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Writer's pictureLejla Panjeta

Homo Liar

Updated: Oct 29



Two most interesting interpretations of the origin of humans: religion says we are made of dust (some of us from the rib), and Darwin says we share common ancestry with apes. There is also a third one, whimsical but very prominent today–we are the progeny of the extraterrestrials who planted their seeds in the ancient civilizations. Whatever you believe, human development has been scientifically theorized to start some two million years ago. How did our ancestors develop abilities to address the problems they were facing? In order to survive, these first hunter-gatherers and cave artists had to communicate.


Communication begins with the living world and art with the appearance of humans. The first people to band together for survival in ancient times were the first syncretic artists. They did not just invent fish stories around the fire for entertainment, but were spiritually connected with the world around them, creating a magical reality that extends to the energy fields where "drawn buffaloes are killed buffaloes."


Power-off ritual

Performing the first rituals, the psychoanalysts of that era–the shamans–became the first artists. Music, painting, and performing arts, as well as the first letters originate from the stories and rituals of the Stone Age. These rituals begin with an understanding of the concept of death. "The oldest evidence of something resembling mythological thinking comes in connection with graves," says Campbell in his conversation with Bill Moyers in the series The Power of Myth. He affirms that, around 50,000 BCE, “We have evidence of a ritualized burial, with sacrifices and with the grave gear, which certainly indicated that the experience of death started something” (The Hero’s Journey, 86). Ancient burial ceremonies are the first evidence of human thought around which stories and rituals were formed. Ritual is the revival of a myth with the active participation of all members of the community, and some of the most widespread in the world are the rituals of death and sacrifice, birth, growing up, and weddings. These rituals very much resemble the defragmentation and cleanup of a modern computer system, while the final ritual–the ritual of death–is comparable to the formatting and rebooting to the initial settings and finally pressing the power-off button of the system. Early people explained the cycle of life and the “power of powering-off” with myths and rituals. By participating in a ritual, one participates in a myth.


Campbell generalized his notion about the importance of the death rite for society as a whole, remarking in Myths to Live By, “Individual death and the endurance of the social order have been combined symbolically and constitute the nuclear structuring force of the rites and, thereby, society” (23). However, he says that today we no longer have rituals. We have replaced myths with New York Times–news of the day. A society without rituals becomes barbarian, and young people do not grow up, because they don’t defragment themselves until their later years.


We pride ourselves on being a wise species while often oversimplifying and trivializing the power of unobservable planes of mythology.

We pride ourselves on being a wise species while often oversimplifying and trivializing the power of unobservable planes of mythology. Rituals are symbolically preserved by religions nowadays, but Campbell believed that today's rituals are too mild relative to the meaning they are supposed to convey. Religious or national holidays are almost the same everywhere: fanatical shopping, excessive cooking and eating, visiting relatives, and gratitude for returning to the peace and quiet of individuality and daily routine. For example, the sacrificial offering in Islam practiced during the holiday Eid al-Fitr nowadays somewhat reduces the weight of experiencing Abraham's/Ibrahim's sacrifice. In most Islamic countries, believers pay money to the butcher to slaughter a sheep, camel, or cow for them, without having any contact with the animal or the sanctity of the sacrificial process.


Stories about animal sacrifices, warriors, and the diet of the first people are a process through which respect is paid to the cycle of life and in which, allegorically and anagogically, one comes to the realization that we are all the same and that everything is connected. "We are made of star stuff" is a famous quote by Carl Sagan, richly interpreted by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, who speaks of atoms as an integral part of all of us. We are made of those same particles found in the first stars, thus making the Universe live in us and vice versa. We are the stars, and we are the Universe–all one and all connected by the same power of energy and matter. Nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon are integral elements of life on Earth, as well as the energy created from the Big Bang. The connection of subatomic particles can be compared to the mythologically invisible, which supports the visible world, as temporality in eternity and movement in time that takes place in Axis Mundi. Campbell himself referred to the theme of mythology as the notion “that there is an invisible plane supporting the visible one, and whether it is thought of as a world or simply as energy that differs from time and time, and place to place” (The Power of Myth, 90). First storytelling refers to this invisible plane. 


