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The Development
of Mythology
As explained by Powell, philosophies and
beliefs may be seriated in four stages: The first stage is
hecastotheism; in this stage extranatural or mysterious
potencies are imputed to objects both animate and inanimate.
The second stage is zootheism; within it the powers of
animate forms are exaggerated and amplified into the realm
of the supernal, and certain animals are deified. The third
stage is that of physitheism, in which the agencies of
nature are personified and exalted unto omnipotence. The
fourth stage is that of psychotheism, which includes the
domain of spiritual concept. In general the development of
belief coincides with the growth of abstraction; yet it is
to be remembered that this growth represents increase in
definiteness of the abstract concepts rather than
augmentation in numbers and kinds of subjective impressions,
i.e., the advance is in quality rather than in quantity;
indeed, it would almost appear that the vague and indefinite
abstraction of hecastotheism is more pervasive and prevalent
than the clearer abstraction of higher stages. Appreciation
of the fundamental characteristics of belief is essential to
even the most general understanding of the Indian mythology
and philosophy, and even after careful study it is difficult
for thinkers trained in the higher methods of thought to
understand the crude and confused ideation of the primitive
thinker.
In hecastotheism the believer finds mysterious properties
and potencies everywhere. To his mind every object is endued
with occult power, moved by a vague volition, actuated by
shadowy motive ranging capriciously from malevolence to
benevolence; in his lax estimation some objects are more
potent or more mysterious than others, the strong, the
sharp, the hard, and the swift-moving rising superior to the
feeble, the dull, the soft, and the slow. Commonly he
singles out some special object as his personal, family, or
tribal mystery-symbol or fetich, the object usually
representing that which is most feared or worst hated among
his surroundings. Vaguely realizing from the memory of
accidents or unforeseen events that he is dependent on his
surroundings, he invests every feature of his environment
with a capricious humor reflecting his own disposition, and
gives to each and all a subtlety and inscrutability
corresponding to his exalted estimation of his own craft in
the chase and war; and, conceiving himself to live and move
only at the mercy of his multitudinous associates, he
becomes a fatalist—kismet is his watchword, and he meets
defeat and death with resignation, just as he goes to
victory with complacence; for so it was ordained.
Zootheism is the offspring of hecastotheism. As the
primitive believer assigns special potency or mystery to the
strong and the swift, he gradually comes to give exceptional
rank to self-moving animals; as his experience of the
strength, alertness, swiftness, and courage of his animate
enemy or prey increases, these animals are invested with
successively higher and higher attributes, each reflecting
the mental operations of the mystical huntsman, and in time
the animals with which the primitive believers are most
intimately associated come to be regarded as tutelary
daimons of supernatural power and intelligence. At first the
animals, like the undifferentiated things of hecastotheism,
are regarded in fear or awe by reason of their strength and
ferocity, and this regard grows into an incipient worship in
the form of sacrifice or other ceremonial; meanwhile,
inanimate things, and in due season rare and unimportant
animals, are neglected, and a half dozen, a dozen, or a
score of the well-known animals are exalted into a hierarchy
of petty gods, headed by the strongest like the bear, the
swiftest like the deer, the most majestic like the eagle,
the most cunning like the fox or coyote, or the most deadly
like the rattlesnake. Commonly the arts and the skill of the
mystical huntsman improve from youth to adolescence and from
generation to generation, so that the later animals appear
to be easier snared or slain than the earlier; moreover, the
accounts of conflicts between men and animals grow by
repetition and are gilded by imagination as memory grows
dim; and for these and other reasons the notion grows up
that the ancient animals were stronger, swifter, slier,
statelier, deadlier than their modern representatives, and
the hierarchy of petty gods is exalted into an omnipotent
thearchy. Eventually, in the most highly developed
zootheistic systems, the leading beast-god is regarded as
the creator of the lesser deities of the earth, sun, and
sky, of the mythic under-world and its real counterpart the
ground or mid-world, as well as the visionary upper-world,
of men, and of the ignoble animals; sometimes the most
exalted beast-god is worshiped especially by the great man
or leading class and incidentally by all, while other men
and groups choose the lesser beast-gods, according to their
rank, for special worship. In hecastotheism the potencies
revered or worshiped are polymorphic, while their attributes
reflect the mental operations of the believers; in zootheism
the deities worshiped are zoomorphic, and their attributes
continue to reflect the human mind.
