Oedipus Rex written by Sophocles is a notorious ancient Greek literary work. It is a story of a young man who took a god from his parents in early childhood, told them that their son killed his father and had sex with his mother. Then Oedipus' parents tied his legs together and abandoned him in the wilderness of colleagues in neighboring cities of Corinth. The king and the queen of the city brought up him; he grew up to be a great leader and married a city next to Jocasta.
Oedipus the King and Fate DT Suzuki are famous Zen experts who took up the subject of free will in one of his lectures and this is a famous Zen expert who is a famous Zen expert, He said it was a battle. "These six battles ultimately constitute a bigger battle: the fight between free will and determinism.Free will is a way that human beings can decide what he or she wants to lead With ability, and freedom to live according to your own way, choose your own destiny; determinism refers to the higher living environment of a person
One of the core controversies in human history is fate and free will. For example, most ancient Greek myths have sent clear messages: you have no final choice and fate always prevails. Recalling the poor Oedipus, he tried to avoid the prophecy that he would marry his mother to kill his father and make everything come true. Sometimes people negotiate with God and even win, just as Abraham did when negotiating the conditions under which Sodom and Gomorra are saved. He reduced God 's deal from 50 to just 10 people. Christianity continues this debate in history and history.
The boundary between Edeps' fate and free will Greeks of the ancients firmly believed that the universe was guided strictly by order and fate. In King Oedipus, Sophocles studied the relationship between free will and destiny, suggesting that contradiction exists in free will at the boundary of fate. But you can conclude that people have free will and are ultimately responsible for their behavior. - The power of the destiny of the Oedipus royal family (King) The basic theme of the Oedipus dynasty is that fate is stronger than free will. Based on this powerful fate, free will not even exist. This is a common belief of ancient Greeks. Modern society may accept or deny fate, but in the story of Edips, fate is inevitable. In the drama, the characters of Oedipus Rex, Oedipus, Icaster and Leos tried to change their destiny