greek “polytheism” encourages integration of a diversity of motivations and states of mind, for a common good under justice (represented by Zeus)