Recently, I have been reading Jospeh Campbell's Myths To Live By. In it, on pages 213 - 214, there is the following passage:
"A functioning mythological symbol I have defined as 'an energy-evoking and energy directing sign.' Dr. [John] Perry [a psychiatrist at the University of California] has termed such signals 'affect images.' Their messages are addressed not to the brain...Yet they pass through the brain, and the educated brain may intefere, misinterpret, and so short-circuit the messages. When that occurs the signs no longer function as they should. The inherited mythology is garbled, and its guiing value lost or misconstrued. Or, what is worse, one may have been brought up to respond to a set of signal not present in the general environment; as is frequently the case, for example, with children raised in the circles of certain special sects [emphasis mine], not participating in - and even despising or resenting - the culture forms of the rest of civilization. Such a person will never feel quite at home in the larger social field, but always uneasy and even slightly paranoid. Nothing touches him as it should. means to him what it should, or moves him as it moves others. He is compelled to retreat for his satisfactions back to the restricted and accordinglyrestricting context of the sect... to which he was attuned. He is disorientated, and even dangerous, in the larger field [...] More normally, rational parents will wish to have produced socially as well as physically healthy offspring, well enough attuned to the system of sentiments of the culture into which they are growing to be able to appraise its values rationally and align themselves constructively with its progressive, decent, life-fostering, and fructifying elements.
And so we have this critical problem...of seeing to it that the mythology...that we are communicating to our young will deliver directive messages qualified to relate them richly and vitally to the environment that is to be theirs for life, and not to some period of man already past, some piously desiderated future, or - what is worst of all - some querulous, freakish sect or momenary fad. And I call this problem critical because, when it is badly resolved, the result for the miseducated individual is what is known, in mythological terms, as a "Waste Land" situattion. The world does not talk to him; he does not talk to the world. When that is the case, there is a cut-off [or alienation]...and he is in prime shape for that psychotic break-away that will turn him into either an essential schizophrenic in a padded cell, or a paranoid screaming slogans at large, in a bughouse without walls."
I am wondering if anyone here can identify with any of the points made by Campbell in his book. In your estimation, is he totally "off the mark," as they say?
I have to say that, in general, I find this book a fascinating read.