Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Headscratchers / AesopsFables

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* In "The Boy Who Cried Wolf", a young boy is hired to protect a flock of sheep. He cries wolf several times when there are no wolves around because he is bored. It gets to the point that when he cries wolf when a real wolf comes, nobody believes him. But that destroys the point of having him work as shepherd. Why didn't the villagers just fire him and hire someone else who was more competent?

to:

* In "The Boy Who Cried Wolf", a young boy is hired to protect a flock of sheep. He cries wolf several times when there are no wolves around because he is bored. It gets to the point that when he cries wolf when a real wolf comes, nobody believes him. But that destroys the point of having him work as shepherd. Why didn't the villagers just fire him and hire someone else who was more competent?competent? After all, it's not like a wolf (or another threat) ''wouldn't'' come eventually. Many sheep were lost because a boy was hired who kept deceiving the villagers, and they never considered hiring anyone else.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Agreed; that is weird. However, I'm going to offer that it may be a moral about commitment. To have a dress made is something of a commitment, you put time and material and energy into it. However, a commitment like that is lost on the Moon, because she changes size all the time. So perhaps the moral is, "Know your own nature; don't make commitments you can't keep, and don't enter promises with people who are fickle."

to:

** Agreed; that is weird. However, I'm going to offer that it may be a moral about commitment. To have a dress made is something of a commitment, you put time and material and energy into it. However, a commitment like that is lost on the Moon, because she changes size all the time. So perhaps the moral is, "Know your own nature; don't make commitments you can't keep, and don't enter promises with people who are fickle.""
* In "The Boy Who Cried Wolf", a young boy is hired to protect a flock of sheep. He cries wolf several times when there are no wolves around because he is bored. It gets to the point that when he cries wolf when a real wolf comes, nobody believes him. But that destroys the point of having him work as shepherd. Why didn't the villagers just fire him and hire someone else who was more competent?
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
dewicking per TRS thread.


*** Another way to interpret it is that the frog is trying to be something it simply can't, not for lack of trying, but simply because it lacks the resources to do so, [[ValuesResonance which might be more relevant than it seems.]] After all, it's all too common nowadays for individuals of generational poverty to fruitlessly attempt to climb up the social ladder in a conventional way. A low-earning worker may have dreams of being a millionaire, but if they continue trying to get more money simply by doing their job as well as possible, likely at the sacrifice of their physical and emotional well-being, (The frog, in its attempts to reach the unattainable, even ends up destroying itself) it may bring them up to a managerial position, but becoming a millionaire in that way would be outright impossible (it's rarely brought up how astronomical it is for a person to become filthy rich as, say, Jeff Bezos). as nice as it is to say that "anything is possible", [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop that sadly is not the reality for most people.]] Granted, Aesop probably wasn't thinking about modern day economics when he thought of this story, but it's still quite applicable.

to:

*** Another way to interpret it is that the frog is trying to be something it simply can't, not for lack of trying, but simply because it lacks the resources to do so, [[ValuesResonance which might be more relevant than it seems.]] After all, it's all too common nowadays for individuals of generational poverty to fruitlessly attempt to climb up the social ladder in a conventional way. A low-earning worker may have dreams of being a millionaire, but if they continue trying to get more money simply by doing their job as well as possible, likely at the sacrifice of their physical and emotional well-being, (The frog, in its attempts to reach the unattainable, even ends up destroying itself) it may bring them up to a managerial position, but becoming a millionaire in that way would be outright impossible (it's rarely brought up how astronomical it is for a person to become filthy rich as, say, Jeff Bezos). as nice as it is to say that "anything is possible", [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop [[HardTruthAesop that sadly is not the reality for most people.]] Granted, Aesop probably wasn't thinking about modern day economics when he thought of this story, but it's still quite applicable.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** There's also the fact that the frog is trying to be something it simply can't, not for lack of trying, but simply because it lacks the resources to do so, [[ValuesResonance which might be more relevant than it seems.]] After all, it's all too common nowadays for individuals of generational poverty to fruitlessly attempt to climb up the social ladder in a conventional way. A low-earning worker may have dreams of being a millionaire, but if they continue trying to get more money simply by doing their job as well as possible, likely at the sacrifice of their physical and emotional well-being, (The frog, in its attempts to reach the unattainable, even ends up destroying itself) it may bring them up to a managerial position, but becoming a millionaire in that way would be outright impossible (it's rarely brought up how astronomical it is for a person to become filthy rich as, say, Jeff Bezos). as nice as it is to say that "anything is possible", [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop that sadly is not the reality for most people.]]

