"Fates" Essays and Research Papers

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    Background A very important debate that runs in our society is the role of fate in the life of a person. Many philosophers have chosen to highlight the importance of fate while many others‚ especially those with a scientific bent of mind‚ have chosen to ignore the role of fate. Many people‚ especially scientists‚ believe that fate is non-existent and that a man writes his won destiny. They believe that a man’s industry creates his fate and that there are other forces that determine the progression of his

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    The pack of wolves symbolize fate because one cannot control it‚ one has to compensate for the unexpected misfortunes it brings‚ and many people spend their lives fearing it although it may never bring them hardships in the future. The wolves‚ in this story‚ are shrouded in mystery. When they first enter the story‚ no one is quite sure what they are. Once the father realizes what they are‚ he immediately goes looking for them but then discovers something far worse than the wolves. They had taken

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    approve of their children wanting to be together and as a result they were forbidden to see each other. Regardless of their parents wishes‚ their fate is already sealed by the stars. This love causes problems not only for them but it also ends up hurting the people around them that they love. Although Romeo and Juliet are more different than alike‚ fate brought them together and with their love they were grow and develop throughout the play; Romeo went from being fickle to decisive while Juliet went

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    “If you can hold it in your hands then you can fold it by commands but if its fate to understand ‚ fate cannot wait and is unmanned‚ the decisions you make will lend fate a hand.”- Unknown After analyzing the manuscript ‚Macbeth‚ it can be said that fate is not determined by pre-destination but by free will. This is proven when Macbeth takes his fate into his own hands by killing his cousin‚ King Duncan‚ in order to become king of Scotland. It is a dispute started by Christians that has traveled

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    They insist that Ethan deserves his fate because of the opposing syllogism‚ stating that one deserves his fate when he chooses impulses rather than morals. Ethan chooses to follow his impulses rather than his morals. As a result‚ Ethan deserves his fate. One believer of the opposing syllogism‚ fellow CHS student Matthew Weder‚ argues that Ethan deserves his fate because of his apparent fear for Zeena. He relates Ethan’s case of determinism to those

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    Fate is a word our society tends to deem worthy of being the scapegoat to all of our annoyances‚ although it is only applicable to the negative situations we get ourselves into. What we fail to understand is that there cannot be a positive without the burdens of a negative‚ and fate takes the blame for both. The romantic tragedy of shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet expresses the ideal of senseless outcomes of impulsive decisions committed by the two blind lovers: Romeo and Juliet. We travel through

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    based on the passion of love‚ including images of fate and death. - Elizabethans strongly believed that fate controlled their lives and everything was planned out. Most people believed that the power of the stars could foretell the future. In the prologue‚ Shakespeare mentions Romeo and Juliet’s destinies: “A pair of star cross’d lovers take their life” this suggests that stars take control of the two lovers’ destiny. - The prologue suggests that fate will play a very important role in “Romeo and

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    Hamlet- The Garden Motif and Fate vs. Man Of Hamlet’s many theories and subjects‚ perhaps one of the most prevailing ideas in William Shakespeare’s most riveting play is in fact the “garden” motif. Shakespeare illustrates throughout his writing the idea of the garden which presumably represents Hamlet’s own paradise‚ and the rotting destruction of the garden is meant to vividly depict the unavoidable hell Hamlet endures throughout the plot. By utilizing this imagery and symbolism‚ William Shakespeare

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    is entirely of his own doing. In the ongoing debate of fate versus free will‚ Oedipus proves that fate will only take a person so far. There is no arguing that he was dealt a dreadful hand by the Gods‚ but it is by his own free will that his prized life collapses. Oedipus could‚ and should have done nothing given the prophecies of the oracle‚ although either way his fate would have been realized. His apparent powerlessness against fate cannot be positively reconciled with his own willfulness

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    Is it possible that our everyday decisions control the outcome of our lives? The ideas of fate and free will have been around for centuries‚ and are still argued about today. The question is often asked: is the outcome of our lives predetermined‚ or do we control the things that happen to us? Aristotle was one of the first of his time to argue that people’s decisions were not determined by fate‚ but rather people decided whether or not to act on their choices. William Shakespeare also examines these

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