This is the king who solved the famous riddle…Yet in the end ruin swept over him. As a marionette to fate and the prophecies, Oedipus grappled with the most satanic of adversities with steadfast fortitude. Perhaps this primitive search for truth, the origin of pestilence, was a tragic blunder? Or did he have any choice but to solve the riddle? Considering his position of power (a deliberate irony on the part of Sophocles), another selection he lacked. But to what extent was he controlled by fate? By free-will? The fate of Oedipus was set in a divine merciless sequence. The state was wrought with pestilence, the poor at the feet of the lord. Teiresias, distraught by his own knowledge, cannot bear to tell Oedipus the grim truth: Let me go homeIt is better so: trust what I say. At this point, a sane interpretation of Oedipus would declare his next decision the cause of his ultimate demise: What! You do know something, and will not tell us? However, what else could a virtuous ruler do? He knew the cause of impoverishment was to be found at the very tip of Teiresiass tongue; if he heeded the prophets advice and ceased pestering for truth, the pestilence of the state would continue unalleviated.
For this reason, he could not simply allow Teiresias to leave. However, by his unwavering persistence at intellectual extraction, Oedipus unearths the devastating truth- inevitable. But what of catharsis? Catharsis (of the reader) was a large motive in the Greek tragedy and thus would have an influence on the story. Hypothetically, if Oedipus were controlled completely by fate and the gods, leaving him powerless to his own end, then edipus would have no hamartia, or character flaw. With no hamartia, Oedipus would not be afflicted with suffering caused by his own doing, rather suffering by the gods. Hence, when he proceeds with blinding himself and suffering and ultimately redemption, the reader may feel no catharsis but instead anger towards the gods and fate.
The Essay on Oedipus Fate Vs Free Will
In Oedipus the King, one of Sophocles' most popular plays, Sophocles clearly depicts the Greek's popular belief that fate will control a man's life despite of man's free will. Man was free to choose and was ultimately held responsible for his own actions. Throughout Oedipus the King, the concept of fate and free will plays an integral part in Oedipus' destruction. Destined to marry his mother and ...
How must one weigh these themes of free-will and fate? Oedipus meant only good. Granted, he was overly proud and at times ignorant, but only for the sake of his people did he wish to live. His bravery was petrified by fate, leaving him to act by a stymied free-will..