Talk:Spiritual being
"For example Zeus was a god and any given dryad? a spirit in greek mythology."
I'm almost sure that dryads were not regarded in a way closely analagous to the modern word "spirit" (Greek would have been what? Pneuma? Daimon? ) I think the dryads were "just" very minor goddesses.
Can anyone clarify?
ficshanal ?
[edit]> are ficshanal spirits
I'm unfamiliar with Star Trek, so I don't know if that is a misspelling or not ?
Science Fiction Section Removed
[edit]I've removed this small section, because I don't think it helps the explanation of the topic any, and I'm not sure that the fictional character Q would constitute a spirit in any sense. Takes corporeal form, for one thing.
Science fiction
[edit]The fictional being Q from Star Trek are fictional spirits, as they possess many, if not all, of the trait mentioned above.
Mythological creature
[edit]Shouldn't this article be merged with "mythological creature"? And people, sign yourself please. --Eleassar777 07:45, 19 May 2005 (UTC)
- Nope, this discussion and definition of spiritual being is core to almost every religion. While mythological creatures might have been physical or might have been spiritual, the idea of a being existing without any physical universe body at all is broad, intersecting mythology, religion, science, ghosts, etc. Terryeo 01:48, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
I did notice that we automatically assume that spirits are incorporeal, when much of the time they are as solid as a human. Iro 04:15, 16 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Redirect
[edit]This article should be redirected somewhere - probably to Spirit - it doesn't seem to have much worth keeping. Paul 17:39, 21 December 2005 (UTC)