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Full Description
The articles in The Bounds of Myth, edited by Gustavo Esparza and Nassim Bravo, shed light on the internal shapes of the mythological discourse, showing the way in which myth borders religion, science, literature, theology, i.e., other forms of rationality. The contributing authors of the volume claim that myth is a valid form of thought and that the former evolves within other forms of discourse, even though its composition is independent and even precedes the latter.
The articles collected here demonstrate the importance of myth as a form of thought that is in constant development, a feature that shows in turn that in spite of its remote and archaic origin, myth remains a valuable and relevant tool to interpret our own culture.
Contributors are: Nassim Bravo, Claudio Calabrese, Teresa Enríquez, Gustavo Esparza, Ethel Junco, Enrique Martínez, Cecilia Sabido and Jon Stewart.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
Prologue
Emily Grosholz
Introduction
Gustavo Esparza and Nassim Bravo
PART 1
Exemplarity, Analogy and Expression in Myth
The Bounds of Myth
The Logical Path from Action to Knowledge
Gustavo Esparza
Considerations on the Visibility of Action in Aristotle
Cecilia Sabido and Teresa Enríquez
The Philosopher Is Somehow a Lover of Metaphors
Enrique Martínez
PART 2
The Problems of Interpretation
The Meanings of Doctrine in De Doctrina Christiana
Claudio Calabrese
The Myth of Self-Knowledge in Genesis 1-2
The Fascination of the Encounter
Gustavo Esparza
The Notion of Subjectivity as Reflected in Early Notions of the Afterlife
Jon Stewart
PART 3
The Myth in Action
Oedipus and Perceval
The Enigma as a Hermeneutical Principle
Ethel Junco
Reinterpreting Medieval Lore Through the Modern Prism
The Myth of Robin Hood in Kierkegaard's Early Journals
Nassim Bravo
Index



