![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Some of these stories are weird enough that relating these to modern ears may elicit cries of Values Dissonance. ![]() Typically, inanimate forces of nature are personified as gods or spirits, complicated variables are simplified in order to identify one clear-cut cause, and explanations of natural phenomeona that contradict modern scientific knowledge are accepted in a culture which lacks modern scientific methods, instruments, and theories. The "Just So" Story (also known as a "pourquoi note French for "why?" story," "origin story," or "aetiological tale" note from the Ancient Greek αἴτιον, "cause") is a myth or folktale which, to quote Wikipedia, "purports to describe the origin of some feature of the natural or social world." The question, often posed to an adult by a child, could be "why do the seasons change?", or "why do zebras have stripes?", or "why do people speak different languages?" The answer given is usually that some god(dess), hero(ine), or mythical ancestor did something a long time ago that caused that thing to become that way: " Because Hades abducted Persephone and took her to the underworld", or " Because the zebra's son burned himself in the baboon's campfire ", or " Because God punished humanity for trying to build a tower to heaven." ![]()
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