I was reading an article in a book discussing the Old Norse mindset compared to ours, and it left me with an interesting thought.
If I were to pick up a stone on the beach and then drop it, a modern, rational mind would say that it was attracted to the ground by the force of gravity.
A Norseman living a thousand years ago, if he thought about it at all, would have said that it was the stone's destiny to be on the beach.
I might throw it and it would fly through the air, it might fall into the ocean and it would sink beneath the waves, but one day it would be washed back onto the beach and it would end up exactly where it was destined to be.
People struggle with the Norse concept of destiny and yet although science can tell us the effect gravity has on the stone, it would appear that nobody actually understands exactly how it does it?
If I were to pick up a stone on the beach and then drop it, a modern, rational mind would say that it was attracted to the ground by the force of gravity.
A Norseman living a thousand years ago, if he thought about it at all, would have said that it was the stone's destiny to be on the beach.
I might throw it and it would fly through the air, it might fall into the ocean and it would sink beneath the waves, but one day it would be washed back onto the beach and it would end up exactly where it was destined to be.
People struggle with the Norse concept of destiny and yet although science can tell us the effect gravity has on the stone, it would appear that nobody actually understands exactly how it does it?