The Role Of Fate Versus Free Will In Oedipus The King

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Do people really have the freedom to choose the outcome of their life possibly reversing a prophecy or does fate always speak the final word despite human decision (Gale, 2015)? This query has bewildered mankind since the beginning of time. We are going to take a look at fate versus free will since it has been labeled as one of the major themes in the play Oedipus the King (Gale, 2015). One may wonder just how permitted we as humans are in making our own determinant decisions here on earth. With hundreds of religions and faiths in the world, there could be varying conclusions to this quandary but this report will focus on ancient Greek mythology, which presents the belief that the gods determine the fate of certain beings (Gale, 2015). In the …show more content…

As the drama opens, the stage is set with a king in turmoil over the distress of his kingdom. The superficial problem will soon lead readers through the intertwining lives of three unsuspecting characters whom naively believe they can thwart their own fates even after being confronted by direct prophecy from a Greek god. Oedipus is the king of Thebes and desires to heroically bring relief to his suffering people whom have struggled under the unrelenting curse of a plague since the beginning of his reign. He summons a prophet for answers only to be presented with the job of revealing the identity of and hunting down the murderer of Laius, the previous king, since the plague represents condemnation from the gods for his unlawful demise. It is interesting that his characteristic ingenuity and boldness used in solving a mysterious riddle was the means by which Oedipus had been crowned king and now the same ploy will be instrumental in …show more content…

Jocasta reveals her mindset as she attempts to counsel and console Oedipus regarding his fate. Believing she had alterably mastered her predicted dreadful future proclaimed by Apollo many years ago, she had dismissed the prophecy as false thus denouncing the dominion of the gods to actually control the outcome of their lives. When she and her first husband, Laius, had given birth to a son, it was predicted that their male offspring would commit unthinkable acts defaming the family. Though full of guilt and contempt for her husband, she believed they had remedied their problem by disposing of their son on the side of a mountain. But as fate would have it, truth reveals that the child had indeed survived and had been placed in the care of the royal family in Corinth. To her shocking dismay she ultimately discovers that the oracle has come true. “There can be no more grief for her abandoned son, since he did not die after all. Now there can be only the horror of realizing that the prophecy she had for so many years considered to be false, was in fact true (Cox, 2003).” Her husband died by the hand of her son, who just so happens to be her current husband with whom she has mothered four children. Fate once again masters free

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