What happens if pandoras box is opened




















It is a recurring weapon in the God of War video game franchise, which is loosely based on Greek mythology. After Titanomachy the Great War ended, Zeus wanted to keep the evils of the world from spreading, so he asked his son Hephaestus to create a box to imprison all the evils inside. After Hephaestus finished the box, Zeus imprisoned all the evils inside the box. But Athena was concerned of what would happen if the Evils were released, so she placed the most powerful weapon inside the box; Hope.

After the Box was sealed shut, Hephaestus recommended placing the Box in the temple on the top of Cronos where it can be safe. She told him that the Box was the most powerful weapon that a mortal could wield, and that if it was opened it would grant anyone a huge amount of power, enough to kill a god.

She also told Kratos that it was hidden somewhere in Pandora's temple, on top of Cronos. Pandora's Box being opened by Kratos before the final battle in God of War. After Kratos went through trial, after trial, he finally acquired Pandora's Box. Just when was about exit the Temple, Ares found out and tossed a giant jagged stone into Kratos. After Kratos was "killed" by Ares, the minions of Ares came and took Pandora's Box from the dying Kratos, and brought it forth to Ares.

Then, she closed the box before hope could escape, so that hope remained within the box. Does this mean that the world doesn't have hope, though since it's still stuck in the box? I thought that the "moral" of the story, so to speak, was that even though there's all this evil out in the world, there's still hope, so not all is lost. But that doesn't make sense if hope is still stuck inside the box. Etymology of Pandora. The myth of Pandora the first mortal woman is misinterpreted.

I've seen many modern books wrongly claiming that hope did escape the box and, despite all evil that was spread throughout the land, people still hoped that better days would soon come.

Hesiod is the one that refers to the box it was not a box actually, but more like a jar and claims that Pandora actually referring to women is the root of all evil, because she would hurt the man with her beauty and lies. For from her is the descent of female women a great pain for mortals, living with men, companions not of destructive Poverty but of Plenty.

When Pandora opened the box, all evil escaped it, but Pandora under Zeus' will held hope inside the jar by closing the lid. Isiodus doesn't say why hope stayed into the jar, but one judging from Isiodus' view on women can imply that he meant by that, that the men would have no hope against women, for without her, they would die alone, but with her, they'd have to withstand their cunning nature.

Judging by this, which is how Hesiod closes Theogony :. He commands Hephaestus to mold from earth the first woman, a "beautiful evil" whose descendants would torment the human race.

Only Hope remained there in an unbreakable home within under the rim of the great jar, and did not fly out at the door. The answer to this question depends on how you interpret the above quote. Is hope being protected in the jar? Or withheld from humanity? The word Hesiod uses for hope, elpis , can also mean 'expectation'. Verdenius states that " elpis may be regarded either a as a good, or b as an evil".

In this view, the hope in Pandora's jar is potential, but for good or evil Hesiod never specified. This is indeed confusingly presented but the implication is that Hope did not escape "fly out the door".

One of the Aesop versions may clarify somewhat:. He then left the jar in human hands. But man had no self-control and he wanted to know what was in that jar, so he pushed the lid aside, letting those things go back to the abode of the gods. The main purpose of the myth of Pandora though is to address the question of why evil exists in the world. The birth of Pandora was represented on the pedestal of the statue of Athena situated at the Parthenon on the Acropolis in Athens.

Thanks for publishing this article: I actually met someone a while ago who, I just recently learned did not know about Pandora. She thought is was just a place to get an endless supply of music on her phone. Never knew the story behind the box. Each person has their own world, that is what makes each of us unique.

Go easy…. I am teaching World Literature to my jr. And they were amazed with the whole myth since the only one they knew was that due to the Devil all these different bad spirits came to be. So if Pandora was the first woman on Earth how come she was created as a punishment for the mankind? Which mankind? I realize that you wrote this a loong time ago, I think you are trying to blend a bible story Adam and Eve with Greek mythology.

Just like Eve was the first woman in the bible, Pandora was the first woman in Greek mythology.



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