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This page is for discussion of Wikipedia standards for articles on Religion and Mythology

Use of the words 'Myth', 'Mythology', etc.

The word 'myth' has two primary meanings in the English language. The first meaning is roughly "a story that express the religion, beliefs and morals of a culture" and the second meaning is roughly "a story that is false or made-up". The first meaning does not involve any judgement on the truth or falsehood of the story, nor on the people who believe in the story; the second meaning says the story is false, and can imply that people who believe it to be true are ignorant or foolish.

In English, we normally reserve the terms "myth" and "mythology" for the stories of the ancient polytheistic religions (such as those of Greece or Rome), which have few or no followers today. We generally do not call the stories of Judaism, Christianity or Islam "myths" or "mythologies", although from a neutral point of view they do not appear to be a fundamentally different phenomena from those stories which we do call myths.

Seven options have been proposed so far, by various people, for using the terms 'myth', 'mythology', etc., on Wikipedia:

Option 1

Call the stories of the ancient polytheistic religions "myths" or "mythology"; do not use this term for the stories of Judaism, Christianity or Islam.

PROS:

CONS:

Option 2

Call the stories of both the ancient polytheistic religions, and of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, "myth". Explain clearly that we are using "myth" here

PROS:

CONS:

Option 3

Avoid use of the words 'myth' and 'mythology' altogether. Refer to the stories of both groups of religions as simply 'religious stories' or some other term.

PROS:

CONS:

Option 4

Call the stories of the ancient polytheistic religions "myths" or "mythology"; do NOT apply the words "myth" and "mythology" to the sacred texts of modern religions; DO apply the words "myth" and "mythology" to certain relevant non-sacred stories that are linked to religious themes or traditions. For example, compare Christian mythology and Bible stories.

PROS:

CONS:

Option 5

Call the stories / myths "legends." This word has almost the same denotation as the first definition of "myth" listed above, but does not have the negative connotation.

PROS:

CONS:

Option 6

Call the stories "Fooism Mythology and <Religious> Stories", and include both stories Fooism believe to be true and stories Fooism believes to be false. Let the reader decide which they think are false and which are true. Do not include stories directly from scripture unless there are mythological beliefs as well, outside the scripture itself, and then discuss the mythological aspects. IOW, consider scripture outside of mythology (as in 4 above).

PROS:

CONS:

Option 7

Sometimes there is a well-defined English standard. Greek mythology is called Greek mythology by pretty much everyone, and in fact Greek religion means something somewhat broader. Further the term is not inaccurate in anyone's book, since myth doesn't necessarily imply falsehood (Tolkien, a devout Christian and linguist, had no problems with calling the resurrection a myth). We shouldn't be in the business of revising the language, we should be in the business of informing people about the topic, so when such a standard exists we should simply adopt it.

Discussion

Option 4 provided by Cayzle (By the way, thanks, Simon, for making this page!)

My preference is also for option 2; this encyclopedia isn't supposed to be written "for" any particular cultural group, and that includes Christians. I see no reason to give their myths special treatment compared to other equivalent stories and/or beliefs just because there are more of them online at the moment. Failing that, I'd accept option 4. I don't like option 3 but I could live with it if the alternative is endless edit-wars, and I really don't like option 1. - BD

My preference is obviously for option 5, since I wrote it. I disagree that using "myths" for everything religious would make the 'pedia NPOV. I think this would promote an atheist point of view (which is not the same as a neutral point of view) --Alex Kennedy

Heh. English is an enormous and akward [Frankenstein's monster]? of a language, but every once and a while that huge lump of vocabulary comes in handy. "Greek Legends" sounds reasonable to me. - BD

My preference is six, since I just added it. Failing that, 2, 3, 4. --Dmerrill

My first preference is still option 2, but I'd be okay with option 6, although I'd say its a bit wordy. I'd also be okay with option 5 if it involved calling both polytheistic and Jewish/Christian?/Islamic? stories "legends" -- I'm concerned though that calling Christian stories legends may still offend people, for the term has some negative conontations, although they are not as bad as the word 'myth'. My next choice, after 2,5 and 6, would be option 3. Options 1 and 4 would be for me my last choice -- I think the two options are fundamentally identical; the only difference is that option 4 recognizes that there are some Christian stories, (e.g. King Arthur, St. George and the Dragon, etc.), which are probably safe to call 'myths', since few people believe them today. I'm not exactly sure what option 7 involves (the wording of the option above doesn't clearly answer the question "should we call the stories of the Bible myth or not?"). The main principle that I think ought to be followed in this is: being NPOV is a more fundamental value for an encyclopedia than either clarity or avoiding offense.

I think its a good thing that people have added options in addition to the three I originally provided, but I think we should try to prune the options available down from 7 to a more manageable number, to help us decide more clearly. I would propose merging options 1 and 4 together, and removing option 7 (unless its author wants to try to make clearer exactly what it proposes.) -- SJK

/talk


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Edited December 15, 2001 6:33 pm by SJK (diff)
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