Sean Berube Profile picture
Jul 31 21 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Freud got Oedipus wrong

The myth is not about inc*st and repressed desire

Its much deeper — the story reveals a heartbreaking flaw of human nature

This one flaw haunted Aristotle, and shaped 3,000 years of Western thought on the soul…🧵 Image
As a recap, Oedipus’ story begins with a prophecy:

King Laius of Thebes is told his son will murder him and marry Laius’ wife (the child’s mother)

To escape fate, he abandons Oedipus to a shepherd, who delivers Oedipus to Corinth Image
Later on, a full grown Oedipus is told the same prophecy:

“You’ll murder your father and marry your mother”

He flees Corinth, fearing King Polybus is his father

Ironically, running from his destiny only delivers him to fate Image
Oedipus later kills a man in self-defense at a crossroads

He then visits Thebes and conquers the legendary Sphinx, which had plagued the city

As reward, he’s made King of Thebes, since their own king mysteriously died…

Nonetheless, Oedipus rules nobly for 20 years Image
Image
Unfortunately, in the present a new plague overruns Thebes

The city is cursed with famine and death

Oedipus consults an oracle, who says the plague will end on one condition:

If the murderer of former king Laius is brought to justice Image
Oedipus swears to find the killer

Ironically, HE is the killer, but no one else knows it

Filled with pride as a virtuous king, Oedipus seeks to find the killer

But the further he searches, the more he despairs Image
Oedipus’ advisors beg him to call off the search, but Oedipus refuses:

He has too much pride to quit

He finds a shepherd who claims to have witness Laius’ death

The news he shares horrifies Oedipus Image
The shepherd perfectly recounts the same events where Oedipus killed Laius

He realizes in horror that he’s the murderer

Perhaps even worse, he realizes he married his mother, Jocasta

She realizes too, but her fate is… not good Image
In despair, Jocasta hangs herself

Oedipus finds her corpse, wails, and grabs her hairpins

He gouges out his own eyes and promises to serve justice to the killer:

He banishes himself from city, left to live in shame as a blinded beggar Image
Why did Aristotle call this the greatest tragedy ever written?

It has to deal with an Ancient Greek concept — harmatia — which translates to fatal flaw

Oedipus’ harmatia was hubris, and it points to a brutal truth of human nature Image
Oedipus sought to be Thebes’ savior

Scholars call him “godlike” in that he is both cause and solution to the plague:

Much like how the greek gods themselves both caused and solved plagues

But Oedipus is not a God, so his “salvation,” is also self-destruction Image
Oedipus’ search for Truth is honorable, but creates his downfall

This is why his tragedy is so great:

He did nothing wrong. His downfall points to the weakness of human nature:

Man is finite and flawed, and tragedy lies at the heart his existence... Image
The play itself glumly concludes:

“Let no man be happy until he is dead”

While it’s understandable what makes this play a great tragedy, what makes it “good”?

What moral lesson does it teach? Image
Paradoxically, man’s meditation on his limits is curative

In suffering there is wisdom, and Oedipus has the ultimate redemption arc:

As a blind beggar, he becomes a prophetic, wise sage

It’s ironic - only in blind humility does he grasp heavenly truth Image
Oedipus dies of old age in peace, as a respected prophet

Better yet, his grave spot is consecrated and blessed by the gods:

He guided the souls of Ancient Greece to virtue thereafter Image
The play then, stresses the Socratic notion of “know thyself”

Oedipus as a proud and great king was blind, unaware of his own faults

Oedipus as a blind and humble beggar became great-souled

Humility showed him heavenly Truth and gave him identity Image
To understand human nature is to know we’re finite and flawed

Tragedy is tied to existence, and suffering is guaranteed

But to bare it with patience, like Oedipus, is to earn favor with Providence

Seek first humility, and you can bare any storm Image
So Oedipus is both a great tragedy, and a great redemption

The tragedy is this is a fallen world — you can be destroyed without fault

But the beauty is, suffering cannot conquer the human spirit

Oedipus carries his pain, perseveres, and becomes a heavenly sage Image
The moral is humility conquers suffering

Pain pushes you to seek heavenly truth, like Oedipus

And such a curse lets a soul bear any burden...

A life lived for Truth is never a life lived in vain Image
I go deeper on topics like this in my free newsletter:
seandiscourse.com
Bonus:

I offer faith and fitness coaching for Christian men looking to:

- Get fit
- Grow in their faith
- Learn the great books

If interested, DM me "fitness" to discuss!

