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Examples: a witch, wolf, vampire, fox, Aesop's scorpion, whore of babylon, bluebeard, a false princess, rumpelstilskin, devil dealers, and all things horrible hiding in the shadows of our human past.

Even to this present day, we still continue to suffer from these atavistic primates.

2006-09-09 18:59:32 · 3 answers · asked by sunriseINFINITY 3 in Social Science Anthropology

3 answers

because the horrors of life got to have a name.

2006-09-11 12:54:33 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

He he he..here sweeties do you want an apple for Halloween.
(I fixed it up very well with some razor blades in it for you.)
He he he would you like some sweet candy (I put some LSD in it for you).
I think that quite possibly some psychopaths draw upon fairy tales for outlets for their personal problems at times. That rather than see the parts we depict as evil they see it as justfiable revenge. What come to my house after you cut off all my roses? Stole my apples from my trees. I think it is remarkable as we are the products of Nords who came through and killed the men, raped the women to leave whomever pregnant that we are not a more hideous type of people.

2006-09-09 19:03:20 · answer #2 · answered by Faerieeeiren 4 · 0 0

Well, this would mean that just about all of our fairytales and fables are stories about psycopaths. That seems unlikely, especially considering most of these stories serve to teach a moral lesson of some kind. Some of them might be. Some of them might just be about other kinds of social peripherals, or irrational fears, or about unexplained natual events, or a hundred other things. I seriously doubt all of them (or even a large number of them) are actually parables for psycopaths.

2006-09-09 20:34:37 · answer #3 · answered by The Ry-Guy 5 · 1 0

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