hamartia การใช้
- Here Aristotle describes hamartia as the quality of a tragic hero that generates that optimal balance.
- She breezed through such words as " hamartia, " which means a character defect.
- Kristin rattled off such words as " hamartia " as if she were spelling her own last name.
- Kristin rattled off such words as " hamartia " and " orthoepy " as if she were spelling her name.
- What is additionally outstanding is the way that the component of Hamartia which is a remarkable part of the disastrous legends has likewise appeared.
- Kristin coolly competed with Sean, rattling off such words as " hamartia " as if she were spelling her own last name.
- She dubbed him a tragic hero, " screwed by his own character flaws ", and argued that this hamartia added to his depth.
- Maxwell's determination proved to be his hamartia as he ended up dying of impalement in the same way that he had lived; alone.
- Finally, " hamartia " may be viewed simply as an act which, for whatever reason, ends in failure rather than success ."
- In tragedy, hamartia is commonly understood to refer to the protagonist s error or flaw that leads to a chain of plot actions culminating in a reversal from their good fortune to bad.
- Jules Brody, however, argues that " it is the height of irony that the idea of the tragic flaw should have had its origin in the Aristotelian notion of " hamartia ".
- They emphasized drama on a household scale, rather than a national scale, and the hamartia and agon in his tragedies are the common flaws of yielding to temptation and the commission of Christian sin.
- It is most often associated with Greek tragedy, although it is also used in Christian theology . " Hamartia " as it pertains to dramatic literature was first used by Aristotle in his Poetics.
- The structure of a Greenan story hinges, as in ancient Greek tragedy, on a reversal of fortune as likely to be caused by a fatal mistake or'hamartia'as by a flaw of character.
- Related terms are " a blessing and a curse ", " Pyrrhic victory ", " two-edged sword ", and the common mistranslation of hamartia, but I'm hoping to find just one word.
- You've ( correctly, I think ) excluded hamartia as a possibility, but I think the modern (-ish ) use of the term " tragic flaw " is exactly what you're looking for.
- We have said that this irrational behaviour-his hamartia in Aristotle's sense-is due to the repression of a whole series of thoughts in his consciousness, in fact everything that referred to his earlier doubts about his parentage.
- In his introduction to the S . H . Butcher translation of 3 Poetics3, Francis Fergusson describes hamartia as the inner quality that initiates, in Dante's words, a 3 movement of spirit3 within the protagonist to commit actions which drive the plot towards its tragic end, inspiring in the audience a build of pity and fear that leads to a purgation of those emotions, or Catharsis.
- Carrier points out that according to Paul ( Phil . 2.7 ), Christ " came'in the likeness of men'( homoiomati anthropon ) and was found'in a form like a man'( schemati euretheis hos anthropos ) and ( in Rom . 8.3 ) that he was only sent'in the likeness of sinful flesh'( en homoiomati sarkos hamartias ).
- Being able to see into the future, being hyper-sensitive to grammar, being extremely tall . . . ) I feel like I heard such a word recently, but I can't remember any particulars . ( It's not hamartia, which is sort of related, not the same thing, and awesome . )-- k & 05 : 16, 12 March 2008 ( UTC)
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