To Be We Should Endure The Slings And Arrows

  • November 2019
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Law

support

Common Belief

It is noble to endure.

The claim is widely believed.

?

Expert Opinion The law of life and death says that we can move into a different realm if we leave t realm of life.

Being involves a world where fortune reigns over us.

Hamlet is the king, he knows a lot about reigning and being in control, and finds himself completely out of control, thus he deduces that he can not be in control.

To Be

?

supports

support

supports

We should endure the slings and arrows of fortune

Avoidance of troubles can be accomplished by resistance

?

Statistic

Sleep will end a thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to

By taking arms against a sea of troubles, we can end them (or at least avoid them)

In death, there is sleep.

By Definition The claim must be true, given the meanings of the terms.

100% of the shocks that the flesh inherits are discarded when this temporal body is cast off.

supports

Fortune may be outrageous, but suffering its slings and arrows can be avoided.

We wish for such a consummation devoutly

oppose

Example

The insolence of office

Example

the spurns That patient merit of the unworthy takes

Example

We are not required to remain in a realm where fortune reigns.

Example

the law’s delay,

support

Example

The pangs of despised love

The burdens of life are wearisome.

Example

the proud man’s contumely

He can forego the bearing of burdens and skip the grunting and sweating required by a weary life

The oppressor’s wrong,

No one would bear these whips

Law

supports

No one would bear these scorns

Law

A bodkin, appropriately applied, will end all argument, allow him to have the final say.

He can end it and have the final say with a bare bodkin

All of the burdens that are being borne in life can be skipped altogether, if life could be foregone.

support

No traveller ever comes back from it.

Data

Historical data at the time, of no actual resurrections from the dead.

supports

We fear death.

Death is not yet known to us personally.

Personal Experience

Hamlet indicates that he has not yet walked the road of the dead, a has no actual experience within its realms.

support

support

conscience makes cowards of us all;

the native hue of resolution Is sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought,

We would rather bear the known, than run to other burdens, scorns, whips, etc., that are unknown.

Assertion

This is the fulcrum of the entire argument, in my opinion.

And enterprises of great pith and moment With this regard their currents turn awry, And lose the name of action.

Personal Experience

He realizes his own pallor at the actual prospect of relinquishing all control to the control of another

oppose

Personal Experience

Hamlet loses his nerve to kill himself because he thinks about all of the unknowns in the equation, and can't stand it.

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