A Whole Different Worldview:
People in the Middle Ages viewed the world radically different. To them, all they knew was based of faith, not observation. Faith in the Church of the past and present, faith in the ideals of the classical philosophers, Socrates, Plato, and above all else, Aristotle. Aristotle was so important, he shows up in Dante's Divine Comedy. (Yet, Plato and Glaucon were known to get into ridiculous arguemen** involving Glaucon holding up plucked chickens and calling them humans, after Plato made a definition of humanity as bipedal creatures with no feathers or scales. After the chicken, he added "with broad, flat nails."
Clearly, you can see how ridiculous a mentality that could build when you venerate these men.
Based off a few wild theories, people believed your eyes shot a gooey film out of them that captured visions and dragged it back to your eyes, allowing vision. Because of this we have the idea of not looking at our "better man" without permission, as by making eye contact you are sticking part of your body in a Noble or Priest without permission.
Also, is the theory that old women, for reasons I can't list on the forums, were not allowed to look at newborns or else poison from their body would give the child a birthmark. This same poison made old women more prone to witchcraft.
Because people were usually Serfs and barely left the area around their homes, they could easily believe, as my professor had stated "There are men over the hill with one giant foot, the size of their chest. When it gets hot they lay on their backs and use the foot for shade." and the people would believe it, as they had no reason to doubt you.
So how does this affect their ideas of the world? Well, as I'm about to share, Religion has a massive part in it.
The One True Nat
01-Jun-2016 13:41:48
- Last edited on
01-Jun-2016 14:03:12
by
Lady Airlea