Physitheism, in its turn, springs from zootheism. Through
contemplation of the strong the idea of strength arises, and
a means is found for bringing the bear into analogy with
thunder, with the sun, or with the avalanche-bearing
mountain; through contemplation of the swift the concept of
swiftness is engendered, and comparison of the deer with the
wind or rushing river is made easy; through contemplation of
the deadly stroke of the rattlesnake the notion of
death-dealing power assumes shape, and comparison of the
snake bite and the lightning stroke is made possible; and in
every case it is inevitably perceived that the agency is
stronger, swifter, deadlier than the animal. At first the
agency is not abstracted or dissociated from the parent
zootheistic concept, and the sun is the mightiest animal as
among many peoples, the thunder is the voice of the bear as
among different woodland tribes or the flapping of the wings
of the great ancient eagle as among the Dakota and ¢egiha,
while lightning is the great serpent of the sky as among the
Zuñi. Subsequently the zoic concept fades, and the constant
association of human intellectual qualities engenders an
anthropic concept, when the sun becomes an anthropomorphic
deity (perhaps bearing a dazzling mask, as among the Zuñi),
and thunder is the rumbling of quoits pitched by the shades
of old-time giants, as among different American tribes.
Eventually all the leading agencies of nature are
personified in anthropic form, and retain the human
attributes of caprice, love, and hate which are found in the
minds of the believers.
Psychotheism is born of physitheism as the anthropomorphic
element in the concept of natural agency gradually fades;
but since none of the aborigines of the United States had
passed into the higher stage, the mode of transition does
not require consideration.
It is to be borne in mind that throughout the course of
development of belief, from the beginning of hecastotheism
into the borderland of psychotheism, the dominant
characteristic is the vague notion of mystery. At first the
mystery pervades all things and extends in all directions,
representing an indefinite ideal world, which is the
counterpart of the real world with the addition of human
qualities. Gradually the mystery segregates, deepening with
respect to animals and disappearing with respect to
inanimate things; and at length the slowly changing
mysteries shape themselves into semiabstractions having a
strong anthropic cast, while the remainder of the earth and
the things thereof gradually become real, though they remain
under the spell and dominion of the mysterious. Thus at
every stage the primitive believer is a mystic—a fatalist in
one stage, a beast worshiper in another, a thaumaturgist in
a third, yet ever and first of all a mystic. It is also to
be borne in mind (and the more firmly because of a
widespread misapprehension) that the primitive believer, up
to the highest stage attained by the North American Indian,
is not a psychotheist, much less a monotheist. His "Great
Spirit" is simply a great mystery, perhaps vaguely
anthropomorphic, oftener zoomorphic, yet not a spirit, which
he is unable to conceive save by reflection of the white
man's concept and inquiry; and his departed spirit is but a
shade, much like that of the ancient Greeks, the associate
and often the inferior of animal shades.
While the four stages in development of belief are
fundamentally distinct, they nevertheless overlap in such
manner as apparently, and in a measure really, to coexist
and blend. Culture progress is slow. In biotic development
the effect of beneficial modification is felt immediately,
and the modified organs or organisms are stimulated and
strengthened cumulatively, while the unmodified are
enfeebled and paralyzed cumulatively through inactivity and
quickly pass toward atrophy and extinction. Conversely in
demotic development, which is characterized by the
persistence of the organisms and by the elimination of the
bad and the preservation of the good among qualities only,
there is a constant tendency toward retardation of progress;
for in savagery and barbarism as in civilization, age
commonly produces conservatism, and at the same time brings
responsibility for the conduct of old and young, so that
modification, howsoever beneficial, is measurably held in
check, and so that the progress of each generation buds in
the springtime of youth yet is not permitted to fruit until
the winter of old age approaches. Accordingly the mean of
demotic progress tends to lag far behind its foremost
advances, and modes of action and especially of thought
change slowly. This is especially true of beliefs, which,
during each generation, are largely vestigial. So the stages
in the evolution of mythologic philosophy overlap widely;
there is probably no tribe now living among whom zootheism
has not yet taken root, though hecastotheism has been found
dominant among different tribes; there is probably no people
in the zootheistic stage who are completely divested of
hecastotheistic vestiges; and one of the curious features of
even the most advanced psychotheism is the occasional
outcropping of features inherited from all of the earlier
stages. Yet it is none the less important to discriminate
the stages.
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The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
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