Predictive History - The Story of "Civilization", "Secret History", "Game Theory" and more - Civilization #36 - Memory of the Norse
Episode Date: October 7, 2025Civilization #36 - Memory of the Norse ...
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Good morning. So today we continue the Vikings and this morning we will look at their worldview, their cultural system.
And as I mentioned last class, I do believe that the Viking culture is truly one of the outstanding cultures in Western civilization.
The problem, though, is we know actually very little about the Viking culture.
and there are certain reasons for that.
The first reason is that they were purposefully an oral tradition.
So it is our prejudice, it is our belief that a literary culture is superior to an oral tradition.
It's harder to read and write.
But what we forget is that when we transition from our oral tradition to a literary culture, we lose a lot in the process.
And there are many cultures that have the capacity to read and write, but they chose not to,
because for them it was much more important to preserve the oral tradition than it was to adopt a literary culture.
And as I explained in today's lecture, there are many actually good reasons why you would want to preserve an oral tradition.
That's the first reason.
The Vikings were purposely an oral tradition culture.
The second reason is that eventually the Vikings would convert to Christianity.
And in this conversion process, which would take generations, they had to abandon a lot of their tradition and heritage,
including their mythologies and their historical memory.
The Vikings were perceived.
believed as barbarians by the Christians.
And because of the traumatic Viking encounters with Europe, there was an intention or purpose
in trying to eradicate the Viking memory.
So please keep in mind that we don't know that much about the Vikings.
What we do know about the Vikings comes from two sources.
The first is archaeology.
We basically dug up their graves, some of their graves, not all of their graves, and through their
graves, we're able to reconstruct some of their culture.
But the main source of our understanding is through Norse mythology.
Unfortunately, we only have a fraction of their entire mythology.
mythology it's vast it's grand it's epic it's beautiful but we only have a
fraction of that and unfortunately over time Christians Christian intellectuals
want to sanctify or purify the Norse mythology because the Norse
mythology is extremely violent and sexual and so they basically clean it up
which means that a lot of what we have has been interpreted for
Christian lens. So please be careful about that. Okay? So I will try my best to
reconstruct the Viking worldview, but please understand there are severe
constraints and limitations. And the way I will reconstruct the Viking
worldview is by comparing contrasting it with other mythologies, other civilizations,
other cultures, and by using literary interpretation.
and ultimately by using my imagination, okay?
So please take what I say with a grain of salt.
Be skeptical, be suspicious, ask questions, challenge me where you feel you need to.
Okay?
All right, so let's get started.
All right, let's look at the Viking tradition in contrast to the Greeks and the Romans.
Okay, so the Greeks, how do they see the world?
Remember, their idea of the community was the idea of the polis.
The polis gives us our word for politics.
The idea is that a community is a group of men, only men, who come together to debate and argue
of the future of the community.
And as such, the individual is someone who stands out, okay?
The word they use is eudaimonia or arete.
Eudaimonia means flourishing.
You can only flourish if you stand out among a group of men.
Arete is proving your excellence among a group of men.
And so I'll give you two examples of this Greek worldview.
So the first is Achilles from the Iliad.
Remember in the Eliad, Achilles tells everyone, I am
in Troy to seek personal glory.
I don't care about the Greeks.
I don't care about Helen or Troy.
I don't care about what others think.
I just want to stand out.
I care about my own personal glory.
And that's why he's willing to let Hector and the Trojans almost destroy the Greek army.
So that's one example.
Another example is from Herodotus.
book Histories. And it has to do with the Athenian leader Themasicles.
Okay, so this is a year 480 BC. And in the year 480 BC, the Persians are invading the Greek mainland.
Sparta, Athens have united against the Persians. The Persians burned down Athens and the
Athenian people are on their ships. And at this point, the Spartans, who are who are
who are in command of the military,
and Athenians have a huge argument.
The Athenians want to challenge the Persians on the sea
and defeat them and defeat their navy.
The Spartans want to use their navy to protect their homeland,
the Peloponnese, against the Persian invasion.
And they cannot come to an agreement.
So what Thamesikl does is he sends a spot
a servant to the king of the Persians and tell him, hey, the entire Greek Navy is stationed
in Salamis, okay? And, but they're about to run away from you. So here's a great chance
to send your entire Persian Navy to crush the Greek Navy once and for all. And that's what the
king does. And at the Battle of Salamis, the Athenians and the Spartans destroy the
Persian Navy and turn the course of not only the war, but of Western history.
Because if the Persian had won that day, then we would be living in a Persian-influenced
world as opposed to a Greek-influenced world.
But you think about it, what Achilles and the Mexics are doing is what we would
call sedition or treason or betrayal.
But that's just the Greek worldview.
The Romans had a very different perspective.
They understood community as fundamentally about tradition.
And as such, the individual had to be pious to the tradition.
Had to be loyal to the tradition.
They used the word piety.
Now, in China, we have a concept called filial piety.
Guys, this is very important.
completely opposite.
In China, filial piety means obedience to your father.
What your father says is right.
That's what it means.
But in Rome, piety means loyalty to the traditions of Rome.
So the classic example is Julius Caesar.
Julius Caesar wants to be king.
He was about to break a lot of Roman traditions.
So his friends, including his friends,
biological son Marcus Brutus killed him it was more important for Marcus
Brutus to be loyal to the traditions of Rome than to the Lord then to be
loyal to his father okay so that's the Roman tradition then you have the
Viking tradition for the Vikings and this is very interesting the community is a
set of stories okay and stories are not the same as tradition tradition is what is
It is past.
