Introduction to the Myth
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13130/2039-9251/4787Abstract
The mythical word can be applied to the origin of the world as well as to its changings. But, beyond its transformations, the mythological narrative and its figures offer an access key to those meanings that reason can’t grasp or constrain into defined or definitive forms.
References
ARISTOTELE, Metafisica.
BLUMENBERG, Hans, Il futuro del mito (1971), tr. it. di G. Leghissa, Medusa, Milano 2002.
CAMPBELL, Joseph, Il potere del mito. Intervista di Bill Moyers (1988), tr. it. di A. Grieco e V. Linguardi, Guanda, Parma 1990.
DIELS, Hermann, KRANZ, Walther, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, Weidmann, Berlin 196411.
MELCHIORRE, Virgilio, Analogia e analisi trascendentale. Linee per una nuova lettura di Kant, Mursia, Milano 1991.
KANT, Immanuel Critica della ragion pura (1781; 17872), tr. it. di C. Esposito, Bompiani, Milano 2004.
KANT, Immanuel, Critica del giudizio (1790), tr. it. di M. Marassi, Bompiani, Milano 2004.
NIETZSCHE, Friedrich, La gaia scienza (1882), tr. it. e cura di G. Colli e M. Montinari, in Opere, Adelphi, Milano 1967, vol. V, t. 2.
RICOEUR, Paul, Finitudine e colpa (1960), tr. it. di M. Girardet, Il Mulino, Bologna 1970.
Downloads
Issue
Section
License
The authors who publish in Itinera are required to accept the following conditions:
1. The authors retain the rights on their paper and lincese the journal the right of first publication. The paper is also licensed under a Creative Commons License, which allows others to share it, by indicating intellectual authorship and its first publication in Itinera.
2. Authors may adhere to other non-exclusive license agreements for the distribution of the published version of the paper (ex. deposit it in an institutional archive or publish it in a monograph), provided that its first publication in Itinera is indicated.
3. Authors can disseminate their paper online (ex. in institutional repositories or on their website) before and during the submission process, since this can lead to productive exchanges and increase quotations of the published work (See “The Effect of Open Access”).