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Comparing The Odyssey And Plato's Version Of Er In The Republic

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There are many speculations about what happens after you die. Where does that person soul go? Is there a heaven or hell? These are questions everyone wonders and will not know until that time comes. However, many people have conducted their own versions of the underworld and after life and in this essay I will compare and contrast the two visions of Homer’s Odyssey and Plato’s version of Er in the republic. This two stories tell a tale of the underworld and make some of the same references while also holding different views as well. Therefore, with these tales being somewhat similar their views of the underworld are completely different. The tale of Plato’s Er in the republic is a tale of a hero who is the son of Armenius. Er was a soldier …show more content…

12 days after his death at his funeral he awaken from the grave and told everyone his journey to the afterlife and what he encountered from that trip. Er said when his soul left his body it went on a journey and when that came to an end, he arrived at a mysterious place at which there were two openings in the earth; they were near together, and over against them were two other openings in the heaven above. Then in between the two openings sat a table of judges who commanded the path of the souls to come. Now these openings showed both worlds after life, meaning they represented heaven and hell. One of the opens represented the showing the bright light of heaven and the peace and home like feeling that it gave off, making everyone want to go through that opening but it’s not up to us once again the lives we live chooses the path we take after life. Then in the other opening showed the deep and dark depths of hell and the pain and suffering that was engaged when your soul entered. Adding on, Er also learned that you were only in hell for a certain amount of time and that time is given to by the sins a person committed in their previous life. For instance, every wrong in which they had done to any one they suffered tenfold;

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