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The myth of Sisyphus - Alex Gendler

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    Whether it’s being chained to a burning
    wheel, turned into a spider,
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    or having an eagle eat one’s liver,
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    Greek mythology is filled
    with stories of the gods
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    inflicting gruesome horrors
    on mortals who angered them.
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    Yet one of their most famous
    punishments is not remembered
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    for its outrageous cruelty,
    but for its disturbing familiarity.
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    Sisyphus was the first king of Ephyra,
    now known as Corinth.
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    Although a clever ruler who made his city
    prosperous, he was also a devious tyrant
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    who seduced his niece and
    killed visitors to show off his power.
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    This violation of the sacred hospitality
    tradition greatly angered the gods.
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    But Sisyphus may still have
    avoided punishment
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    if it hadn’t been for his
    reckless confidence.
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    The trouble began when Zeus
    kidnapped the nymph Aegina,
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    carrying her away in the form
    of a massive eagle.
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    Aegina’s father, the river god Asopus,
    pursued their trail to Ephyra,
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    where he encountered Sisyphus.
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    In exchange for the god making
    a spring inside the city,
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    the king told Asopus which way
    Zeus had taken the girl.
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    When Zeus found out, he was so furious
    that he ordered Thanatos, or Death,
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    to chain Sisyphus in the underworld
    so he couldn’t cause any more problems.
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    But Sisyphus lived up to
    his crafty reputation.
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    As he was about to be imprisoned,
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    the king asked Thanatos to show him
    how the chains worked
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    – and quickly bound him instead,
    before escaping back among the living.
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    With Thanatos trapped, no one could die,
    and the world was thrown into chaos.
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    Things only returned to normal
    when the god of war Ares,
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    upset that battles were no longer fun,
    freed Thanatos from his chains.
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    Sisyphus knew his reckoning was at hand.
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    But he had another trick up his sleeve.
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    Before dying, he asked his wife Merope
    to throw his body in the public square,
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    from where it eventually washed up on
    the shores of the river Styx.
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    Now back among the dead,
    Sisyphus approached Persephone,
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    queen of the Underworld, and complained
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    that his wife had disrespected him
    by not giving him a proper burial.
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    Persephone granted him permission to go
    back to the land of living
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    and punish Merope, on the condition that
    he would return when he was done.
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    Of course, Sisyphus refused
    to keep his promise,
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    now having twice escaped death
    by tricking the gods.
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    There wouldn’t be a third time,
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    as the messenger Hermes dragged
    Sisyphus back to Hades.
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    The king had thought he was
    more clever than the gods,
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    but Zeus would have the last laugh.
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    Sisyphus’s punishment was
    a straightforward task
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    – rolling a massive boulder up a hill.
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    But just as he approached the top, the
    rock would roll all the way back down,
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    forcing him to start over
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    …and over, and over, for all eternity.
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    Historians have suggested that the tale
    of Sisyphus may stem from ancient myths
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    about the rising and setting sun,
    or other natural cycles.
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    But the vivid image of someone condemned
    to endlessly repeat a futile task
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    has resonated as an allegory
    about the human condition.
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    In his classic essay
    The Myth of Sisyphus,
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    existentialist philosopher Albert Camus
    compared the punishment
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    to humanity’s futile search
    for meaning and truth
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    in a meaningless and
    indifferent universe.
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    Instead of despairing, Camus imagined
    Sisyphus defiantly meeting his fate
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    as he walks down the hill to begin
    rolling the rock again.
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    And even if the daily
    struggles of our lives
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    sometimes seem equally
    repetitive and absurd,
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    we still give them significance and value
    by embracing them as our own.
Title:
The myth of Sisyphus - Alex Gendler
Speaker:
Alex Gendler
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:38
Kayla Wolf edited English subtitles for The myth of Sisyphus
Elise Haadsma approved English subtitles for The myth of Sisyphus
Elise Haadsma accepted English subtitles for The myth of Sisyphus
Kayla Wolf edited English subtitles for The myth of Sisyphus
Kayla Wolf edited English subtitles for The myth of Sisyphus

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