"Voodoo is cheap."
I submit to you the author Heinz Meyer, who notes that, "The bow, the long-range weapon characteristic of the vast steppes, was hated by both the Greeks with their agonic attitutde to combat, and the Germanic heroes."
The ideal of sportive context expressed in the word
agon to a large extent determined the Greek view of combat, even in war. Similarly the Teutonic attitude to battle - namely that even though battle was a matter of life and death, it was primarily an honourable struggle between two heroes charged with defending or asserting their own or their tribe's repute - prevented the European warriors from adequately assessing the bow's worth and from deploying it effectively. In both cultures it was considered unfair, dishonourable, unmanly and even cowardly to deliberately evade honourable hand-to-hand combat by resorting to the long-range bow, anonymously shooting arrows (possible even from an ambush), and making use of a horse for a quick, often only feigned escape, and then suddenly attacking again, equally perfidiously in new formation and from a different direction. For the Greeks and Ancient Germans the bow thus only played a role in mythology - a very marginal one in the latter case.
Voodoo ~ Bow in terms of philosophic approach to warfare.