Lies that keep us alive

The origins of storytelling can be found in cave rituals around fire and the first syncretic art from which all the arts as we know them today are born. Prehistoric man dances, sings, paints and acts, practicing syncretic rites of the concept of his mythic consciousness. Myth is understood here as a conception of consciousness, while ritual is its action. This mythical concept and ritual action, make communication between the members of the tribe in a syncretic combination of artistic expression so that art evolves later into the experience completely opposed to reality and separated from that initial syncretism of the magical consciousness of early Homo sapiens. Art has become a lie, a game, a metaphor, and a pretense, unlike the original rituals, which reflected the invisible planes to our consciousness. That magical consciousness through archetypes has remained to this day an inseparable part of what differs our starry molecules from other species. 


The first stories were created in Paleolithic caves where Homo sapiens created culture. We have replaced the cave and the light of the fire in modern times with an altar in the center of our living room that emits photons from flat screens amusing us with stories which have mythological ancestry. The multitude of worlds that we discovered and created in the narrative patterns of the first myths, we have today translated into the entertainment industry. Binge-watching series from the comfort of the sanctity of our living room is just a remnant of our innate desire to experience the myth and adventure we call life.


Miracles in movies and series are offered to us on the altar in our living room, without us having to make any effort. The question is when they will be replaced by other technological content, which will include cinematic means of expression, virtual reality, metaverses, and artificial intelligence. In the 2024 series 3 Body Problem, based on the 2008 Chinese bestselling trilogy by Liu Cixin, humanity must prepare for destruction by a high-tech species coming from outer space. The reason they want to destroy us is–the story of RED RIDING HOOD! This highly advanced species does not understand why the wolf was lying to the grandmother. For them: “This story is a lie about a liar. A liar is someone not to be trusted. We communicate what is known."


Far more technologically advanced than us, but devoid of the ability to lie, these aliens are a metaphor for our future with artificial intelligence and neurolinks as envisioned by author and philosopher Alan Watts. In his future, human beings will be connected by neural connections, and every thought and desire will be open and accessible to everyone. It sounds scary, but we are already living the prototype of this vision with social networks and the Internet. We are well on our way to erasing what makes us “lying humans,” with the help of artificial intelligence, algorithms, and silicon networks. In our living room with myths in front of a flat screen, we are slowly creating a civilization completely devoid of rituals and mystical experiences. 3 Body Problem species are not capable of understanding the story of the Lying Wolf, imagination in fairy tales or fantasy, grasping the concepts of play, metaphors, or anything non-factual. We humans are not to be trusted, because we tell stories.


A Homo liar who understands and enjoys the story of Little Red Riding Hood cannot survive in a world of algorithms that is deprived of myths and rituals. There is no place for defragmentation cycles and mystical power-off experience in it. But that world is exactly what makes us a wise species–Homo sapiens. If we renounce the experience of the invisible that supports the visible world, stories that anagogically lead us to mystical knowledge, lies that interpret the truth, artists who preserve myths, and natural cycles of life–then we renounce ourselves, we lose our connection with the stars from which we are all built. 






MythBlast authored by:


Dr. Lejla Panjeta is a Professor of Film Studies and Visual Communication. She was a professor and guest lecturer in many international and Bosnian universities. She also directed and produced in theatre, worked in film production, and authored documentary films. She curated university exhibitions and film projects. She won awards for her artistic and academic works. She is the author and editor of books on film studies, art, and communication. Her recent publication was the bilingual illustrated encyclopedic guide – Filmbook, made for everyone from 8 to 108 years old. Her research interests are in the fields of aesthetics, propaganda, communication, visual arts, cultural and film studies, and mythology. https://independent.academia.edu/LejlaPanjeta






This MythBlast was inspired by The Power of Myth Episode 3, and Romance of the Grail

 

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In this episode entitled "Interpretation of Symbolic Form" which was recorded around 1970, Joseph Campbell delves into the meaning of symbolic forms and narrative. In the lecture, he explores how symbolic forms point to the human capacity for the transcendent experience. Host, Bradley Olson introduces the episode and gives commentary after the lecture.



 

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A picture of Joseph Campbell, a white man in a brown suit.

"There are two attitudes toward religious and mythic images today. One is that they are references to facts, and the other is that they are lies. But they are neither facts nor lies; rather, they are metaphors. Mythology is a compendium of metaphors."

-- Joseph Campbell






 





 

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