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Creation II

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Title: Creation II


1
  • ?????

2
  • Creation II
  • ???????????
  • I ?????
  • II ????????

3
  • I ?????
  • ??? (???)
  • ?????????,??????????????,???????????,?????
  • ????????????,??????????
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    ??????
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4
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  • ??????????? ???????????,????,?????,??????,?????
    ??????,?????????????????????????,??????????

5
  • II ???????
  • ?????
  • ?????????????,????? (Prometheus)
    ?Eros???????????,?????????????,???????,Athena?????
    ?????? ???????
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6
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    ????(???????????) (??? ?????)
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7
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    ???????,?????????,?????????????????????,??????????
    ,?????????,?????,????????,????????????
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8
  • ????,??????????????????????????Zeus (??) ??????
    (Prometheus) ????,????????????????????????????,(Ze
    us ???? Pandora ??????????)?

9
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    ?,????,??????????????????? (Titans)?
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10
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11
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12
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13
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14
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15
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16
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17
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    ????,????????

18
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    ??????????????????????????

19
  • Myths of Creation the Origins of Human Beings
    (compiled from Powell, Classical Myths, pp.
    106-133)
  • Where do human beings come from? What sets them
    apart from other creatures? Why is it their fate
    to labor, suffer, and die? The myths of the
    ancient Greeks and Romans offered answers to
    these questions. Certain elements of the stories
    they told about human origins and the human
    conditions are strikingly similar to
    corresponding stories from Mesopotamia and the
    Bible.

20
  • Prometheus, Maker of Mortals
  • .. the maker of human beings is said to be
    Prometheus, the Titan who took Zeuss side in the
    battle against his brother and sister Titans.
  • Like Cronus, and like Zeus himself, Prometheus
    was known especially for being clever, the
    inventor of many things, including the race of
    mortals. He was said to have fashioned human
    beings from mud and water or from mud combined
    with wind. The Roman poet Ovid gives the fullest
    surviving version of the story. After describing
    the emergence of the world from Chaos, Ovid tells
    us that Prometheus made the human race by mixing
    primeval earth and water.

21
  • Because the earth contained divine seed, the
    human was a superior being
  • An animal blessed with a higher soul was still
    needed,
  • One abler to reason more deeply, one able to
    govern the others.
  • So man was born. Perhaps the maker of all things
    produced him
  • Of heavenly seed, in hopes of creating a yet
    better world.
  • Or perhaps the newborn world, freshly set off
    from the ether,
  • Still retained a few seeds of the heaven from
    which it had come.
  • The son of Iapetus Prometheus fashioned earth
    and water commingled
  • Into the image of gods, who are rulers of all
    things created.
  • The other beasts, four-footed, gaze at the earth,
    looking downward
  • But man was given a posture which forces his eyes
    to the heavens,
  • Walking erect and lifting his sight to the stars
    in their courses. (Ovid, Metamorphoses, 176-86)

22
  • A related Eastern story also told how humans were
    made from mud or clay. Hence our bodies turn to
    dust when we die, a version that entered the
    biblical narrative of how the Lord God formed
    man of dust from the ground and breathed into his
    nostrils the breath of life and man became a
    living being (Genesis, 2.4)

23
  • The Sumerian Creation of Man from Mud
  • .. Enki (the clever god) instructed Ki, Earth,
    and together they fashioned servants of clay to
    provide for the gods needs --- the prototypes of
    ordinary humans.
  • The story explains the origin of ordinary human
    beings a creature so made and destined to serve
    as slave of the gods and can never hope for
    happiness.

24
  • Prometheus, Protector of Mortals (Human Beings)
  • Prometheus had much in common with his Eastern
    predecessor Enki, and in the classical tradition
    he was the creator of the mortals. He was also
    their protector, an important figure to modern
    European culture. His lineage was as lofty as
    that of Zeus, for his father Iapetus was a Titan,
    brother of Cronus. Prometheus essential quality
    is encoded in his name, which means
    forethinker, like a character from folklore.
    His name has the same linguistic root as Metis,
    Cleverness, Zeuss first consort, and points to
    his inventive intelligence.

25
  • Ancient myth usually depicts early human beings
    as having lived in a paradise, now lost, a
    biblical Eden. The Greeks (and Mesopotamians)
    also told stories of a better time in the remote
    past. Prometheus taught them (human beings)
    brick making, woodworking, the calendar, numbers,
    writing, animal husbandry, and seafaring.
  • The highest human skills, then, are the gifts of
    Prometheus medicine, metallurgy, and prophecy
    from dreams, the shape of intestines, and
    astronomical phenomena. Prometheus is the great
    culture-bearer. He made human life what it is.

26
  • Prominent Themes in Classical Stories of Human
    Origins
  • The Greeks and Romans did not have a book of
    Genesis to decree what one should believe about
    the origin of humans and their early life in the
    long-ago faraway times when mortals lived close
    to gods. Hesiods account was by far the most
    popular, but other traditions abounded. Although
    different in detail, most reports agreed that
    human came from the earth, a theme that first
    appeared in Mesopotamian myth. Of course, the
    notion that Earth is a mother is logical and may
    appear independently in any culture.
  • Humans may simply emerge from the earth, growing
    like plants from seeds or semen placed within it.
    Deucalion threw stones over his shoulder like a
    man sowing a furrow, and up sprang men the
    Giants, too, were born when the semen-blood from
    Uranus severed genitals fell to the earth.

27
  • A second way for mortals to issue from the earth
    is at the hands of an artisan god. So Hephaestus
    made Pandora from clay. A tradition later than
    Hesiod says that Prometheus mixed clay with wind
    to make the first humans, as in the biblical
    story the creator made Adam by breathing on the
    dust of the earth.
  • The image of humans growing from the earth is
    derived from agriculture the tradition of the
    artisan god derives from pottery making.

28
  • The essential quality of humans is to be mortal,
    destined to die. This quality separates us
    forever from the company of the gods. Because
    gods too emerged from Gaea/Earth, they and
    mortals share a common origin, .. Now we (human
    beings as mortals) live apart from the gods, eat
    cooked meat, labor for our keep, marry to
    reproduce, and die.
  • (Powell, Classical Myth, pp. 106-133).
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