Artigo Revisado por pares

Homeric Attribution of Outcomes and Divine Causation

2018; University of Iowa Press; Volume: 29; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1353/syl.2018.0001

ISSN

2160-5157

Autores

Ruth Scodel,

Tópico(s)

Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics

Resumo

One branch of attribution theory in social psychology studies how people explain the outcomes of what they and others attempt. In Homeric epic, both narrator and characters stress ability. Effort is taken for granted unless it is inadequate. Task difficulty is salient only when characters try to persuade others. Luck is very important in the poems, but is not marked as such. Where luck would be especially significant, divine intervention appears instead. The characters, however, can often only infer divine intervention, and their ability to infer the gods' motives is limited. Claims about divine action are rhetorically motivated.

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