Aristotle mentions
hamartia in
Poetics. He argues that it is a powerful device to have a story begin with a rich and powerful hero, neither exceptionally virtuous nor villainous, who then falls into misfortune by a mistake or error (
hamartia). Discussion among scholars centers mainly on the degree to which hamartia is defined as
tragic flaw or
tragic error.
Critical argument for flaw Poetic justice describes an obligation of the dramatic poet, along with philosophers and priests, to see that their work promotes moral behavior. 18th-century French dramatic style honored that obligation with the use of
hamartia as a vice to be punished
Phèdre, Racine's adaptation of Euripides'
Hippolytus, is an example of French Neoclassical use of
hamartia as a means of punishing vice.
Jean Racine says in his Preface to
Phèdre, as translated by R.C. Knight: The play is a tragic story about a
royal family. The main characters' respective vices—rage, lust and envy—lead them to their tragic downfall.
Critical argument for error In her 1963
Modern Language Review article, "The Tragic Flaw: Is it a Tragic Error?", Isabel Hyde traces the twentieth-century history of
hamartia as tragic flaw, which she argues is an incorrect interpretation. Hyde draws upon the language in Butcher's interpretation of
Poetics regarding
hamartia as both error and "defect in character". Hyde points out a footnote in which Butcher qualifies his second definition by saying it is not a "natural" expression to describe a flaw in behavior. Hyde calls upon another description from A.C. Bradley's
Shakespearean Tragedy of 1904 which she contends is misleading: Hyde goes on to elucidate interpretive pitfalls of treating
hamartia as tragic flaw by tracing the tragic flaw argument through several examples from well-known tragedies including
Hamlet and
Oedipus Rex. Hyde observes that students often state "thinking too much" as Hamlet's tragic flaw upon which his death in the story depends. That idea does not, however, offer explanation for the moments when Hamlet does act impulsively and violently. It also embarks down a trail of logic that suggests he ought to have murdered Claudius right away to avoid tragedy, which Hyde asserts is problematic. In
Oedipus Rex, she observes that the ideas of Oedipus' hasty behavior at the crossroads or his trust in his intellect as being the qualities upon which the change of fortune relies is incomplete. Instead, to focus on his ignorance of the true identity of his parents as the foundation of his downfall takes into account all of his decisions that lead to the tragic end. Rather than a flaw in character, error, in Oedipus' case based upon lack of information, is the more complete interpretation. In his 1978
Classical World article
Hamartia, Atë, and Oedipus, Leon Golden compares scholarship that examines where to place ''hamartia's
definition along a spectrum connecting the moral, flaw, and the intellectual, error. His goal is to revisit the role, if any, Atë, or divine intervention, plays in hamartia
. The Butcher translation of "Poetics" references hamartia'' as both a "single great error", and "a single great defect in character", prompting critics to raise arguments. Mid-twentieth-century scholar Phillip W. Harsh sees
hamartia as tragic flaw, observing that Oedipus assumes some moral ownership of his demise when he reacts excessively with rage and murder to the encounter at the crossroads. Van Braam, on the other hand, notes of Oedipus'
hamartia, "no specific sin attaching to him as an individual, but the universally human one of blindly following the light of one's own intellect." He adds that a defining feature of tragedy is that the sufferer must be the agent of his own suffering by no conscious moral failing on his part in order to create a tragic irony. O. Hey's observations fall into this camp as well. He notes that the term refers to an action that is carried out in good moral faith by the protagonist, but as he has been deprived of key pieces of information, the action brings disastrous results. J.M. Bremer also conducted a thorough study of
hamartia in Greek thought, focusing on its usage in Aristotle and
Homer. His findings lead him, like Hyde, to cite
hamartia as an intellectual error rather than a moral failing.
Critical arguments on divine intervention J. M. Bremer and Dawe both conclude that the will of the gods may factor into Aristotelian
hamartia. Golden disagrees. Bremer cites Sophocles' mention of Oedipus being possessed by "dark powers" as evidence of guidance from either divine or daemonic force. Dawe's argument centers around tragic dramatists' four areas from which a protagonist's demise can originate. The first is fate, the second is wrath of an angry god, the third comes from a human enemy, and the last is the protagonist's frailty or error. Dawe contends that the tragic
dénouement can be the result of a divine plan as long as plot action begets plot action in accordance with Aristotle. Golden cites Van Braam's notion of Oedipus committing a tragic error by trusting his own intellect in spite of Tiresias' warning as the argument for human error over divine manipulation. Golden concludes that
hamartia principally refers to a matter of intellect, although it may include elements of morality. What his study asserts is separate from
hamartia, in a view that conflicts with Dawe's and Bremer's, is the concept of divine retribution. == In Christian theology ==