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Kurtz Vs Socrates

Decent Essays

When it comes to the topic of what the darkness represents in Joseph Conrad’s piece, “Heart of Darkness”, it seems to manifest itself as immoral circumstances. This story follows Marlow, an Englishman wanting to explore The Congo River while working for “the Company”, an ivory trade business (680). In his time there he searches for and meets Kurtz, a man who has an astonishing reputation as a very successful ivory tradesman. The greed, slavery, violence, and absurd gratification of power throughout this novel show the incompatibly of the Good Life, a life filled with reflection and realizing that happiness and knowledge are derived from being virtuous. Socrates states in “Apology” that, “The unexamined life isn’t worth living,” (38a). This quote portrays that a life filled with ignorance, materialism, or dominance over others is pointless and irreconcilable with the Good Life. In the “Apology”, Socrates is on trial …show more content…

Marlow believes that, “[Kurtz’s] very existence was improbable, inexplicable, and altogether bewildering. He was an insoluble problem. It was inconceivable how he had existed, how he had succeeded in getting so far, how he had managed to remain -- why he did not instantly disappear,” (723). To Marlow, Kurtz being alive, albeit not for much longer, was unlikely as it was illogical for him not to be dead. He is utterly obsessed about collecting as much ivory as possible that he fought death and even manipulated the natives into believing that he is worthy of godliness. Both Socrates and Kurtz have similar views on passion and the only way of stopping them is their own demise. The main difference between them, though, is the effect it has on others; one is trying to enlighten himself and others around him where the latter acts as a thick, dissolute fog over

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