You will call mythos as mythos, but for those who believe, those are not myths. Belief and myth are relative to each other's belief. It depends on your (observer's/question asker's) definition of "myth", like "Schrödinger's cat"
The myths were the religion of Greeks and Romans. We call them myths, because we do not believe in them.
There is no proof of myths but there is proof of dinosaurs.
maybe a few in battle but not the thousands myths would have you to believe.
You do not need to believe in myths.
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People believed that there were "gods" and mythical creatures.
Indigenous Australians, perhaps.
No,because people choose who they belive.
That some people believe them as literal truth.
There have never been a time in human history when there were not at least some people who believed that myths are real. To this day, many people believe in myths. As for the way that this comes about, we all have only a limited knowledge of reality, and we try to make sense of it in our own way, so different people come to different conclusions.
Now? None, modern Egyptians follow the faith of Islam and Christianity and Judaism.
Some common spiritual myths that people often believe in include the idea that everything happens for a reason, that karma guarantees justice, and that prayer can always change outcomes.