It is what is written down.
Stories are memories that are living.
That which a community tells about itself.
And therefore, there is a flexibility to these stories.
They can be re-imagined over and over.
The basic structure, the outline is the same.
But the community has to constantly relive and reimagine these stories.
And therefore, the individual is a person who acts out these stories.
Okay?
Acts out these stories.
And he acts out these stories by either through ritual, either through adventure or exploration.
Okay?
So this is a hard to understand, okay?
How is this different from the Roman tradition?
But let me tell you a story to illustrate this Viking culture.
Okay, so 30 years ago, a long time ago, I was having lunch with a new friend.
And he went to a very good school called Georgetown.
It's based in Washington, D.C., and it's where Bill Clinton went.
Okay?
This is where a lot of the Washington foreign policy elite go to school.
And he told me that at Georgetown, there's a tradition, a competition among undergraduates.
And the competition is who can go the furthest to do the most useless thing.
And a lot of undergraduates participate in this competition.
So what my friend and his friend did was one day they got in a car,
they drove 12 hours to Canada, the Canadian border.
They crossed the Canadian border, then they got out of the car and went into the forest to take a piss
Then they got back in the car and drove all the way back to Georgetown
They spent 24 hours driving so that they could take a piss in Canada
Okay, now you think this sounds really stupid, but the most interesting thing about the story is that it is memorable
Right?
And what this means is that 50 years after they graduate from Georgetown, people will still remember what they did.
Not only that, but they'll tell their friends, they'll tell their colleagues, they'll tell their children.
So this memory will persist over time.
No one to remember who got the best grades at Georgetown that year.
No one to remember who had the most money, who made the most money in the most money in.
in his or her life okay but everyone's to remember these two guys who got in their car
and drove 24 hours just so that they can take they can go to Canada to take a piss
all right so that is Viking culture it's not about winning glory or protecting
tradition it's about doing what is shocking what is new what will add to the
imagination and the memory of the community
Does that make sense?
All right.
So their main memory is, of course, their mythology, Norse mythology.
And Norse mythology, I would argue, is the greatest mythology in human history.
We still have it today.
You might have seen these Marvel movies, right?
Thor, the Four series.
There are a lot of TV shows based on the Vikings.
So the Viking culture, the Norse mythology, it's still celebrated today.
Okay?
So let me explain to you why I would argue that Norse mythology is probably the greatest cosmological system we have.
Okay, so first it's grand.
In this mythology, there are nine realms.
Okay?
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine.
And it's all connected by a world tree called Idersel.
No one knows what this world tree looks like, but it's basically the equivalent of God in this system.
And in this, in Idersil, there are three gods who control the fate and destiny of the world called Anans.
So it's very grand and epic.
Also, what's important to understand is there's nothing outside this universe.
This is it.
Second is that it's complete.
What I mean by that is it has a beginning and has an end.
The beginning is there's a rift and from the rift steps
a frost giant named Imar.
And then comes a cow, a cosmic cow, who then licks the ice
and that releases another god who eventually give birth
to another god who will give birth to the three major gods,
including Odin.
And these three major gods will kill Imar,
and from Imar's carcass, they will build the universe.
Okay?
That's the beginning.
But there's also an N.
And the N is what they call,
what's what they call Ragnarok.
Ragnarok.
And Ragnarok is the end of everything.
It is a final battle between the gods,
what I call the Aesier.
So Odin,
is the All Father, the main god, but in all children are called the Acer.
The Aeser will fight a final cosmic battle between them and their enemies.
And in this final battle, everything will die.
Nothing will be left.
Then that's it.
Now, as I mentioned, the Christian tradition will take the story and adapt it.
for its own ends. So in the Christian tradition, Rhinorak does happen, but guess what?
After the end of the world, two humans, a man and a woman, will emerge from the destruction
and reconstitute the world, okay? That's the Christian tradition. In the North tradition,
evidence. And you may think to yourself, oh, well, this sounds extremely pessimistic.
That's only because we're looking at it from our perspective. From the perspective of the
perspective of the Vikings, the end of the world means that you must cherish every single
day. Live with honor, live with glory, live with courage. Cherish every moment. Okay?
And that's the idea. The third thing about Norse mythology is that it's unified. So, all the
characters everything that happens is contained within this mythology and contributes to
development of this mythology so this mythology not only includes gods but also
includes humans okay who are champions of the gods so there's a very famous love
story within this mythology between a human named Sigard and the
and a Valkyrie who is a certain of the gods named Bumhildi.
Eventually what will happen is that there will be a very famous German composer named Wagner
who will take the story of Sigard Bohemdi and this entire Norse mythology and construct something called the Ring Cycle,
which is the most famous opera in German history.
And this becomes one of the foundations of modern German culture.
This Norse mythology will also become the inspiration for tokens, epic called Lord of the Rings.
So these are the two most obvious examples of how Norse mythology still impacts our world today.
And as we go along the semester, I will show other influences.
So what Norse mythology is trying to do is create community among the Vikings and instill
certain values.
The three major values that these stories manifest and express are courage.
The courage to explore, the courage to seek what is new and unknown, to venture forth into the unknown.
Because Vikings are mainly explorers and adventurers.
Rating is only a small part of their community, okay?
Second is the idea of loyalty.
And this is a very important concept.
When you go out on new adventures, you usually go out with you're usually going out with the idea of loyalty.
your brothers, your friends.
It's like a band of brothers.
So you have to survive, you have to be willing to die for them.
You have to die for each other.
