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Free Will In Billy Pilgrim's Slaughterhouse-Five

Decent Essays

In the novel Slaughterhouse-Five, free will is an important theme throughout the story of Billy Pilgrim. Vonnegut suggests that free will doesn’t exist and that humans can not control what happens in their life. He also presents the idea that predestination will guide you to where you are supposed to be in life and when humans choose what to do it’s not really them deciding, it is what’s supposed to happen. With that, he displays a contrast on how free will can exist. Free will can become difficult to understand, but Vonnegut’s use of it as a significant theme will help readers to further understand the novel and how free will contributes to the story. In the novel, Billy Pilgrim experiences things in his life he can’t control and he doesn’t feel comfortable in those situations. One of those experiences is when Billy is drafted for World War II. He obviously doesn’t want this because he has to give up his career as an eye doctor. When Billy goes into the war he is a chaplains assistant. This displays how he is not equipped with what he needs to fight and survive in the war; however, he does survive. The other soldiers that are fighting with the proper equipment end up getting killed. This situation in Billy’s life is significant because it shows his fate and how he doesn’t have free will to decide on his own. Against Billy’s will he went to war and survived when he shouldn’t have. Billy couldn’t …show more content…

Vonnegut used this theme to reveal new concepts and ideas to his readers. He included free will across the entire story line which helps his readers to better understand what free will is. By using Billy Pilgrim’s personal life, the Tralfamadorians, and references to Christianity, Vonnegut shows how free will is presumed to different types of people. Free will is important in understanding the story, because it is a vital theme and makes contributions to the story Vonnegut wants to

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