Theology and Existentialism in Aeschylus

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Theology and Existentialism in Aeschylus

by Richard Rader

2014223 pages
Fiction

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This book revivifies the complex question of fate and freedom in the tragedies of the famous Greek playwright. Starting with Sartre’s insights about radical existential freedom, this book shows that Aeschylus is concerned with the ethical ramifications of surrendering our lives to fatalism (gods, curses, inherited guilt) and thoroughly interrogates the plays for their complex insights into theology and human motivation. But can we reconcile the radical freedom of existentialism and the seemingly fatal world of tragedy, where gods and curses and necessities wreak havoc on individual autonomy? If forces beyond our control or comprehension are influencing our lives, what happens to choice? How are we to conceive of ethics in a world studiously indifferent to our choices?0In this book, author Ric Rader demonstrates thatfew understood the importance of these questions better than the tragedians, whose literature dealt with a central theological concern: What is a god? And how does god affec

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