If the survival of the group requires you to make them
with sacrifice, you have to do so.
Loyalty means love for each other.
It does not mean obedience.
Remember, in the Viking world, it is very egalitarian.
There's very little hierarchy.
There are high status people,
but there are high status people.
because they're proving themselves worthier than the others,
because they're braver, because they're stronger,
because they're more clever.
The last Viking value is resourcefulness.
So the idea here is, when you venture off into the unknown,
you cannot know what to expect.
You can't plan ahead, you can't be strategic.
So you can only be resourceful, meaning you must respond to the danger as it arises.
You have to be what we call quick-witted.
You have to have street smarts.
So these are the three main values or ideas that Norse mythology is trying to express and instill in the people.
So that's a general introduction to Viking culture.
Now what I will do is I will provide evidence and examples for this argument.
Okay?
All right.
But is this clear to guys?
Okay.
All right. So now let's do the PPP.
And look at the evidence and the examples.
Okay.
Okay, all right, the Viking worldview.
All right, first thing I need you guys to understand is that every culture, every society
fundamentally asks itself three questions that this painting from Paul Guggen captures, okay?
Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going? Every culture is trying to grapple with these three questions.
Paul Gogaine, I'm not sure if you know who he is. He has a very famous French artist.
He started off actually as a financier, a stockbroker, and then he basically became disgusted
with a material lifestyle of modern society.
So he got on a boat and went to Tahiti, where he painted.
He interacted with the natives, and through this interaction, he began to grapple with what
it means to be a human, what is the human project.
And what he believes and what most actually anthropologists believe is, to be human is to ask these three questions.
Where do we come from? Why are we here? Where are we going? And that's ultimately what Norse mythology is trying to grapple with as well.
Okay, so again, we know our evidence or understanding of the Vikings comes from archaeology.
So we are able to take up their graves. And what we discover is, and it's very interesting, is that each grave is unique.
and it seems that each grave in its own way is telling a story about who this person is.
It's like this grave was not meant just to send this individual into the afterworld,
but also to remember him or her and his or her achievements and life.
So let's look at some reconstructions.
of these graves. Okay, and you can see this woman is buried with tools and arrow as well as a dead horse.
So we're not able to reconstruct her story, but obviously those who knew her
knew exactly what the story represented, okay?
This is another example where man is buried with his ship. The Vikings are the
only society to bury people in ships.
Another example, and as you can see, they're all unique.
In fact, what's really interesting for us is to appreciate that funerals were the most
important aspect of Viking society.
It's what brought the community together, and it was what they remember the most.
It is funerals are what contributed to historical memory in the Viking world.
As you can see, this funeral is extremely elaborate involving a lot of animal sacrifice.
These horses are being gathered up to be sacrificed.
There's also human sacrifice.
And these funerals can last for a long time, 10 days.
So again, because the Vikings never wrote anything down, we actually don't know that much
about these funerals.
In fact, we only have one historical rinket.
record of a funeral.
And this happened in the Viking Rus.
So this is Eastern, the Eastern world near the Volga.
And it was written down by a Muslim diplomat and traveler by the name of Ahmad ibn Badlan.
And he is from the Abbasid Caliphate.
And he is in the Viking world in order to negotiate a treaty of trade.
The Abbasids and the Vikings traded a lot.
And as an honored guest, the Vikings invited him to a funeral of a deceased chieftain
or a king.
Now there are certain things about this funeral that's important for us.
The first thing is that it would last 10 days.
It's a very elaborate affair that requires a lot of choreography and coronation.
The second thing is that a third of the man's wealth, where some of the man's wealth, where
spent on the funeral expenses. So basically a feast for everyone. A third was spent on his
funeral clothes that was tailor made for him. So this is like the best clothes. And a third was
given to his wife. What this tells us is first of all, this man, even though he was high
status, he didn't have that much wealth, right? And second of all, the Vikings are very
egalitarian society. The third thing that's important for us, they didn't care that much about
wealth period right they spent a third on the funeral they just burn away the money
okay so what's also important for us to remember is there is a funeral director there's a woman
who ibn fan then calls the angel of death who was coordinating and orchestrating this funeral
during the course of this funeral there are things that happen that actually discussed him okay so we've
So before we continue, please keep in mind that Ibn Fallon, he's an observer.
He doesn't speak the language.
He doesn't know culture.
So he doesn't exactly know what's going on.
Second of all, he's a Muslim.
So he has his own cultural worldview that is in conflict with the Viking worldview.
The third thing is he is writing this down after the fact.
And if you do that, what often happens is that you will misremember a lot of things.
So please take his description with a grain of salt, with some skepticism, but also please remember that we have no choice in the matter,
because this is the only written record of a Viking funeral from this time.
Okay, so we have absolutely no choice in the matter.
So let's look at what he writes and then try to reconstruct the Viking culture and understanding.
Okay, so first thing he says is they kind of dock into and through the half,
into the boat and placed the man's weapons beside him okay so again they are
celebrating his life they are memorizing his life they had two horses run
themselves sweaty cut them to pieces and threw the meat into the ship
finally they killed two cows a hand and a cock and did the same with them okay
so not only are they remember him but they're giving him supplies to help to
sustain him as he ventures and voyages into the after world
Now this is interesting. They asked for a human sacrifice and a slave girl volunteers
Volunteers okay clearly she didn't volunteer but she volunteers and let's see what what happens
Meanwhile the slave girl went from one tent to the other and had sexual intercourse with the master of each
Every man told her tell your master that have done this purely out of love for you. Okay, it's that this is incorrect. It should be for him all right? So this is really because of
confusing for us. It's a funeral and they're having sex with the woman who is about to sacrifice.
