Thetis gave him proposition he can stay with her and live a long life or he can go fight in this and he will die before he even gets one gray hair but he will get fame
Explanation:
a study of the stuff that they say in the past that you stuff that they stay in the present they take some stuff from the past and grab stuff from the present
1. Interracial relationships/interracial sex would be forbidden. One of the Nuremberg Codes was "German Blood and German Honour," basically they didn't want any Germans to become intimate with a Jew or allow them to marry. If that law was imposed on my culture today, my parents would be breaking the law since they are interracial and had 2 children. My race would not be treated the same as everyone else. We wouldn't be able to have a relationship outside of our race.
2. We would not be considered citizens. The second Nuremberg Code was the "Reich Citizenship Law." Only those of German or related blood were permitted to be Reich Citizens. If that law was imposed on my culture then most of us wouldn't be citizens. In America people who aren't citizens still have to pay taxes and of course obey the law. Citizen ship means that you have the right to vote, the right to hold government offices, and the right to collect unemployment insurance payments (etc.) We would not be allowed to do any of that.
The main themes of the play are: fate and free will with the
inevitability of oracular predictions is a theme that often occurs in
Greek tragedies the conflict between the individual and the state
similar to that in Sophocles’ “Antigone” and people’s willingness to ignore painful truths both Oedipus and Jocasta clutch
at unlikely details in order to avoiding facing up to the inceasingly
apparent truth and sight and blindness the irony that the blind seer Tiresius can actually “see” more clearly than the supposedly clear-eyed Oedipus<span>, who is in reality blind to the truth about his origins and his inadvertent crimes.
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<span>Hope my answer would be a great help for you.
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I think from Western Africa-- near modern-day Nigeria<span>-- southward and eastward, spreading out across all of the southern half of the African continent. This migration started at about 1000 B.C.E., and ended at about 1700 A.D. although that date is still in dispute.</span>