The Importance Of Free Will In Oedipus The King

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In Oedipus the King, the existence of prophecy promotes that of free will, thus granting the subject freedom over the way they react to fate.
Prophecy complements free will, thus allowing both to coexist with strength. Just as one cannot fully know darkness unless they have seen light, one cannot fully understand free will if they do not understand prophecy. Oedipus gouges out his eyes upon arriving at the revelation that he has killed his father and married his mother. When asked why he chooses to go blind, he replies, “Apollo, friends, Apollo—he ordained my agonies—these, my pains on pains! But the hand that struck my eyes was mine, mine alone—no one else—I did it all myself!” (1467-1471). In other words, Oedipus is saying that he takes pride in knowing that he gouged out his eyes …show more content…

Tiresias’s comment, “How terrible—to see the truth when the truth is only pain to him who sees” (359-360) suggests that the “truth” is already set in stone; all that is left is for the people involved with the truth to decide how they will handle with the truth. Oedipus’ later response to the truth confirms this. When the Chorus says, “How can I say you’ve chosen for the best? Better to die than be alive and blind” (1497-1498), Oedipus replies, “What I did was best—don’t lecture me, no more advice. I, with my eyes, how could I look my father in the eyes when I go down to death?” (1499-1502) and “My troubles are mine and I am the only man alive who can sustain them” (1548-1549). Instead of committing suicide to end his misery, Oedipus chooses to continue living because of his belief that he can sustain his pain. Sophocles makes it evident that this is by Oedipus’ choice rather than Apollo’s dictation, therefore demonstrating that characters have freedom over their reactions. Through the inclusion of such dialogue, Sophocles shows that characters still have true free will, though in a small

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