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Sean Berube

Sean Berube Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @SeanBerube4

Jul 30
How can a good God let you suffer and die?

Tolkien said a 600 year old poem had the answer to this question

He spent over 25 years reading, studying and teaching it to students

Here’s the poem, and what it taught him about God, grief, and finding hope in the face of death…🧵 Image
“Pearl,” was a 14th century medieval poem

It follows a father’s grief — his 2 year old daughter, Pearl, just died

Her loss has devastated him and made his life seem meaningless

Even worse, his grief is no ordinary grief Image
The father’s grief is destroying him:

He SHOULD move on, but doesn’t want to — he’d rather die than live without Pearl

He’s not just battling grief, but struggling for a will to live

On the cusp of death, he falls asleep dreaming of his daughter… Image
Read 22 tweets
Jul 22
Solomon was the wisest man to ever live

He wrote divine proverbs, built God’s temple, and ruled a golden empire

Yet one fatal flaw destroyed it all, and his empire crumbled

Here’s the sin that ensnared Solomon, and how it still destroys civilizations to this day…🧵 Image
Solomon’s glory shined early

He found favor with God and was granted one wish from the Lord

His wish:

“Give your servant an understanding mind to govern your people,

That I may discern between good and evil” Image
His request was granted:

“God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding beyond all measure”

He ruled as a benevolent King and led Israel to prosperity

Yet more impressive than his decrees, was his legendary proverbs Image
Read 14 tweets
Jul 21
Orwell was a staunch socialist

But everything changed when he saw real poverty

He saw untold horrors in a mining town, and wrote a report that sent socialists into a fury

Here’s what he saw, and the rot it revealed at the heart of socialism…🧵 Image
Orwell writes his critiques in his work “The Road to Wigan Pier”

It’s comprised of 2 parts:

Part 1 shows the life of working class miners in England

Part 2 is Orwell’s critique against socialism

First here’s what Orwell saw on his visit to a mining town Image
The company housing for the miners was squalid

Orwell stayed in shared houses with the workers

The homes were rat-infested with mold, filth and often no indoor toilets

Some neighborhoods even had sewage covering its streets Image
Read 21 tweets
Jul 18
Before Stalin and Nietzsche, Dostoevsky foresaw the bloodbath of nihilism

He knew it would murder millions, but he also knew how to defeat it

In a single sentence, he showed how to save mankind from its most catastrophic evil…🧵 Image
Dostoevsky’s line is famous and well-quoted, but hardly understood:

“Beauty will save the world”

It’s genius isn’t fully grasped until you know the context

Dostoevsky wrote this sentence in his most underrated novel Image
The novel is called “The Idiot”

It follows Prince Myshkin — a kindhearted and gentle soul — considered so meek that he draws comparisons to Christ himself

The problem is, he’s living in 19th century Russia

Society would prove… unkind to him Image
Read 20 tweets
Jul 17
400 years ago, Don Quixote prophesied the death of God

The book warned against the fatal mistake that gutted the soul of the West

Here’s that mistake, and the path to rediscovering beauty, goodness, and God in a cynical age… 🧵 Image
At first glance it’s difficult to understand why Don Quixote is a great book

The novel is bloated by modern standards, and the plot is inconsequential

It simply follows protagonist Don Quixote’s descent into insanity

Yet there’s a hidden genius in his madness Image
Why is Quixote insane?

First off, he’s a poor farmer in 17th century Spain

Europe was modernizing — growing in intellectual sophistication — but at a price

The price was the “death of God,” or a growing decline in religious fervor Image
Read 18 tweets
Jun 24
Dante’s Inferno has 9 circles:

The deeper you go, the darker it gets

Yet one kind of soul is so depraved, even Hell itself rejects them

Here’s the sin too pitiful for even Satan to claim…🧵 Image
First lets recap the structure of Dante’s Hell

The first circle is Limbo:

It’s a realm of peaceful sorrow, reserved for virtuous pagans

The next 8 circles are divided into 3 subsections Image
Upper hell consists of circles 2-5

These cover the sins of incontinence (lust, gluttony, greed, wrath)

These are crimes of natural desires that have become perverted...

The more heinous and unnatural evils begin in Middle Hell Image
Read 18 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(