The myth of Sisyphus - Alex Gendler

8,114,858 views ・ 2018-11-13

TED-Ed


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

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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.
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