mago mo
chaos
The cast of Chaos and Creation - 2007 includes: Bruce Hermann as Cosmo
AnswerPerhaps not all, but many of the more ancient creation stories of the Mediterranean and Near East regions began with chaos. The struggle between good and evil, or between the righteous gods and the chaos monsters provided a satisfying and plausible explanation for the reasons for the creation of this imperfect world.We even find fragments of ancient Hebrew chaos stories in Psalms and Job, although the creation stories in Genesis 1 and 2 could perhaps be considered as reflecting more recent cultural attitudes to the older chaos-creation stories.
Sjoerd Lieuwe Bonting has written: 'Mens, chaos, verzoening' -- subject(s): Life, Religion and science, Theodicy 'Creation and double chaos' -- subject(s): Chaos (Christian theology), Creation, Religion and science
Chaos, Tiamat, and Enlil are figures from ancient mythologies. Chaos originates from Greek mythology, representing the primordial void or the state of disorder before creation. Tiamat is a key figure in Babylonian mythology, often depicted as a goddess of chaos and the saltwater ocean, associated with creation myths in the "Enuma Elish." Enlil, also from Mesopotamian mythology, is a major god associated with wind, air, and storms, and is considered one of the chief deities of the Sumerian pantheon.
Chaos was the first primeval goddess to appear at the creation of the universe.
In Greek mythology, the primordial deity Chaos is often considered the first entity or void from which everything else emerged. Chaos is not typically depicted with parents, as it represents a state of formlessness or the initial nothingness before creation. However, some myths suggest that from Chaos arose other primordial beings, such as Gaia (Earth), Tartarus (the Abyss), and Eros (Love), who played key roles in the formation of the universe.
Great Performances - 1971 Paul McCartney Chaos and Creation at Abbey Road 34-8 was released on: USA: 27 February 2006
But you can't before it is
In "Kubla Khan," the lines that evoke chaos and excitement in creation are those describing the "stately pleasure-dome" and the "caverns measureless to man." The vivid imagery of the "sunny spots of greenery" and the "deep romantic chasm" captures the wild, untamed beauty of nature, symbolizing the tumultuous and exhilarating process of artistic creation. The contrasting elements of harmony and chaos in the landscape reflect the dynamic interplay inherent in the act of creation itself.
No, Chaos was the boundless, original void, from which everything else sprang.
Many ancient religions held that creation came about because of, or involved, conflict between the forces of good and chaos. The forces of chaos were sometimes seen as destructive gods, but in other cases as chaos monsters that had to be defeated by the gods, who were generally benevolent.An example of a chaos god is the Babylonian goddess, Tiamat, who is clearly conceived as a monstrous threat to both cosmic and socio-political order, and the survival of the world as well as the survival of the state depend on the creator god Marduk defeating her and keeping her from returning.In a Hindu creation story, from the Sanskrit hymns in the Rig Veda, the creator god Indra must slay the chaos demon Vrtra in order to release its primordial chaos waters as a life source, thereby creating and establishing a livable cosmos, the order of which is integrally related to Vedic understanding of social order.The Bible contains ancient references to the forces of chaos, associated with the world's creation. Timothy K. Beal (Religion and its Monsters) has identified a quite a few fragments of more ancient chaos stories in the biblical Book of Job. For example, in Job 38:8, God asks, "Who shut Yam behind doors when it burst forth from the womb ..." (KJV translates as: "shut up the sea with doors, when it brake forth, as if it had issued out of the womb?" The italics on 'as if' mean that this is not a literal translation. ). Yam (or Yamm) was the Canaanite sea god, a destructive chaos force, and the reference in Job can be identified in early Canaanite creation stories. Behemoth and Leviathan, mentioned in the Psalms and in Job, are also generally considered to have been chaos monsters.