Jack of Kent
29th October 2008, 04:30 AM
Live people are scary: they can torture, they can steal, they can abuse.
Almost all the problems in the world derive from the cruelty, dishonesty, or stupidity, of living people.
I can easily see why one would be afraid of living people.
I can even understand why one could be afraid of the "living dead" such as vampires, mummies, or zombies; or even of monsters such as werewolves, trolls, or hobgoblins.
I would go so far to just about appreciate that one can fear certain invisible forces, such as a Devil or several malevolent demons: the genuinely-held concerns of our early modern ancestors about witchcraft were based on these fears. The witch was in league with, and a conduit for, such forces.
But ghosts? By which I mean the surviving spirits of particular dead people (not "evil spirits", which are really demons and unconnected to any particular dead person).
Why should they be scary? What harm could they actually do? Indeed, there are few examples of stories where any harm is done by a ghost, even in a "haunting".
However, ghosts are scary to many people. They used to scare me. Indeed, as a boy I was scared of ghosts but not any of the other "scary" supernatural things I mention above.
I ceased to fear ghosts, as I realised that they were unlikely to hurt me; and then I ceased to believe in them.
And now I cannot see why I was scared of them at all.
[Copied over from my Blog site, for interest and discussion.]
Almost all the problems in the world derive from the cruelty, dishonesty, or stupidity, of living people.
I can easily see why one would be afraid of living people.
I can even understand why one could be afraid of the "living dead" such as vampires, mummies, or zombies; or even of monsters such as werewolves, trolls, or hobgoblins.
I would go so far to just about appreciate that one can fear certain invisible forces, such as a Devil or several malevolent demons: the genuinely-held concerns of our early modern ancestors about witchcraft were based on these fears. The witch was in league with, and a conduit for, such forces.
But ghosts? By which I mean the surviving spirits of particular dead people (not "evil spirits", which are really demons and unconnected to any particular dead person).
Why should they be scary? What harm could they actually do? Indeed, there are few examples of stories where any harm is done by a ghost, even in a "haunting".
However, ghosts are scary to many people. They used to scare me. Indeed, as a boy I was scared of ghosts but not any of the other "scary" supernatural things I mention above.
I ceased to fear ghosts, as I realised that they were unlikely to hurt me; and then I ceased to believe in them.
And now I cannot see why I was scared of them at all.
[Copied over from my Blog site, for interest and discussion.]