Thursday, January 31, 2019
Oedipus: Fate Is Unavoidable :: Oedipus Rex, Sophocles
Oedipus Fate is Unavoidable     No matter what anyone tries, no matter what anyone does, no matter whatanyone believes they realize accomplished, they have not controlled dowery. Fate isuncontrollable. Much like betting on a sure thing and know in the back ofyour mind that there are infinite factors in the outcome--anything could happen.Its unfortunate that the people of antediluvian Greece sanctioned the concept of mint. In the Era of Enlightenment the idea of God-controlled fate was fin onlyychallenged with the notion of self-fulfilled destiny until then, men turned toprophets and oracles. In the depend Oedipus, by Sophocles, there was a ongoingsynergy between fate and knowledge that was constantly rejected. Oedipus, themain character, struggled to dominate his own destiny, but ironically fell backinto his bizarre misfortune that was in the end, inevitable.     Misfortune, false realities, deception all a result of Oedipus knowingtoo much and at the same time too little of his true lot in life. Knowledge waswhat nurtured him into false pretenses. Knowledge was a false pretense. Byknowing that his parents were out of harms way, namely his, he knew that hisprophecy would not come true. He knew that as long as his capture was stillalive and he was married to a woman not even related to his mother, he would notbear the offspring that men would shudder to look upon. It was the look-alike ofirony for Oedipus to know his fate, and try to avoid it with the knowledgethat he had obtained "My father was Polybus of Corinth, my mother the DorianMerope, and I was held the foremost man in all that town until a thing happened--a thing to startle a man, though not to make him angry as it made me. We weresitting at the table, and a man who had drunk too much cried out that I was notmy fathers son--and I, though angry, restrained my anger for that twenty-four hour period but thenext day went to my father and my mother and q uestioned them. They wereindignant at the taunt and that comforted me--and yet the mans wordsrankled...I want where I might escape those infamous things--the doom that waslaid upon me."     When Oedipus fled from his parents, he started the chain reaction ofironic happenstance that would eventually direct him in a complete circle back
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