"Starting with Max Weber's famous concept of "charismatic authority" and the eventual "routinization" of it in traditional and bureaucratic authority, Raphael Falco argues that the original charisma remains far more alive than Weber assumes and that it does so because of myth. For Falco, religion, for example, would become dessicated without myth. With myth, religion can transform itself to meet changes in the world. Religion does not become hollow because myth changes to keep it alive. Weber himself wrote little on myth. It is Falco who ties charisma to myth. Most theorists of myth assume that, if anything, it is dried-up myth which kills religion and other institutions. Falco argues the opposite: that religion and other institutions would dry up without myth. An original take on the place of myth in the modern world. And very well written to boot." - Robert A. Segal, Sixth Century Chair in Religious Studies, University of Aberdeen, and author of Theorizing about Myth and Myth: A Very Short Introduction