So we don't have, we absolutely no idea what's going on. But I'm going to make a guess.
I'm going to use my imagination. First, it's important for us to understand who the slave girl is.
She's not a normal person. I believe, I would argue that she must be the lover of the deceased chieftain.
Why? Okay. It's a lot of.
Remember the Iliad. In the Iliad, the entire story begins with a problem. The problem is that Agamon, the leader of the Greeks, he has kidnapped a girl who happens to be the daughter of a high priest to Apollo.
And the priest comes to him and says, I will give you all the gold in the world, but please give me back my daughter.
And all the Greeks are said, oh, you should do that Agamannan, please give back the daughter, okay?
That's just the custom of war.
If a father can ransom the daughter, you have to return her.
But Agamonanon says this, I'm not going to return her because I love her.
I love her more than my wife.
And as a result, the high priest prays to Apollo who unleashes a deadly plague among the Greeks.
The Greeks are dying.
So finally, Achilles steps up and says to Agamon, you have to return the girl.
Now, Agamon has lost face.
So he says to Achilles, fine, I will return the girl that I love more than anything else in the world,
but you must give me your girl, your slate girl.
And Achilles gets so angry of this that he refused to fight for the Greeks,
which leads to the disaster of the Trojan War.
Okay?
So what is this is telling us?
This is telling us that in this world where these men are far from home and they kidnap
these slave girls, they fall in love with them.
And in the process of falling in love with them, these great men confer status and power
onto these slave girls.
Does that make sense?
All right?
I know this is hard to understand, but the slave girl is not a normal girl.
She is the lover, the mistress, essentially the wife of the chieftain who's died.
So another question then is, why has she volunteered to cure herself?
Okay, well, if we continue the logic, then I would argue that it's because without the
man, she has no status and power in the community.
She'll go back to being a slave, and she might be ostracized.
So by volunteering and sacrificing herself, she will win status and power and honor for her
children and for her relatives in the community.
She will make her family part of that community.
That's why she does this.
Now then the question then is, okay, I don't get it now because if, in fact, the slave
girl is the chieftain's favorite mistress, and if this slave girl is the chieftain's favorite mistress,
this slave girl does in fact love this man why is you having sex with everyone okay
and the answer is in this world gifts are very important basically if you go to
war and you win things you have to share over everyone okay so what this
deceased man is saying now that I'm dead I give you one final gift and it's most
the greatest treasure that I can possibly give you, which is the woman I love.
Okay?
And that's why each man is forced to have sex with her.
And they tell this, girl, when you go to your master, tell him, I only do this out of my love for him.
Not for you.
I don't have sex with you.
I do not want to have sex with you.
But I will in order to celebrate him, to honor him, to love him.
Yes
So, do
So,
Yes, you can make that argument, okay?
Because remember, in this,
Because remember, in this world, homosexuality is not
It doesn't exist.
It doesn't exist. It's very, it's okay?
for men have sex with each other it's okay for men have sex with together with one
woman okay and that's how they create intimacy and bonding because remember when
you're out in war you have to be able to make the ultimate sacrifice so you have
to bond with your fellow soldiers and the best way to bond is through sex okay
sex with each other but also sex with other women okay so so yeah so you can
make that argument okay again I don't know it goes on their heads but if you
extend the logic yes then they think they're having sex with a master food the
girl all right and that's what they say I'm gonna you doing this I don't my
love for for him not for you but for him okay so let's continue okay in the
afternoon they moved the slave girl to something that looked like a doorframe
where she was lifted on the palms of the men three times.
So the door frame represents access to the afterworld, okay?
So she's being sacrificed now.
The first time she saw her father and mother,
that second time she saw all her deceased relatives,
and the third time she saw her master in paradise.
Okay?
So what this is is she, the slave girl,
who is not part of the community.
What she's really doing is implanting her personal memory
into the community as a whole.
She's making her family part of the community now.
She's talking about her past.
And everyone, again, this is the community event.
Everyone's observing.
Everyone can hear her.
All right?
So they know that after she dies,
they must honor her memory
by honoring her relatives and family.
There it was green and beautiful,
and together with him,
she saw men and young people.
She saw her master beckoned for her,
Then she was brought a chicken which she decapitated and which was then thrown on the boat.
Again, this is some strange ritual that I have said no idea what it means, but it must mean something.
Often what they do is they reenact mythologies.
So there must have been a famous story where a woman decapulates a chicken for some reason.
And she's doing that.
They are reliving mythologies.
All right, let's continue.
There after the slave girl was taking away to the ship, she removed her bracelets
and gave them to the old woman.
She took what was most valuable to her
and gave her to the old woman
who is the angel of death, the funeral director.
So what she's doing is giving thanks
to the old woman.
She's giving her a gift.
She's bribing her for the honor of being sacrificed.
Thereafter, she removed her anklets
and gave them to the old men's two daughters.
Then they took her abroad the ship,
but they did not allow her to enter the tent
where the dead chief didn't lay.
She's about to be sacrificed.
The girl received several vessels of intoxicating drinks, and she sang.
These intoxicating drinks are often psychedelics, okay?
So these psychedelics are meant to enhance her visuals.
Now she's singing.
Before the old woman urged her to enter the tent,
I saw that the girl did not know what she was doing,
notes Ibn Thalen.
So even Falon is completely confused by this.
So what we need to understand is this is highly choreographed, right?
