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1.41: ¿Qué es un mito?

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    92139
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    Hoy en día la gente suele usar la palabra “mito” para significar una historia falsa o un falso rumor. Por ejemplo, si una persona preguntara: “¿Es el viernes 13 un día desafortunado?” otra persona podría responder: “No, eso es sólo un mito”. Pero los antiguos griegos no usaban de esta manera la palabra mythos (μθος). Para los griegos, un mito era simplemente una historia. No era importante si la historia era verdadera o falsa; lo importante era el hecho de que el modo de hablar era el de una historia. La palabra griega logos (λογος), por otra parte, significa una explicación racional o afirmación analítica. Estas dos palabras, mitos y logos, apuntan a dos tipos diferentes de discurso, correspondientes a dos formas diferentes de pensar. Uno no se consideraba más importante que el otro; simplemente eran diferentes. Si pones las dos palabras juntas: mythos + logos = mitología. Y “mitología” es la explicación o el estudio analítico de los mitos.


    1.41: ¿Qué es un mito? is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.