The myth of Prometheus - Iseult Gillespie

8,912,559 views ・ 2017-11-14

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Before the creation of humanity,
0
7041
1704
00:08
the Greek gods won a great battle against a race of giants called the Titans.
1
8745
5082
00:13
Most Titans were destroyed or driven to the eternal hell of Tartarus.
2
13827
4779
00:18
But the Titan Prometheus, whose name means foresight,
3
18606
3040
00:21
persuaded his brother Epimetheus to fight with him on the side of the gods.
4
21646
6190
00:27
As thanks, Zeus entrusted the brothers
5
27836
2572
00:30
with the task of creating all living things.
6
30408
4029
00:34
Epimetheus was to distribute the gifts of the gods among the creatures.
7
34437
4300
00:38
To some, he gave flight;
8
38737
1431
00:40
to others, the ability to move through water
9
40168
2608
00:42
or race through grass.
10
42776
2312
00:45
He gave the beasts glittering scales,
11
45088
2121
00:47
soft fur,
12
47209
1010
00:48
and sharp claws.
13
48219
2549
00:50
Meanwhile, Prometheus shaped the first humans out of mud.
14
50768
4620
00:55
He formed them in the image of the gods,
15
55388
2443
00:57
but Zeus decreed they were too remain mortal
16
57831
2537
01:00
and worship the inhabitants of Mount Olympus from below.
17
60368
5014
01:05
Zeus deemed humans subservient creatures vulnerable to the elements
18
65382
4440
01:09
and dependent on the gods for protection.
19
69822
3098
01:12
However, Prometheus envisioned his crude creations with a greater purpose.
20
72920
5690
01:18
So when Zeus asked him to decide how sacrifices would be made,
21
78610
3843
01:22
the wily Prometheus planned a trick that would give humans some advantage.
22
82453
6311
01:28
He killed a bull and divided it into two parts to present to Zeus.
23
88764
5160
01:33
On one side, he concealed the succulent flesh and skin
24
93924
3316
01:37
under the unappealing belly of the animal.
25
97240
3585
01:40
On the other, he hid the bones under a thick layer of fat.
26
100825
3755
01:44
When Zeus chose the seemingly best portion for himself,
27
104580
3675
01:48
he was outraged at Prometheus's deception.
28
108255
3891
01:52
Fuming, Zeus forbade the use of fire on Earth,
29
112146
3459
01:55
whether to cook meat or for any other purpose.
30
115605
4131
01:59
But Prometheus refused to see his creations denied this resource.
31
119736
4751
02:04
And so, he scaled Mount Olympus to steal fire
32
124487
3078
02:07
from the workshop of Hephaestus and Athena.
33
127565
3909
02:11
He hid the flames in a hollow fennel stalk and brought it safely down to the people.
34
131474
5511
02:16
This gave them the power to harness nature for their own benefit
35
136985
3491
02:20
and ultimately dominate the natural order.
36
140476
4082
02:24
With fire, humans could care for themselves with food and warmth.
37
144558
4498
02:29
But they could also forge weapons and wage war.
38
149056
3922
02:32
Prometheus's flames acted as a catalyst for the rapid progression of civilization.
39
152978
6338
02:39
When Zeus looked down at this scene, he realized what had happened.
40
159316
4301
02:43
Prometheus had once again wounded his pride
41
163617
2850
02:46
and subverted his authority.
42
166467
2400
02:48
Furious, Zeus imposed a brutal punishment.
43
168867
3181
02:52
Prometheus was to be chained to a cliff for eternity.
44
172048
4161
02:56
Each day, he would be visited by a vulture who would tear out his liver
45
176209
4178
03:00
and each night his liver would grow back to be attacked again in the morning.
46
180387
6252
03:06
Although Prometheus remained in perpetual agony,
47
186639
3030
03:09
he never expressed regret at his act of rebellion.
48
189669
3860
03:13
His resilience in the face of oppression made him a beloved figure in mythology.
49
193529
5190
03:18
He was also celebrated for his mischievous and inquisitive spirit,
50
198719
3780
03:22
and for the knowledge, progress, and power he brought to human hands.
51
202499
5601
03:28
He's also a recurring figure in art and literature.
52
208100
3860
03:31
In Percy Bysshe Shelley's lyrical drama "Prometheus Unbound,"
53
211960
3421
03:35
the author imagines Prometheus as a romantic hero
54
215381
3340
03:38
who escapes and continues to spread empathy and knowledge.
55
218721
4734
03:43
Of his protagonist, Shelley wrote,
56
223455
1778
03:45
"Prometheus is the type of the highest perfection
57
225233
2711
03:47
of moral and intellectual nature,
58
227944
2573
03:50
impelled by the purest and the truest motives
59
230517
2628
03:53
to the best and noblest ends."
60
233145
3388
03:56
His wife Mary envisaged Prometheus as a more cautionary figure
61
236533
4333
04:00
and subtitled her novel "Frankenstein: The Modern Prometheus."
62
240866
5201
04:06
This suggests the damage of corrupting the natural order
63
246067
3379
04:09
and remains relevant to the ethical questions
64
249446
2249
04:11
surrounding science and technology today.
65
251695
4241
04:15
As hero, rebel, or trickster,
66
255936
2150
04:18
Prometheus remains a symbol of our capacity to capture the powers of nature,
67
258086
4681
04:22
and ultimately,
68
262767
1550
04:24
he reminds us of the potential of individual acts to ignite the world.
69
264317
4761
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7