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Originally Posted by I, Brian
No problem - this is a thread worth revisiting the subject from the particular angle. 
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I agree. I think Campbell is saying much more than Hinduism, Egyptian monotheism, Judaism and Zorastrianism arose from a common ancestral religious tradition. I think that what he is getting at is that the fundamental human experience of Oneness, God, the Tao, Brahman, whatever you want to call it is the same for everyone and that all myths in
every great wisdom tradition are attempts to describe and relate this unexpressable human experience tailored to the sensitbilities and culture of the people by whom and for whom the myth was originally written. If you look at other people's myths (NOT their religious beliefs, but the myths on which those beliefs are built) and really work to discern their meaning, you can see a common essential experience - the "elementary idea" - expressed in all of them.
Having done that, I found the same thing Campbell is expressing. Interestingly, what sent me looking was my complete dissatisfaction with the religious beliefs and dogmas of fundmentalist Christianity. After a dozen years of looking at and studying other myths, philosophy, history and psychology I arrived at a satisfactory understaning about the nature of the myth and what is actually being expressed in these myths. I was quite surprised to return to the Christian myth and discover this same "elementary idea" encoded (and covered by 2000 years of culture, ego and bloodshed).