Monday, October 21, 2013

Feeling the Elephant

Ur-Zababa King of Sumer
Ur-Zababa King of Kish
Ur-Zababa had a nightmare
Ur-Zababa had a dream
Sargon in a raft of rushes
Sargon of the floating basket
Pours the wine for Ur-Zababa
One last time.
________

The parallels between the literature that eventually became the Tanach, the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament and other ancient legends in all their versions are inescapable, even for a beginning student of ancient history:  the eye for an eye of Hammurabi, the Story of Joseph and Potiphar's wife, the story of the infant Sargon found floating in a basket on the Tigris, like Moses on the Nile.  Such observations are striking at first glance to the untrained eye, but sometimes that untrained eye may also be the unprejudiced eye.

 Does anyone not recall the first time they saw a globe, how obvious was the fit between the European and African coast of the Atlantic?  Studying Geology ages ago, we were taught that it was only a coincidence and Plate Tectonics was a radical, almost heretical concept.  The world, of course was still just as it was made, only cooler and with mountains perhaps thrust up by contraction. Of course, Eppur si muove, as Galileo may or may not have said about the 'stationary' Earth. And still it moves, or at least the continents do. Did that plucked turkey look like a dinosaur?  Coincidence. That ape like a man?

Was the Moses Story embellished with older folk tales?  There are so many other examples of plots and even phrases in Bible stories that it's tempting to say so and it's hard to say that it isn't so.  It's hard, at least for history buffs and students of ancient literature to deny it and yet easy, if perhaps the desperation shows a little, in the always condescending and often irrelevant or fallacious dismissals written by Biblical certainty advocates.

Yes, there are minor differences.  Moses' mother was not a princess; he was adopted by one. The Tigris is a fast river, the Nile is a slower one. the Atlantic coasts do not exactly mesh. Jesus is not an exact copy of Mithras or Osiris or Ganesh or any of the many other Biblical or extra Biblical sons of gods or resurrected saviors of nations or souls. Noah and Ut-Napishtim are different.  None of the myth makers whose stories appear in the Bible could have read the Popol Vuh with it's resurrection of Hun-Hunahpu -- but as Joseph Campbell said, when you get down to the deepest well of myth you find a deeper one at the bottom.  Such stories are archetypes perhaps; rooted in our basic human desire or propensity to concoct explanatory stories about what we cannot know or understand. Each culture creates the same stories in its own image.

Perhaps the Sargon story, in it's obviously mythologized form, comes from the same instinct or from the same primordial urge or instinct we all share that produced the obviously mythologized Moses tale.  We do have hard evidence for Sargon of Akkad, conqueror of Sumer, scourge of Elam. We have none whatever for Moses and we have so many contradictions and no evidence whatever in that story. yet look at how fiercely we defend it's inerrant accuracy!

All this is just another stanza in my long lament about the illusion of reason and truth and objectivity in the way we humans see reality.  Some of us do so more than others; more often that others do and about more things, but we are what we are. Like the blind men and the elephant we see dimly if at all, but the tragedy is not in our blindness, but in the fact that in gaining sight, we cling to the things we became comfortable with back when we were blind, even as the elephant laughs.

10 comments:

  1. Well said! Always glad to meet a Campbell reader!!! Which reminds me that it's time for a re-read

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  2. I remember reading Joseph Campbell years ago, and one of his explanations for the similarities in the god myths across the planet, he said, may be because we humans share the same organs; and so, therefore, we dream with the same brains as well as think with them--also our guts, I've read. So it may not be so strange that we humans would come up with similar myths to explain how we got here, who we are, and where we're going.

    I've always been fascinated by the ancient Egyptians myth about how after a person dies, his/her soul/hear is weighed to determine how much good or evil he/she has done. If more evil was done than good, if I remember this correctly, the soul/heart is sent to a nether region where it's eaten by a malevolent half-god, half-hyman with a jaw full of very sharp teeth. IOW, a Ted Cruz.

    Our myths change with each culture and receive new life with each transition.

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  3. Sargon has precedence over Moses by about 810 years..about the same removal in time as we from the 2nd Crusade. The Archeologists keep digging, but at present, many seem to view the Hebrews as simply an offshoot of the Canaanites. Fascinating stuff if you don't have a horse in the race.

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    1. It's hard to substantiate a particular date for Moses without contradicting one fact or another, but to argue that a Sumerian epic story, doubtless written after the fact would not have been heard a short distance away by the time the Exodus story was written is silly, given the vast network of trade originating from Sumer. There is in fact strong evidence of a Sumerian settlement in the Nile delta.

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  4. Fall from Grace: Hiss
    Joseph Campbell: Follow your bliss.
    Two lovers: Give me a kiss.
    Overindulgence: Take a piss
    Taking inventory: Reminisce
    Death and dying: Fearing the Abyss

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    1. reading the poem, I must ask you this
      If I were to groan, would you take it amiss?

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    2. Can't please all the people all the time. Besides, today is my day off. Let's see, what shall I do today? Kiss? Bliss? Piss? Or hiss?

      Or perhaps I should be making travel arrangements to inter my deceased mother next week.

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  5. It is a commonality between all peoples and tribes to confabulate a great story to explain what they cannot understand. To draw comfort when they are afraid and to assign responsibility when they wish to be absolved.

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  6. As my friend Mr. Prufrock said: "That is not what I meant at all. That is not it, at all."

    I'm not sure any comments address my attempt to make a certain point although I do appreciate them.

    Yes, it's quite possible that the Moses in the bulrushes story is a version of the Sargon story and it's possible that both descend from a common ancestor now lost to us. There are so may examples of stories extracted from one culture and adapted to another it's foolish to say it doesn't happen, but I'm trying to examine the tendency to address one version as being beyond question or doubt even though it has nothing to support it and much to deny it -- in preference to another version with more support. There was a Sargon even though all his details aren't present. There is no evidence for Moses and much evidence that the story is a pastiche.

    Yet you won't find passionate and condescending articles built around shaky and not quite logical or factual arguments about Sargon. The connection between the stories may or may not be factual, but it isn't ridiculous or even impossible as the critique I link to asserts, as Brother Occam would agree.

    I'm adapting the famous blind men and elephant tale to that purpose and postulating that were they to begin to see the whole beast, they would still prefer to see the leg as a tree, the trunk as a snake, etc. It is harder to let go of an idea, a belief, an orientation once held than it is to embrace a new one. Much harder. I'm postulating that this fact illuminates much that is puzzling and frustrating in human events.

    Why would one fight to the death, for instance, to defend the idea that tax cuts are the best way to fund a war, or defend the idea that a health care system that works in Switzerland and in Massachusetts would be the biggest disaster in American history? Are Tea Partisans really defending an artificial value system against all facts and logic for the same reasons one might defend the truth of the Exodus story against any other interpretation?

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  7. Yes, it's possible that what I'm groping at is the 'framing effect' that has us much more concerned at losing something than we are pleased by gaining something. Does it hurt more to lose and old comfort of certainty than to gain pleasure from greater sight? The only problem with that is that we tend to dismiss psychological phenomena since we ourselves as well balanced and objective individuals need not be concerned with mental stuff.

    The tendency to hold on however holds on to an important place in Buddhist culture, being the source of our unhappiness in an ever changing reality. A few dollars have been lost in the market as well, it being so hard to let go of a loser. In that respect we're more apt to call it greed but maybe that inborn, inescapable impetus, that thing that keeps life going is what unifies all our error, our self destructiveness itself -- the urge for more. Maybe the old guy had something there when he told us to let go.

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