Every person knows what to do in this process.
It's a ritual, meaning that there's a script in place, and meaning that the chieftain and
the slave girl and the old woman all discussed this beforehand.
That's the only way this makes sense.
Then the girl was pulled into the tent by the old woman and the men start to beat on their
shields with sticks so her screams could not be heard.
The tent is being surrounded by warriors with shields.
Okay?
Six men enter the tent to have intercourse with a girl after which they laid her onto her master's bed beside him.
All right?
So six men basically rape her together.
And what this is doing is we enacting the memory of being with their chieftain, right?
Going around in raids, sacking a city, and then raping the woman together.
Guys, I know this is terrible.
I know this is terrible.
But again, we have to try to understand their worldview and their practice.
The two men grabbed her hands and two men her wrists.
The angel of death looped a rope around her neck,
and while two men pulled the rope,
the old woman stabbed the girl between her ribs of a knife.
She's being sacrificed by the angel of death,
and that's how she dies.
All right?
Thereafter, the closest male relative of the dead chieftain walked backwards, naked, covering
his anus with one hand and a piece of burning wood with the other.
Again, this must come from a certain mythology, okay?
That's the only way we can explain this practice.
Why is he going around naked?
He ships the ship aflame after which other people added wood to the fire.
And that's how he dies.
Again, this sounds gruesome.
What they're doing is they are celebrating the man and implanting his memory into the community.
Because everyone participates in his funeral, the man, his memory, is now part of the community's
collective consciousness.
He has become a story within the community and therefore will be remembered forever for his
achievements.
Does that make sense, guys?
So this is again a depiction of the funeral.
And again, the Greeks and the Romans had equivalents.
And we'll discuss these equivalents so you better understand what's going on.
For the Romans, that's something called a triumph.
A triumph was the highlight of Roman life.
It was basically a general who won great conquest.
And so he came back in a military parade.
The parade will offer a lot of things.
It would offer some pictures of the conquered territory.
It would parade treasures like elephants or gold captured from the conquered people.
It will also parade slaves and captured people, like usually kings.
And it would feature the soldiers as well as the triumphant general.
What's important for us, remember is at the end of this parade, they go to the temple of Jupiter, their god, and they will sacrifice these slaves and these captured kings to the god, to the god Jupiter.
Okay?
So it's very similar to the funeral, guys.
The Greeks, on the other hand, had theater to build the community's collective consciousness.
The community all participated in the theater.
So there were no professional actors.
It was community members that participated in the theater.
And the community, the spectators, would judge which theater was the best.
It was the highlight of the community to pick the best playwright for that year.
It was the greatest honor.
It's like winning the Nobel Prize, basically.
Okay?
The theater is very different.
They didn't practice any human sacrifice.
They didn't parade slaves around.
What they did was often was write about war from the perspective of the enemy.
Okay?
So, European wrote something called Chorjan Woman, where he wrote about the children woman
who were raped and captured and kidnapped by the Greeks.
An Isulist wrote about the Persian laws.
And that's why the Greek civilization is considered the most imaginative in human history
because it practices empathy. It changes perspectives. It's willing to celebrate everyone.
So that's a Greek world.
Okay. All right, let's talk a little about Norse mythology.
Remember what I said was that Norse mythology,
its purpose is to express and promote three values, courage, loyalty, and resourcefulness.
So the example of courage is Odin.
At the beginning of the world, Odin, who is a god of knowledge, he wants to seek all knowledge.
So he flies around Id yourself, the world tree, and he goes into different realms.
And he meets a god by something called the well of cosmic knowledge.
You drink from the soup, you gain cosmic knowledge.
So Odin wanted to drink it, but he had to make an offering.
So he offered what was most valuable to him, which was his eye, guys, okay, his eye.
So he plugged out his eye, gave it to the God and drank from the well of cosmic knowledge.
But once he drank from the well and learned cosmic knowledge, he became more curious about the universe.
And so he started to venture into more unknowns.
Eventually, he went into the realm of death.
And no matter how hard he tried, he could not penetrate this world.
There are too many winds, there are too many barriers.
So he killed himself, right?
Because that's what you do.
If you want to enter a death world, it's to kill yourself.
So he killed himself and was dead for a long time, but in his death, he was able to see all
the secrets of the universe.
And then afterwards he resurrected himself.
So Odin personifies the idea of courage in the world.
Viking world to seek the unknown relentlessly okay even if it cost you your life
and your eye okay okay the idea of loyalty all right so um in the Norse world
there'll be a Ragnarok and there's a wolf Fenris who will
foreshadow the rival of Ragnarok he's very dangerous
But when he's born, he's just a little pup.
So the Esar, the gods, basically decided to adopt him as a pet.
They think he's harmless.
And his master is Thier, who is the god of war among the Aser.
But very quickly, Fenrir grows to be huge.
And now the gods see him as a menace.
So they try to time up.
But no matter how hard they try, they can't time up.
And it becomes like a game.
like and Ferris thinks this is really funny okay but the gods become really worried
so they go to the dwarfs and they ask the dwarfs to create a magic rope which
they do and Tear goes back to Ferris says hey let's continue this game of
each of us trying to tie you up Ferris says like okay but how do how do I know
that you will release me if I can't get out here put your hand
in my mouth and if you don't release me I'll take your hand all right so the
gods discuss this and here volunteers to do this knowing that he's gonna lose
his hand all right and that's what happens they tie Feren's up and Farrin Farris gets
once it be released the God to refuse because he's a menace and then Feneres just
cuts off bites off the hand that's the idea of loyalty loyalty to
your friends.
