Introduction to the History of Religions - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
[94] Maspero, _Dawn of Civilization_, pp. 112, 185.
[95] _Tailtiriya Brahmana_, 3, 11, 8, 5; _catapatha Brahmana_, 12, 9, 3, 12. Cf. Bloomfield, _Religion of the Veda_, p. 253.
[96] The same remark holds of later conceptions of the departed soul and of deities.
[97] Mariner, _Tonga_, pp. 328, 343. G.o.ds also die, as in the Egyptian religious creed (Maspero, _Dawn of Civilization_, p. 111), in Greek myths and folk-beliefs (the grave of Zeus, etc.), and in the Norse myth of the combat of the G.o.ds with the giants.
[98] Jastrow, _Religion of Babylonia and a.s.syria_, chap.
xxv.
[99] 1 Sam. xxvii, 11 f.; Ezek. x.x.xii, 17 f.; Isa. xiv, 9 f.
Eccl. iii, 19 f., ix, 5, 6, 10, which are sometimes cited in support of the opposite opinion, belong not to the Jewish popular belief, but to a late academic system which is colored by Greek skeptical philosophy. All other late Jewish books (Apocrypha, New Testament, Talmud) a.s.sume the continued existence of the soul in the other world.
[100] See above, -- 43.
[101] Hopkins, _Religions of India_, pp. 130, 143 ff., 396; Rhys Davids, _Buddhism_, p. 111 ff.; Spiegel, _Eranische Alterthiunskunde_, ii, 161 ff.; Wiedemann, _Egyptian Doctrine of Immortality_; De Groot, _Religion of the Chinese_, chap. iii.
[102] On the Homeric usage see Rohde, _Psyche_, as cited above, -- 43.
[103] Several early Christian writers (Tatian, _Address to the Greeks_, 13; Justin, _Trypho_, cap. vi) held that souls are naturally mortal, but these views did not affect the general Christian position.
[104] Such as Ezek. xviii, 4. This view appears in _Clementine Homilies_, vii, 1.
[105] Cf. W. R. Alger, _Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life_; Harvard Ingersoll Lectures on "The Immortality of Man."
[106] Cf. H. Spencer, _Principles of Sociology_, i, chap.
xv; article "Blest, abode of the," in Hastings, _Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics_.
[107] Cf. Tylor, _Primitive Culture_, chap. xii f.
[108] Cf. Hartland, _Primitive Paternity_, i, 254, and chap.
iii.
[109] In _Primitive Culture_, chap. xii.
[110] In _La survivance de l'ame_, pa.s.sim.
[111] See also the discussion of the subject in Alger, op.
cit. (in -- 53), p. 62 f. This work contains a bibliography of the future state (by Ezra Abbot) substantially complete up to the year 1862.
[112] Cf. Saussaye, _Religion of the Teutons_, p. 295 f.
[113] M. Kingsley, _Studies_, p. 122; _Travels_, p. 445.
[114] Haddon, _Head-hunters_, p. 179 ff.
[115] Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_, Index, s.v. _Alcheringa_; id., _Northern Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 271.
[116] A. B. Ellis, _Yoruba_, p. 128.
[117] Cf. especially the Central Australian conception.
[118] It is involved in all monistic systems. It appears also to be silently made in the Old Testament: the lower animals, like man, are vivified by the "breath of G.o.d" (Ps.
civ, 29, 30; cf. Gen. ii, 7; vii, 22), and are destroyed in the flood because of the wickedness of man (Gen. vi, 5-7); cf. also Rom. viii, 22.
[119] So in the Upanishads (but not in the poetic Veda); see Hopkins, _Religions of India_, p. 227; Bloomfield, _Religion of the Veda_, p. 257. Tylor (_Primitive Culture_, ii, 18) points out that in this conception we have a suggestion of the theory of development in organic life.
[120] So the Central Australians (Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 514), the Californian Maidu (Dixon, _The Northern Maidu_, p. 246). Cf.
the cases in which precautions are taken against a ghost's entering its old earthly abode.
[121] _Rig-Veda_, 15.
[122] Spencer and Gillen, loc. cit. and p. 516 f.
[123] Probably the Greek _ker_ (???) and the Teutonic 'nightmare,' French _cauchemar_ (_mara_, an incubus, or succuba), belong in this cla.s.s of malefic ghosts.
[124] See below, -- 92.
[125] Steinmetz, _Ethnologische Studien zur ersten Entwicklung der Strafe_, i, 141 ff.
[126] For West Africa see above, -- 43, n. 2; for the Norse _fylgja_ ('follower') cf. Saussaye, _Religion of the Teutons_, p. 292 ff.
[127] -- 38, n. 2.
[128] A transitional stage is marked by the theory, in a polypsychic system, that one soul remains near the body while another goes to the distant land.
[129] So, perhaps, among the eastern Polynesians (W. Ellis, _Polynesian Researches_, i, 303) and the Navahos (Matthews, _Navaho Legends_, p. 38).
[130] Maspero, _Dawn of Civilization_, chap. iii, 183 ff.; Teit, _Thompson River Indians_, p. 85; Rink, _Tales of the Eskimo_, p. 40.
[131] _Odyssey_, xi (by the encircling Okeanos); Williams, _Fiji_, p. 192; Brinton, _Myths of the New World_, p. 288 f.; Saussaye, _Religion of the Teutons_, p. 290; _Rig-Veda_, x, 63, 10; ix, 41, 2.
[132] Breasted, _History of Egypt_, p. 65; Charon; Saussaye, op. cit., p. 290; Rohde, _Psyche_, 3d ed., i, 306. For the story given by Procopius (_De Bell. Goth._ iv, 20) see Tylor, _Primitive Culture_, ii, 64 f.
[133] Saussaye, op. cit., p. 291.
[134] _Rig-Veda_, x, 154, 4, 5; Lister in _Journal of the Anthropological Inst.i.tute_, xxi, 51 (moon). Cf. Breasted, _History of Egypt_, p. 64; Hopkins, _Religions of India_, pp. 129, 206; Brinton, _Myths of the New World_, p. 284 ff.; Muller, _Amerikanische Urreligionen_, i, 288 ff.; Saussaye, op. cit., p. 291; Spencer, _Principles of Sociology_, i, 232 f.
[135] Matthews, _Navaho Legends_, p. 185 f.; Teit, _Thompson River Indians_, p. 78.
[136] Turner, _Samoa_, p. 257; Lawes (on New Guinea), in _Journal of the Anthropological Inst.i.tute_, viii, 371; Callaway, _Zulu Nursery Tales_, p. 316; Matthews, _Navaho Legends_, p. 215; Rink, _Tales of the Eskimo_, p. 37; Sir G.
S. Robertson, _The Kafirs of the Hindu-Kush_, p. 380 f.
[137] _aeneid_, vi.
[138] _Odyssey_, xi, 489; Isa. x.x.xviii, 10 ff.; Prov. iii, 16, etc.
[139] 1 Sam. xxviii, 14; Ezek. x.x.xii, 19-32; Isa. xiv, 9-15; x.x.xviii, 18. For the early Babylonian conception of the Underworld see the _Descent of Ishtar_ (in Jastrow, _Religion of Babylonia and a.s.syria_, chap. xxv); S. H.