Monday, February 11, 2019
Adam in Miltons Paradise Lost Essay -- John Milton
 pass in enlightenment doomed Fates Ruler - and Subject    A  profound problem in John Miltons  nirvana Lost in the theological issue of  thaw  ordain versus fate, a traditionally much-debated question. Free  get out is the condition of having control or direction over fate or destiny the individual shapes his life and future  through with(predicate) his  titleions. The opposing view,  arrest lack of free will (made famous by John Calvin), is predestination, which expresses the  vagary that our futures have been foreseen long before our existences, so our actions are preordained, and our paths chosen for us. Miltons  insertion of the character  crack wrestles with these ideas around free will throughout Paradise Lost while he does in fact eat the  apple of his own accord, the episode is foreseen by God, in advance. In this epic poem, Milton asserts that man, through Adams example, exercises free will but in doing so, he exposes contradiction, makes some  absorb inquiries and asks som   e engrossing questions.    A cursory history of  twain views would be beneficial here. John Calvin, the famed apologist of predestination, defines it in this way    In conformity, therefore, to the clear doctrine of the Scripture, we assert, that by an  eternal and immutable counsel, God has  at one time for all determined, both whom he would  admit to salvation, and whom he would condemn to destruction. We  produce that this  counsel, as far as concerns the elect, is founded on his gratuitous mercy, totally   irrespective of human merit but that to those whom he devotes to condemnation, the gate  of life is  unopen by a just and irreprehensible, but incomprehensible, judgment. In the elect,  we consider  label as an evidence of election, and justification as another token of it...  ...eversed in a moment of free will else there is a  enigma here that is unreconcilable how can people both have free will and not have it, simultaneously?    In Paradise Lost, John Milton attacks the th   eme of free will versus predestination through the actions of Adam, the  first gear man. Adams actions are unclear -- thus he has free will to act on his own -- but at the same time he is governed by an overriding God who can see past, present, and future. Adam is both the subject and ruler of his fate, in a unique contradiction  modishly set up and expressed by Milton. The writing surrounding Adam evidence Miltons essential believe in free will, but  withal display his thoughtful treatment of the situation. In the epic poem Paradise Lost, John Milton carefully weighs the two ideas of predestination and free will against each other, with profound and fascinating results.                   
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