Resourcefulness.
So the gods are always at war
with the frost giants.
One day a man named the builder
comes to them and says,
I can build you a wall to protect
you from your enemies
in 18 months.
This is Asgard, the home of the gods.
And the builder says,
I will do this, but I want three things.
I want the son.
I want the moon, and I want the beautiful goddess Freya in marriage.
And Odin, the god's like, no, that's a stupid deal.
But Loki, who is the god of mischief and the blood brother of Odin, says to Odin, take the deal.
But make it six months, give him six months.
That way he'll finish about a third of the wall and we can finish the rest.
And all the things, that's a great idea.
Okay, the builder agrees to this deal on one condition that he's allowed to use his horse in order to carry the bricks and the concrete, okay?
And they got to agree.
What they don't know is the horse is a magic horse, and the horse is able to travel as fast as light itself.
And so the builder is able to really quickly build that wall, and he's about to finish the wall.
Odin says Loki, you got us into this mess, get us out of this mess.
or I will kill you.
So what does Loki do?
Loki thinks and he's a shape shifter, right?
And he's able to shape shift into a mirror, a beautiful horse,
okay, like this.
The builder's horse sees the mirror and becomes really excited, right?
And he runs off, and the builder is not able
to finish the wall, and Loki gets birth to a horse,
a baby horse that then becomes Odin's horse, okay?
That's the idea of resourcefulness.
There are some really funny stories
within Norse mythology, okay?
One of the funniest is this.
Thor has a magic hammer named Mojanair.
He loves it. He loves it so much that he sleeps with it.
He puts it under his pillow.
One day he wakes up and finds it missing.
So of course he thinks it must be Loki,
because Loki's always playing these tricks on the gods.
But Loki says, I didn't do it,
and I will find out for you who did it.
So Loki explores, and he finds out
that it was the Froststein King who stole the hammer.
The Frostshine King will only return the hammer
if the gods give him Freya as a wife.
Loki goes back and Freya says, screw off.
I'm not going to do this.
So Loki says to Thor,
The plan.
The plan is he's going to dress four up as Freya.
He's going to put a wedding dress and a veil on Thor and locate himself as a bridesmaid, okay?
Stupid plan, but they do this.
They go off and the Frashein king doesn't really notice that Freya is a huge man.
They have this huge feast, and unfortunately, Thor loves to eat and he loves to drink.
So basically this huge feast, Thor is eating this oxen, he's drinking all this beer,
and he's burping in the process.
So the first giant king is kind of like confused, but he's also really excited.
At the wedding, the first giant king presents the hammer, Molgerner, to Thor.
and he lifts the veil to kiss Thor,
and that's when he realizes that it's actually a man.
Then Thor gets his hammer and beats the crap out of the king.
So there are many stories like this, which are really funny and imaginative.
What do these stories tell us about the understanding of the individual
in the Viking world.
This is Neil Price.
And to prepare for this lecture,
I did a lot of research,
including listening to his YouTube lecture,
which has over about a million views on YouTube.
But he's a Viking expert.
He's an archaeologist.
I highly recommend that you listen to his YouTube videos
if you're interested in this material.
But this is what he has to say
about the Viking worldview.
The Viking, the individual,
is shaped by four forces.
Okay?
First is the hammer.
The hammer is basically the shell or the shape of the person.
Okay?
The outer being.
So it may not be the body actually, but it's the shell, okay?
Second is the idea of the humming ja.
The humming ja, think of it as a pet who follows you around,
and it personifies luck.
And because it's a pet, you can either either
You can either nurture the pet or not nurture it.
You nurture it by showing courage.
So in battle, if you run off, if you enter the battle of courage, the pet will be with you.
But if you run away and you hide yourself, the pet might run away.
And in the Viking world, all that matters is Havingja.
You win if you get lucky, not because you're stronger.
The third idea is Huger.
And Hugo is your essence, your soul, who you are really.
The last idea is Thaja.
And Faja is what you inherit from your family.
It is the guardian spirit of your family.
So think of it as the collection of your ancestors who whisper you advice in your dreams.
Today we recall this concept intuition.
intuition, right?
Intuition, that's what it represents.
So as you can see, Neil Price and other experts
are showing us that we think of the Vikings as barbarians,
but in fact, they're very complicated
and nuanced understanding of themselves and the world.
Okay, so another question then is,
how are the Vikings able to
do this my argument to you is it's because of the oral tradition we are simply
not creative as people who tell stories every day and who make stories the
heart and center of the community okay so um this is an overgenitalization an
oversimplification but I want us to understand this graph before people lived in
the old tradition what this meant is
is they tell stories.
When you tell stories, you need at least two people.
You need the speaker and you need the listener.
You can't do it otherwise, okay?
You can't tell a story to yourself.
So you need at least two people.
But often it was a whole community
that participated in the stories.
And what this meant is that the stories were living things.
They were things that you played with,
that were flexible, they were clay.
You can change the stories over and over.
Each person who told the story would tell it different.
So there are like millions of different versions
of these North stories that I just told you.
Because each person can interpret that story differently.
So these are living memories.
And that means that each story is unique.
Now there's a concept in cultural theory
called the aura, the essence, the soul.
And each story has its own soul if you think about it.
Let's contrast this with literary culture.
In literary culture, reading and writing, you have to do it by yourself.
You cannot write with a friend.
It would be terrible if you did that.
But the benefit is that whatever you write leaves you and becomes part of the page.
It's permanent now.
And as a result, your words can escape time and space.
