Most stories don't have morals - the best ones hardly ever do.
Some stories have morals because they are written by people who love to give advice. People who love to give advice are nearly always the people least worth listening to.
AnswerStories are a wonderful way to teach. Stories have always been used to teach the morals of any given culture. Every group of people on earth has their own set of folk tales that have been used for thousands of years to pass on moral lessons to children. They generally set forth a dilemma, or puzzle, or situation in a simple format so that the child can easily see the problem and later learn from the outcome. Read Aesop's Fables for a good survey of children's stories that teach a moral lesson.The world's great literature explores universal moral questions that transcend time and allow us to study the morals of earlier times and marvel at how much things have changed. Pick up any classic English novel to see how the eighteenth century morality affected the lives of women. Compare their lives to the freedom of today. A reading of George Eliot will reveal that women were aware of their subjection and were unhappy about it but had no idea that it could or would ever change. However, to gain enrichment from reading you need to make wise choices about what you read.
Shakespeare is a great source for learning and reading about morality and amorality!The Bibles and their many translations are composed of stories composed by many, many authors over long periods of time that sought to teach the moral lessons held essential to those authors.
Myths, legends, and folklore are all forms of traditional storytelling that often involve supernatural or fantastical elements. They are passed down through generations and reflect the beliefs, values, and cultural identities of a society. These narratives can provide insights into the human experience and offer explanations for natural phenomena.
Almost all cultures have myths.
Not at all, really.
One hopes to understand how these myths and legends serve as metaphor for the struggles of all humans in everyday life (even if there is quite a bit of hyperbole inherent in these works!)
Almost all corporate legends are very intelligent, have good leadership qualities, are confident, and start with a good, workable idea.
Myths entertain and teach us today, but it was from myths that we learned to trace genealogy, from myths that are the origins of ideas - psychology, time keeping, understanding and naming human emotions, "misery", "gloom", "love", all these are the gods of the Greeks.
Stories, myths and legends are all synonyms for the word tales.
He was real but was mostly myths and fairytale.
No. It's all fairy tales, lies, bubbe meissehs, folk legends, myths, and BS.
The same way you know about your god(s), if any. Most all cultures and civilizations had writings and artifacts, along with oral stories, that inform us today about their culture and beliefs.
Well it all depends on what legends and myths you look at. In some elves can make illusion's others its fairies.
Having the right intention