Morality In Antigone By Creon Essay

1113 Words3 Pages

Envision a sibling of yours imprisoned for a blasphemous reason. There are only two paths left for your sibling, life in prison or demise. Would you labor tirelessly for their freedom in the sacrifice of yours or forsake them for your own liberties? Well, that depends on your morality. Morality has been around for many centuries, but only recently have two theorists, Lawrence Kohlberg and Carol Gilligan, been able to define morality. Kohlberg’s scale has six stages that primarily focuses on justice and fairness, while Gilligan’s scale of three stages is based upon care and social relationships. My moral judgment is an embodiment of both of these scales and more as I consider morality to not be confined to subjective scales, but boundless. Remember the question imposed above? Well, in the play “Antigone” by Sophocles, Ismene is living exactly through that. Even more, she challenges the limits of her morality to question her ability to save Antigone from Creon’s clutches. Ismene displays the most change in a character’s morality according to Kohlberg, Gilligan, and my personal scale, while attempting to extricate Antigone, which results in Creon becoming the tragic hero. During the beginning of the play, Ismene’s morality displays a Stage four mentality …show more content…

Those assertions are false as it can be seen through Ismene’s actions and spoken words that she, in fact, does not stay stagnant in morality, but advances in her moralistic views. Specifically, her personality from the beginning of the play and the end of the play proposes very drastic changes in perspective. To illustrate, Ismene is afraid how her actions would affect her well-being during the beginning of the play, however puts herself in danger to attempt to rescue Antigone at the end of the theatrical. Consequently, Ismene’s principles or virtues do increase throughout the

Open Document