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Thoreau And Civil Disobedience In Sophocles Antigone

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In the play Antigone, Sophocles uses duality to explore citizens conflicting obligations, that of one’s inner desires and of social regulation, resulting in the ongoing struggle for balance of freedoms and restrictions in our everyday life. This makes us question the role of our government, whether it is put in place to preserve or restrict our freedoms.

Thoreau and civil disobedience
True patriots not those who blindly followed their admin, but those who followed their own conscious. He sought to move prestige away from obedience to independent thought. What marked out a noble citizen was not that they respectfully shut up, but that they thought for themselves everyday of an administration's life. Thoreau saw nothing undignified about spending some time behind bars. “Under a government which imprisons unjustly, the true place for a just man is prison.” an election may determine who a leader may be but does not determine who is right, or one should simply do nothing until the next election. To assume so would be an appeal to authority, …show more content…

Stop Political passivity, but know what you stand for when you actively oppose the authority.
THOREAU
True prestige is in independent thought as we live in a constantly imperfect world
Not to say “down with conformity” for uniquenesses sake, as this would simply be an emerging perspective of circular logic, both conformity and individuality are neither inherently good or bad, but thinking critically on a deeper level, past the surface is an essential part of developing as an individual.
Why do we have an attachment to free will and individuality? -useful in

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