Aesop’s fables were very
wonderful to read, as a child growing up my parents would also relay numerous
amounts of morals to me. It is safe to say that without these morals, the way I’d
act and think would not be the same today. Without a doubt, Aesop’s fables
truly teaches people lessons that they will never forget.
Edward Clayton’s “Aesop,
Aristotle, and Animals: The Role of Fables in Human Life” was a very well-coordinated
piece describing how fables correlate to the way humans act in society. Clayton
argues that within fables, lies the similarities between humans and animals. Clayton
provided readers with an excerpt of a fable, and then proceeded to remind us
how the fables would directly relate to the reasoning behind human logic today.
In addition, Clayton provided readers with an immaculate amount credibility.
Clayton consistently provided descriptions of how fables affected ancient
Greece and Athenian culture in order to back up his argument. The way he
structured his writing allowed me to understand that Clayton truly knew what he
was talking about.
For example, Clayton uses
the fable of Hesiod’s “Work and Days”, where the moral is that “the weak suffer
at the whim of the stronger”. This explains how dominance in the animal world
correlates to the power hierarchy in the world of humans, which furthers the argument
that Clayton is trying to make. As a reader, I always believed that the motive
behind fables was to teach readers of morals. However, Clayton has brought to
me a new perspective of how fables can also relate to “democracy, equality, and
justice”.
I also very much agree
with Clayton that human beings can live differently than animals because of our
“unique capability of reason”. Clayton backs this up using Aristotle and how he
states that “It allows them to redefine their environments and themselves,
which animals cannot do, and in doing so they can create a city and citizens
that are compatible with principles of equality and justice”. This had been nothing
less of a revelation to me, to learn that fables can be so much more complex
and sophisticated than just a story and a lesson. Clayton really did a well
rounded observation on how fables play a contributing factor to the human world
and changed how I will perceive the next fable I read.
I agree with you that these kind of lessons learned through these fables did played an important role in our lives. From a very young age,they taught us important life lessons that later became a useful tool to make better decisions in our lives.
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