An exhaustive definition of myths is not given by Sorel. On frequent occasions, he refers to them as "pictures," "images," or "expressions," but never a full description. The reason is given by Sorel on the account that myths "must be taken as a whole, as historical forces, and that we should be especially careful not to make any comparison between accomplished fact and the picture people had formed for themselves before action." Further, he opposes the "attempt to analyse such groups of images in the way that we analyse a thing in its elements..." The scientific approach does not accurately explain myths for Sorel, as they are "expressions of a determination to act" The character or "color" of this construction is dependent on the conditions of life that the producers of the myth experience. There is also the concept of the "catastrophic myth" in Sorel's theory of myths, which is employed by groups in a struggle that purports the coming of catastrophe in a society, the subsequent fall of all things henceforth static in history. For reference, Sorel cites the Christians who, in early theology, believed in the imminent punishment of mankind by God in an apocalyptic episode; although this reckoning was never realized, it nonetheless
functioned accordingly in bringing about more fervent Christians: "The catastrophe did not come to pass, but Christian thought profited so greatly from the apocalyptic myth that certain contemporary scholars maintain that the whole preaching of Christ referred solely to this point." It was by this metric of function, and that alone, that myths ought to be valued or not by Sorel; "The myth must be judged as a means of acting on the present; any attempt to discuss how far it can be taken literally is devoid of sense." The power of the myths come from their ability to negate any compromise. Clearly, there is a fate involved in these catastrophic myths, a fate which convinces the faithful that "all attempts made to bring about social peace seem childish..." The good myth is, therefore, the totalizing one for Sorel, which "drags into the revolutionary track everything it touches." Once again, Sorel believes it is the general strike that can bring about a similar sentiment for socialism. Intimately linked to Sorel's theory of myth is that of
heroism owing to how intimately myth deals with the concept of
war and, so too, that of
sacrifice. It is the idea of war conceived heroically, as Sorel names it, which he dwells on. For, in drawing an identical parallel with
Nietzsche's theory of
master morality, the heroic war has stitched in it "[t]he ardent desire to try ones strength in great battles... to conquer glory at the peril of one's life." Compare this to Nietzsche's views, which Sorel was influenced thoroughly by, in how he sees the
nobleman approach war: "[H]ere alone genuine 'love of one's enemies' is possible... How much reverence has a noble man for his enemies!.. For he desires his enemy for himself, as his mark of distinction... in whom there is nothing to despise and
very much to honor!" Sorel goes further, in fact, and establishes that the "master type" spoken of by Nietzsche is still in existence in the United States, which for Sorel's time retained the culture of capitalist conquest and fervent exploitation of all by the individual, even comparing them to the "ancient Greek sailor" in their adventures. Nietzsche's disdain for
popular democratic values, or the "herd instinct," which led him to regard the
French Revolution as "the lowering" of mankind morally, is known to Sorel, who addresses what he believes to be Nietzsche's mistake: "If it has been believed that the type [of "
Homeric Hero" was bound to disappear, that was because the Homeric values were imagined to be irreconcilable with the other values which sprang from this principle; Nietzsche committed this error, which all those who believe in the necessity of unity in thought are bound to make." Sorel makes his point that if proletarian violence is to emerge, it will draw from these Homeric archetypes which characterized Nietzsche's understanding of master morality, thus dispensing with the "morality of the weak" which would make any attempt at revolutionary socialism impossible. ==References==