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The myth of Prometheus - Iseult Gillespie

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    Before the creation of humanity,
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    the Greek gods won a great battle against
    a race of giants called the Titans.
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    Most Titans were destroyed or
    driven to the eternal hell of Tartarus.
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    But the Titan Prometheus,
    whose name means foresight,
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    persuaded his brother Epimetheus
    to fight with him on the side of the gods.
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    As thanks, Zeus entrusted the brothers
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    with the task of creating
    all living things.
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    Epimetheus was to distribute the gifts
    of the gods among the creatures.
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    To some, he gave flight;
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    to others, the ability
    to move through water
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    or race through grass.
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    He gave the beasts glittering scales,
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    soft fur,
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    and sharp claws.
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    Meanwhile, Prometheus shaped
    the first humans out of mud.
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    He formed them in the image of the gods,
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    but Zeus decried
    they were too remain mortal
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    and worship the inhabitants
    of Mount Olympus from below.
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    Zeus deemed humans subservient
    creatures vulnerable to the elements
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    and dependent on the gods for protection.
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    However, Prometheus envisioned his crude
    creations with a greater purpose.
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    So when Zeus asked him to decide
    how sacrifices would be made,
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    the wily Prometheus planned a trick
    that would give humans some advantage.
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    He killed a bull and divided it
    into two parts to present to Zeus.
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    On one side, he concealed
    the succulent flesh and skin
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    under the unappealing belly of the animal.
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    On the other, he hid the bones
    under a thick layer of fat.
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    When Zeus chose the seemingly
    best portion for himself,
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    he was outraged
    at Prometheus's deception.
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    Fuming, Zeus forbade the use
    of fire on Earth,
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    whether to cook meat
    or for any other purpose.
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    But Prometheus refused to see
    his creations denied this resource.
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    And so, he scaled Mount Olympus
    to steal fire
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    from the workshop
    of Hephaestus and Athena.
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    He hid the flames in hollow fennel stalk
    and brought it safely down to the people.
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    This gave them the power to harness
    nature for their own benefit
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    and ultimately dominate the natural order.
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    With fire, humans could care
    for themselves with food and warmth.
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    But they could also forge weapons
    and wage war.
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    Prometheus's flames acted as a catalyst
    for the rapid progression of civilization.
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    When Zeus looked down at this scene,
    he realized what had happened.
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    Prometheus had once again
    wounded his pride
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    and subverted his authority.
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    Furious, Zeus imposed a brutal punishment.
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    Prometheus was to be chained
    to a cliff for eternity.
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    Each day, he would be visited by a vulture
    who would tear out his liver
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    and each night his liver would grow back
    to be attacked again in the morning.
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    Although Prometheus remained
    in perpetual agony,
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    he never expressed regret
    at his act of rebellion.
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    His resilience in the face of oppression
    made him a beloved figure in mythology.
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    He was also celebrated for his mischevious
    and inquisitive spirit,
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    and for the knowledge, progress,
    and power he brought to human hands.
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    He's also a recurring figure
    in art and literature.
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    In Percy Bysshe Shelley's
    lyrical drama Prometheus Unbound,
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    the author imagine Prometheus
    as a romantic hero
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    who escapes and continues to spread
    empathy and knowledge.
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    Of his protagonist, Shelley wrote,
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    "Prometheus is the type
    of the highest perfection
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    of moral and intellectual nature,
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    impelled by the purest
    and the truest motives
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    to the best and noblest ends."
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    His wife Mary envisaged Prometheus
    as a more cautionary figure
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    and subtitled her novel
    Frankenstein, The Modern Prometheus.
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    This suggests the damage of corrupting
    the natural order
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    and remains relevant
    to the ethical questions
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    surrounding science and technology today.
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    As hero, rebel, or trickster,
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    Prometheus remains a symbol of our
    capacity to capture the powers of nature,
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    and ultimately,
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    he reminds us of the potential
    of individual acts to ignite the world.
Title:
The myth of Prometheus - Iseult Gillespie
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:47

English subtitles

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