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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » Crash Course
Archetypes and Male Divinities: Crash Course World Mythology #15

Archetypes and Male Divinities: Crash Course World Mythology #15

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
This week on Crash Course Mythology, Mike is teaching you about the archetypes that are often associated with male divinities. We-re going to talk about Fathers & Sons, Kings & Judges, Saviors & Sages, Shamans, Tricksters, and Lords of Destruction. Along the way, we-ll look at the story of Hwaning, Hwanung, and Dangun from the Korean peninsula, and we-ll learn about Arjuna and all the help he got from Krishna. We-ll also touch on a ton of other myths from around the world. These things play out this way all the time, man. Crash Course is made with Adobe Creative Cloud. You can download the software and try it free here: Our
Date: 2022-04-04

Comments and reviews: 10


Hindu gods had some kind of flying machine. I'm not gonna say airplane or spaceships because I'm not a loony and obviously that's the Greek gods, silly, the american government picked Tom Delonge specifically to help share their knowledge of aliens.
That's what he said on Joe Rogan and I'm sure elsewhere. Either Tom is crazy or the truth is gonna get out there. He's produced things that are part of this plan of his and there's a website so.
I just don't know if -the gods were aliens- means there were multiple groups of aliens or the same group >_>
But believing that aliens created humans without any tangible evidence would make me a hypocrite because I'm an atheist and critical of belief without evidence.
But Tom DeLonge. I want in on his things.
But yeah, Hindu gods flew something. I think flying vehicles are common in myths, but a lot of the time there's flying horses. But the Hindu vessels (is that a synonym for ship) flew by magic or mana or something like that.
God magic, not puny mortal magic.

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Congrats for having explained in this academic manner how Lord Shri Krishna embodies all these different kinds of male archetypes.
Wait, it is even deeper. :
He also says that He is the source of all shaktis ( energies ), His internal and external energies. The personified material energy, Durga, for example, is acting on his behalf. So there might maybe the bridge to the female Goddess archetypes. All there in the Bhagavad Gita.

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Krishn knew the war would consume all of his kingdom and clansmen as well but still for the protection of Dharm he let the war happened while also trying to avoid it with any means necessary. After the war, the mother of 100 kauravs Gandhari curses Krishn that -because you let all of her sons die, all of his family, kingdom and clansmen would also perish-. Being a God but in human form he had to take the curse.
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Thinking of Gods as having skills or attributes rather than being -Gods of ___- is how I've been advised to think of the Deities in Irish polytheism and I really like that approach so seeing it mentioned, though only in a specific instance, is neat!
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Krishna was a prince and he was Arjuna's chariotee. After watching your takes on Hindu Mythologies so disrespectfully, I wonder if I should believe what you say about other cultures smh.
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Is anyone else bothered by cutie-pie Mike's tendency to add extra syllables to words? Archetypal (three syllables, not four) and monarchal (three syllables, not four, for example.
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Almighty God Became EVERYTHING. You will be standing in front of him. just as suridly as you. .Are standing on him and created of him.
Archetypes doesn't really work here.

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I thought Pluto was accidentally synchronized with the god Plutus because their names sounded similar, and they were retroactively called the same god for reasons.
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Krishna's pretty cool, but Shiva smoked weed. Which doesn't make sense if he's the destroyer. Like chill, man, eat some Doritos! Destroyer of snacks!
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Calling Tyr a son of Odin is a bit dubious. He is only refered to be one once, as I recall, by S. S, and never in any other translated work (to my knowledge)
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