to:

*** There's also the fact Another way to interpret it is that the frog is trying to be something it simply can't, not for lack of trying, but simply because it lacks the resources to do so, [[ValuesResonance which might be more relevant than it seems.]] After all, it's all too common nowadays for individuals of generational poverty to fruitlessly attempt to climb up the social ladder in a conventional way. A low-earning worker may have dreams of being a millionaire, but if they continue trying to get more money simply by doing their job as well as possible, likely at the sacrifice of their physical and emotional well-being, (The frog, in its attempts to reach the unattainable, even ends up destroying itself) it may bring them up to a managerial position, but becoming a millionaire in that way would be outright impossible (it's rarely brought up how astronomical it is for a person to become filthy rich as, say, Jeff Bezos). as nice as it is to say that "anything is possible", [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop that sadly is not the reality for most people.]] Granted, Aesop probably wasn't thinking about modern day economics when he thought of this story, but it's still quite applicable.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

*** There's also the fact that the frog is trying to be something it simply can't, not for lack of trying, but simply because it lacks the resources to do so, [[ValuesResonance which might be more relevant than it seems.]] After all, it's all too common nowadays for individuals of generational poverty to fruitlessly attempt to climb up the social ladder in a conventional way. A low-earning worker may have dreams of being a millionaire, but if they continue trying to get more money simply by doing their job as well as possible, likely at the sacrifice of their physical and emotional well-being, (The frog, in its attempts to reach the unattainable, even ends up destroying itself) it may bring them up to a managerial position, but becoming a millionaire in that way would be outright impossible (it's rarely brought up how astronomical it is for a person to become filthy rich as, say, Jeff Bezos). as nice as it is to say that "anything is possible", [[FamilyUnfriendlyAesop that sadly is not the reality for most people.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** I think you're taking the symbolism a bit literally. Just because the loser was proven wrong in the tale or dies doesn't mean they are useless or obsolete completely. Taking the example of The North Wind And The Sun, the moral for us to learn is that "kindness, gentleness, and persuasion win where force fails," not "The North Wind has no use because he lost this one contest". The North Wind isn't obsolete, he's [[WeaksauceWeakness just bad at getting guys to take off their jackets.]] It's quite likely that after the story ended, the North Wind just huffed that he lost and flew somewhere else.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Renamed trope


** A couple possible morals occurred to me after reading it: If taken literally, I see the moral as the satyr being [[YouFailPhysicsForever an idiot who doesn't understand basic temperature transfer]] and [[WitchHunt thinks he has supernatural powers]]. If taken as a political metaphor, I agree with the above see it as the satyr [[FalseDichotomy hating moderates, centrists, and compromise]]. The only way I've thought of that makes satyr not an idiot is if the hand warming and soup cooling happened one after the other, in which case he could have just held the bowl to accomplish both at once, and the satyr doesn't want to associate with someone who didn't think to do that (although, those are still some [[DisproportionateRetribution ridiculously high standards]]).

to:

** A couple possible morals occurred to me after reading it: If taken literally, I see the moral as the satyr being [[YouFailPhysicsForever [[ArtisticLicensePhysics an idiot who doesn't understand basic temperature transfer]] and [[WitchHunt thinks he has supernatural powers]]. If taken as a political metaphor, I agree with the above see it as the satyr [[FalseDichotomy hating moderates, centrists, and compromise]]. The only way I've thought of that makes satyr not an idiot is if the hand warming and soup cooling happened one after the other, in which case he could have just held the bowl to accomplish both at once, and the satyr doesn't want to associate with someone who didn't think to do that (although, those are still some [[DisproportionateRetribution ridiculously high standards]]).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Agreed; that is weird. However, I'm going to offer that it may be a moral about commitment. To have a dress made is something of a commitment, you put time and material and energy into it. However, a commitment like that is lost on the Moon, because she changes size all the time. So perhaps the moral is, "Know your own nature; don't make commitments you can't keep, and don't enter promises with people who are fickle."
----
<<|ItJustBugsMe|>>

to:

** Agreed; that is weird. However, I'm going to offer that it may be a moral about commitment. To have a dress made is something of a commitment, you put time and material and energy into it. However, a commitment like that is lost on the Moon, because she changes size all the time. So perhaps the moral is, "Know your own nature; don't make commitments you can't keep, and don't enter promises with people who are fickle."
----
<<|ItJustBugsMe|>>
"
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Ain't No Rule is not the trope name. It's just a redirect to Loophole Abuse.


