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Joseph
Campbell, in his Masks of God, discusses
the
Apache myth of the world creator, Black Hactcin,
who
created the world by first forming a bird,
then whirling
it around so fast that the
bird got dizzy and began
hallucinating the images
that became
the world.
Campbell gives many examples of
the "whirling bird"
motif and relates it to the
more general image of the
swastika.
The swastika, according
to Campbell, was the first
geometrical symbol to appear in the history of humanity.
Its appearance was associated
with a number of
evolutionary events, including the first organized, stable
cities, and the discovery of writing and of the wheel. The
swastika has somewhat ambivalent connotations
for us
today, as it is associated both with the Hopi's
reverence
for harmony and the Nazi's quest for power.
Mixed feelings about the swastika
can also be related
to the more general pattern of
the several pairs of
opposite and complementary meanings associated with
the opposed directions of rotation of
the archetypal
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