Child was reading and loving a rendition of Beowulf and was curious about monsters and dragons. My attempt at explanation: before we had cameras and airplanes and internet, it was reasonable to believe that monsters and magic and dragons existed.
Like how we tell stories about aliens. Our descendants will explain to their little ones how 21st century people lacked faster-than-light and nanotechnology and synthetic cognizance so they could entertain weird ideas about alien life.
@22 I see quite the opposite: Monsters and dragons are more popular than ever before. And most alien stories are nothing more than ancient sagas taken to outer space. I think technology is driving a desire for archaic storytelling (and magical thinking). 👾 🐉
@22 hard to tell. I think people generally believed in supernatural beings, but it could have differed across classes and regions. And most likely there were sceptics and people attached to superstition in medieval times just like today.
@stefan
@kensanata
Consider the first people to encounter gorillas, and their wonder if these were human.
And the Papua New Guinean highlanders’ astonishment at meeting whites, from Australia for the first time, less than a century ago! They inspected the visitors’ poop and (apparently) had women sleep with them to confirm that they were indeed human.
Today there’s a lot of support for skepticism about “supernatural”. A thousand years ago, much less so—who knew what wonders existed far away?