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Originally Posted by
Gladys
This is the nub of our disagreement - Dostoevsky creates a subtle third dimension which few can see. In the ending, the prince's deliberate actions are not those of a fool, irrespective of appearances or the judgement of others. That is the point, not just of the final page, but of the entire novel.
Not being a fool is not a third dimension, it is only one dimension. Either he is a fool or not fool. Dostoievisky dimension is having the prince and the book as both at sametime. The existence of one does not deny the other.
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I'm certain Dostoevsky would characterise this view of life as sadly cynical. In real life Dostoevsky can see unalloyed triumph: with Christ crucified the archetypal triumph. Both Jesus and the prince triumph as 'suffering servants', but this subtle third dimension is 'foolishness to the wise'.
Dostoievisky life is sadly. We have several examples of Dostoievisky desillusion. So, it is not out of character to find a book about dostoievisky and see them. The same Dostoievisky of The Idiot wrote THe PLayer, Underground Man, the chapter Great Inquisitor, The Demons, etc.
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The prince understands the paradoxical redemptive power of suffering, for he stares at and long remembers that dreadful ‘Deposition’: the poor Holbein copy, ‘at Roghozin’s in one of his gloomiest rooms, over the door’.
The problem is not what prince understand about the moral virtues, but what he does not understand about social interation.
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The epileptic prince's overarching intention is to love (agape). He triumphs, and especially so in the end: a witness to truth and love. Those around him echo Pilate's question, "What is truth?", while committing the prince to a Swiss asylum.
Obviously they question, The prince should be truth, he is the ideal.
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The book is about the effects
and the character of the prince. I have long understood that you accept the 'noble focus' of the prince. Have
you understood what I mean by 'the suffering servant', a Christ-like figure, who would self-sacrifice even to death? Dostoevsky probably had in mind the Scripture:
Isaiah 53:3___He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not.
The sacrifice is part of the character. Dom Quixote dies, jesus dies. He obviously can not live, a living great man (the prince) while alive can change and conquer. His redemption is not the redemption of the real word, but of his own being. Or what he symbolizes.
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Ah no. The 'romantic elements' exist exclusively in the minds of those around Prince Myshkin. And Dostoevsky systematically demolishes these elements, leaving the prince is unscathed - Nietzsche's 'Übermensch' (overman).
Exclusively? The prince is a romantic element, a natural good man (rousseau, another example gave by Dostoievisky besides Quixot is a Dickens character), idealistic, noble. He is romantic. It is not just on others. (The overman of Nitzches is a typical romantic character as well).
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Prince Myshkin sets high goals, which Sonya in Crime and Punishment' well nigh achieves. We could do worse than to aspire to them. Is the prince's gracious treatment of Ippolit, Keller, Burdovsky or Lebedev beyond us? In this sense, The Idiot is a novel full of hope.
And he fails. The basic fails is the failure with society and reality. THis is also present. In this sense, all the hope is not the prince is understanding where he fails.