vyor
Oh that's cute
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2015
- Messages
- 14,902
- Likes received
- 57,894
Dude. Right there in the very sentence you quoted.
Except, again, kami is a broad term. It would be accurate to call them "scientists" and then yokai are one subset. Except kami isn't so narrow a term as 'scientist' and is more accurately as broad a classification as 'person'.
At most, you might make the argument that yokai are 'supernatural creatures' like ghosts and apparitions, rather than physical objects like most kami tend to be. Which is a very recent definition that doesn't apply to most of Japanese history. And sort of ignores all the 'haunted objects' yokai of history.
And also ignores how some kami have natures as broad and nonphysical as 'love' and 'trade'.
Kami are spirits. All spirits. Including human. Yokai are a specific subset of ghostly spirits that tend toward the destructive. Not that there aren't plenty of destructive kami overseeing everything from war to disease to death in childbirth to suicide.
Sometimes, the tradition acknowledges a particular yokai as a kami. Take the kappa, for example. A yokai that goes around pulling souls out through the butthole. And also a river/lake kami.
Or the Tengu- a yokai, also a forest and/or mountain kami.
Even wikipedia gets this right:
![]()
Kappa - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
![]()
Tengu - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Wikipedia is wrong on this, and if that's where you're getting your info then its no wonder why you have a mistaken impression. Wikipedia doesn't have have kitsune ranks as just one major thing they have completely wrong. You know: Tenko, Zenko, Kuko, Kiko...