It becomes timeless.
We have Homer because Homer's words were written down, even though Homer is probably illiterate.
Today we live in the visual culture.
So think of videos, think of photographs, right?
First thing to understand is that it's passive.
Both in literary and oral culture, you have to participate.
You have to use your imagination to make the thing alive.
But with a photograph, it's all provided to you.
It's very passive experience.
It's self-enclosed, meaning it's impossible for you to add anything to it, okay?
But you get more information that way.
So there are benefits to visual culture.
So for example, a map, right?
If you look at a map, it tells you a lot more information than if someone try to explain it to you with words.
And the last advantage of a visual culture is it is universal.
So if an alien species came down to our planet and looked at the pictures, they would know
what's going on.
Whereas if they heard a story or read a book, they would have no idea what's going on.
So this is the old tradition in contrast with literary culture and visual culture.
The old tradition is extremely complex.
We tend to think that it's just about telling a story, okay?
But if you think about it, there are so many variables and nuance and factors in the telling
of a story.
That's why each version is unique onto itself.
So I can teach the same material, but if we change the classroom, if we change the students,
if we change the lighting, the experience of being the same material.
classroom would change. The Norse, the Vikings, the way they told stories is they
would tell it in a big hall. Because remember it's usually cold up north. It's
snowing outside. They would tell it in a big hall and it's dark. So they have a big
fire inside the hall. And the storyteller, the bard, would recite the story or
tell the story beside the fire as everyone listens.
Some important things to know about this.
First is the halls were huge.
There was as huge as a Greek amphitheater.
So you could see about 1,000,000 people within the hall.
Second is the idea of darkness.
When it's dark and you can't see, your ears become much more perceptive.
So the words have become alive.
They're more color.
They're more detail.
They're much more imagery.
Okay? And third is these words are bouncing off the walls and they're creating echo and resonance.
And so these words almost like bonds that unite everyone in the telling of the story.
Okay? And if you think about it, this experience is very similar to the Ice Age.
Remember last semester at the very beginning, we did the Ice Age cave paintings.
And what we need to understand is people came together in these caves not to paint in the caves,
but to tell stories about where they came from, who they are, and where they're going.
All right?
And all of our ancestors, every one of them for thousands of years, participated in this process of converging in these ice caves.
and hearing stories being told to them in these dark, wet caves.
So this takes us back to the time of the Ice Age.
It's activating nostalgia within us, and that's why the oral tradition is so powerful.
Okay?
All right, so these stories have been told in a certain way to excite the audience.
Okay, so think of this class.
In this class, we have no tests.
I don't even take attendance.
So when I present material in this class, it has to be interesting for you, right?
Why is it interesting?
It has shocking.
It has emotions.
It has structure.
When I come to class, I actually do not script out my class.
What I do is I think of the narrative structure, the story I want to tell.
And then in class, depending on your reactions, depending on the question you.
you ask I will change some of the details in the story to make it much more
interesting for you in the old tradition it's a co-creation collaborative
process that's what makes it so powerful as an experiment what you can do is
this think about think about this in class there might be some material you found
really interesting right so then you go on YouTube I post these lectures on
YouTube to try to remember the experience and what you will find is you cannot okay
because we've switched some oral culture to visual culture the same is true if it's
your birthday okay it's your 18th birthday you got with your friends and you have a
wonderful time and you're like I want to take a picture to remember this
experience but what you will find when you do that is the picture doesn't
really capture the experience for you you cannot the picture cannot
back the feeling for you.
And that's why the Vikings were so insistent
on maintaining their old tradition
and not transitioning into the literary culture.
Because their old tradition is what gave the community
purpose and meaning.
If you gave that up, then your community
would lose cohesiveness.
Right?
Does it make sense to you guys?
All right.
So what's the old tradition?
Again, we've lost it, we've mainly lost it, but remember what it is.
Let's take two things that you know very well, and merge them together, and then you can experience what the oral tradition is.
It's basically the immersion of a movie. Think of going to a good movie.
And remember the power, the immersive power being that movie.
You are in that movie, okay?
You combine it with the intimacy of a conversation.
You just think of having this like four or five hour conversation with your best for a movie.
conversation with your best friend and talking about life and love in general okay
it could the old tradition combines these two things and that's why it's so
powerful that's why it cannot be remembered okay the Viking old tradition was
extremely powerful but it was so powerful that it cannot be remembered it cannot
be written down but as I will show you in future classes this old tradition will
go on to influence major European civilization, specifically the Germans and the British,
but also the Russians as well.
All right.
So again, for most of human industry, we as humans have shared our time together telling stories.
Why do we lose the old tradition?
Okay, remember this.
Why do we lose your old tradition?
Well, we transition to a literary culture that emphasized reading and writing.
So in school, we have you read books, but we don't have you tell stories.
We don't tell stories to you.
We went from paganism to Christianity.
The problem of Christianity is it is extremely sentimentious.
It focuses on what is good and evil.
Whereas pagan culture, it's like whether it's interesting or not interesting.
whether it's memorable or not memorable.
Live a memorable, interesting, adventurous life.
And the questions are like, no, that's not good,
because if you do that, you're going to create a lot of evil.
So live a good life.
Avoid committing evil.
The last thing is, as we went from me,
got here in a world where everyone can contribute to the story,
to a hierarchical world where the top of the elite insists on indoctrinating us
and controlling how we think.
All right?
Okay.
Does that make sense to you guys?
Any questions so far?
So this is why we left the oral tradition
and adopted literary and visual culture.
