Posted By Administration,
Thursday 26 July 2012
|
This article from Pádraig Mac Carron and Ralph Kenna was published in EPL Volume 99 Number 2 and is available at: http://iopscience.iop.org/0295-5075/99/2/28002Abstract As in statistical physics, the concept of universality plays an
important, albeit qualitative, role in the field of comparative
mythology. Here we apply statistical mechanical tools to analyse the
networks underlying three iconic mythological narratives with a view to
identifying common and distinguishing quantitative features. Of the
three narratives, an Anglo-Saxon and a Greek text are mostly believed by
antiquarians to be partly historically based while the third, an Irish
epic, is often considered to be fictional. Here we use network analysis
in an attempt to discriminate real from imaginary social networks and
place mythological narratives on the spectrum between them. This
suggests that the perceived artificiality of the Irish narrative can be
traced back to anomalous features associated with six characters.
Speculating that these are amalgams of several entities or proxies,
renders the plausibility of the Irish text comparable to the others from
a network-theoretic point of view.
Tags:
EPL Publication
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|