@ARTICLE{TBA, TITLE={[FORTHCOMING] Transport Myths in Science Fiction and Mythology: Lessons Learned from Integral Mythanalysis}, AUTHOR={Christian Gatard, }, JOURNAL={Technology and Innovation}, VOLUME={}, NUMBER={Forthcoming papers}, YEAR={2026}, URL={https://www.openscience.fr/Transport-Myths-in-Science-Fiction-and-Mythology-Lessons-Learned-from-Integral}, DOI={TBA}, ISSN={2399-8571}, ABSTRACT={Science fiction and mythology share a fundamental anthropological function: taming the unknown through narrative. Transport is never neutral in either tradition — crossing a threshold always implies an ontological rupture. Hermes, god of passages, serves as the structuring archetype: his winged sandals prefigure spaceships; his roles as messenger and psychopomp resonate with AI, dimensional portals, and space exploration. The article proposes an integral mythanalysis: a critical archaeology of narratives distinguishing Band-Aid myths (immutable archetypes — the hero, sacrifice, the king) from butterfly myths (ancient stories metamorphosing across eras). Prometheus becomes Elon Musk; Aladdin’s carpet, the drone-taxi. In science fiction, rockets, spaceships, and stations replay ancient mythemes: the Argo, Charon’s ferry, the shamanic axis mundi. Transport reveals a political dialectic — whoever controls the passages controls collective destinies. Against the Promethean myth of unlimited conquest, our era seems to seek a figure closer to Hermes — a prudent mediator between worlds. To change the myths is to change reality itself.}}