Okay, so to conclude the class,
I know this is a lot to take in.
It's a lot of information.
I apologize, okay, but let me conclude
with a story.
So I have two young boys, and I sleep with them, okay?
And what I do is I tell them stories.
I don't have them do math.
I don't have them read books, but I tell them stories, where I make them the characters,
the heroes of the story.
So I'll tell you one story that I told my youngest son Ma Maum, okay?
The story goes like this.
It is Ma Ma Ma Mao's fourth birthday.
And I tell Ma'amau, on your fourth birthday, something magical happens.
You can pray to God, and whatever you wish for, God will grant you your wish.
So Ma'amal is really excited, and he thinks a long time about what he wants.
On his fourth birthday, he prays to God and says,
I wish for a room full of strawberries every single day.
He says that and God immediately responds.
Immediately in his room it's full of strawberries.
And Mao, he loves strawberries.
He eats it right away.
The next day, the room is also full of strawberries.
And he eats it again.
The third day, again.
But by the fourth day, he's kind of sick of strawberries.
So eventually, strawberries overflow and fill the house.
and then they fill the street.
At this time, the neighbors are really worried.
And we have to explain to our neighbors,
oh, it's because Mao Mao wish for strawberries,
and that's why we have so many strawberries.
But hey, let's share strawberries together.
And the neighbors are at first happy,
but eventually they get sick of strawberries too.
And then the strawberries fill the entire street.
Then the city of Beijing is filled with the strawberries.
Now it's a national emergency.
The military come, scientists come, and everyone's trying to resolve this issue.
Then the whole country of China is filled with strawberries.
Then the whole continent of Asia is filled with strawberries.
Eventually, everyone has to get on a spaceship and get out
of, get out into space and go to the moon, to colonize the moon.
But strawberries keep on overflowing until they reach the moon.
At this point, the entire world says to Ma Mao,
listen your fifth birthday is tomorrow please pray to God and tell him no more strawberries
mama if you do this for us we will make you president and king of the world we will
give you all the chocolate in the world we'll give you all the golden world can you
please do this can you please tell God no more strawberries if you do that we'll give you
all the chocolate in the world and mama says yes I will
And on his fifth birthday, Maumau closes eyes,
placed to God and says,
Dear God, I wish for a room full of chocolate every day.
And that's how the story ends.
Now, it's a very strange story, but guess what?
My sons remember this for a long time.
But knowing that, it's going to inspire him
to think about the story and tell his own stories.
Okay, all he has to do is change the story a bit and now he has his own story.
You can change the characters.
He can change some of the details.
That's the power of the old tradition.
But if I ever write down this story, I couldn't say it in this way.
I couldn't do it, okay?
Let's see how I would change the story if I ever wanted down, okay?
Let's the same story, but now I write it down rather than say it to Ma Ma Mao himself.
For his fourth birthday, Ma Ma Ma Mauna,
pray to God for a room full of strawberries every day immediately his room filled
of strawberries he ate them happily the next morning his room filled with
strawberries he ate them the very next morning his room filled of strawberries
he did not eat them okay so I have to make this story shorter more compact so
that's easier to read the house filled of strawberries in the street filled with
them then the city then the country on his fifth birthday my mom
pray to God for no more strawberries his room became clean and Mamma understood the
power of words you understand why am I doing this why has literature
changed a story because now I know that the words leave me and they leave
Ma Mao they go out into the wider world and therefore people will judge my
words they will think like I'm a bad father or whatever I'm conscious of that
okay so I change in a way that is not so offensive so that people can better
appreciate this you understand you see the difference between oral culture and
literary culture in oral culture you can be intimate therefore you can play
you can experiment you can be curious you can be adventurous and that's what
leads to the imagination but in a literary culture everyone is watching you
hundred years from now people are still watching you therefore you have a sense of shame
you're very conscious about your effect on people all right so a metaphor we can use
is this transition from oral tradition to literature is really like the story of
Adam and Eve where because they ate the fruit from the tree of knowledge they
develop a sense of shame they understood that they are naked and therefore
they're being watched okay and because of this they are thrown out of the
Garden of Eden so I want I want to leave you with that metaphor okay oral
tradition we we leave it behind and we think that is a good thing but we
tend to forget the power and beauty of the oral tradition all right so I
leave you with three questions okay to help us better
understand and remember the lecture.
The first question is, what is the imagination?
What's the memory?
Well, in the old tradition, we would think
that the imagination is just an extension of the memory.
By making our stories memorable,
we excite the imagination.
Therefore, we allow for the process of creation.
Second question is, could we have Homer, Dante,
and Shakespeare without the old tradition?
And the answer, I think, is no.
I think we would not have the greatest poetry
in human history, but we're not for the old tradition.
In fact, if you think about for the past 50 years,
what has humanity, even though there's like 8 billion of us,
we have more wealth and technology never before,
what literary masterpiece have we created?
I know you guys read the Doilat Club in school, and it sucks, okay?
I'm telling you right now it is terrible, it's a piece of crap.
And I can't think of a literary masterpiece,
of the past 50 to 60 years.
There are some very entertaining books,
but not of the stature and power of Homer, Dante, and Shakespeare.
And the last question I have is,
does civilization make us less creative?
Okay?
Does being a civilization make us more ashamed of exploring,
of being curious, or playing?
Are we less creative because of civilization?
Alright?
Okay, so that's it guys.
Any questions?
Okay, so next week we start, we will do the Abyssid Caliphate, okay?
All right, so I will see you guys.
Next Tuesday.