** Hey, AintNoRule.

to:

** Hey, AintNoRule.[[LoopholeAbuse ain't no rule]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** A couple possible morals occurred to me after reading it: If taken literally, I see the moral as the satyr being [[YouFailPhysicsForever an idiot who doesn't understand basic temperature transfer]] and [[WitchHunt thinks he has supernatural powers]]. If taken as a political metaphor, I agree with the above see it as the satyr [[False Dichotomy hating moderates, centrists, and compromise]]. The only way I've thought of that makes satyr not an idiot is if the hand warming and soup cooling happened one after the other, in which case he could have just held the bowl to accomplish both at once, and the satyr doesn't want to associate with someone who didn't think to do that (although, those are still some [[DisproportionateRetribution ridiculously high standards]]).

to:

** A couple possible morals occurred to me after reading it: If taken literally, I see the moral as the satyr being [[YouFailPhysicsForever an idiot who doesn't understand basic temperature transfer]] and [[WitchHunt thinks he has supernatural powers]]. If taken as a political metaphor, I agree with the above see it as the satyr [[False Dichotomy [[FalseDichotomy hating moderates, centrists, and compromise]]. The only way I've thought of that makes satyr not an idiot is if the hand warming and soup cooling happened one after the other, in which case he could have just held the bowl to accomplish both at once, and the satyr doesn't want to associate with someone who didn't think to do that (although, those are still some [[DisproportionateRetribution ridiculously high standards]]).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** A couple possible morals occurred to me after reading it: If taken literally, I see the moral as the satyr being [[YouFailPhysicsForever an idiot who doesn't understand basic temperature transfer]] and [[WitchHunt thinks he has supernatural powers]]. If taken as a political metaphor, I agree with the above see it as the satyr [[False Dichotomy hating moderates, centrists, and compromise]]. The only way I've thought of that makes satyr not an idiot is if the hand warming and soup cooling happened one after the other, in which case he could have just held the bowl to accomplish both at once, and the satyr doesn't want to associate with someone who didn't think to do that (although, those are still some [[DisproportionateRetribution ridiculously high standards]]).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. [=Strawman=] argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.

to:

*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. [=Strawman=] [[TheWarOnStraw Strawman]] argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. [=StrawMan=] argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.

to:

*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. [=StrawMan=] [=Strawman=] argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. [StrawMan=] argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.

to:

*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. [StrawMan=] [=StrawMan=] argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. StrawMan argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.

to:

*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. StrawMan [StrawMan=] argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
If it\'s not about this work, it doesn\'t belong on this work\'s page.


* The story of the ugly duckling. Think about the story a minute. What it tells you is that if you are ugly you will get nowhere in life. For people to like you, you need to turn beautiful. [[SarcasmMode Not the feel good story of the year.]]
** I'd just like to notice this is not an Aesop Fable. The point is made, though...
*** True, but it is used as one. People use it all the time to comfort children who feel disliked.
** I'd say its actual point is more about perseverance, and not giving up on yourself. Had the cygnet given up and not struggled to survive the winter, he might have never made it to his "[[BuffySpeak swany-ness]]". So it's more about "don't give up on life."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** I'd say its actual point is more about perseverance, and not giving up on yourself. Had the cygnet given up and not struggled to survive the winter, he might have never made it to his "swany-ness". So it's more about "don't give up on life."

to:

** I'd say its actual point is more about perseverance, and not giving up on yourself. Had the cygnet given up and not struggled to survive the winter, he might have never made it to his "swany-ness"."[[BuffySpeak swany-ness]]". So it's more about "don't give up on life."

Added: 8102

Changed: 500

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
swapping ptitle and redirect


[[redirect:JustBugsMe/{{Ptitlekz5pnid1}}]]

to:

[[redirect:JustBugsMe/{{Ptitlekz5pnid1}}]]* The story of the tortoise and the hare just bugs me. Its moral is supposed to be "slow and steady wins the race", but that's not it at all. It's a story about overconfidence and humility. If the hare had kept running, he would have won, regardless of how slow and steady the tortoise moved. It's only because he decided to thumb his nose at the tortoise by taking a nap before the finish line. The real moral of the story is don't underestimate your opponent and always be a good sport.
** Already discussed here: [[Headscratchers/TheTortoiseAndTheHare The Tortoise and the Hare]].
** In the original tales themselves the morals were not stated at the end. Those were later additions/interpretations.
* The story of the ugly duckling. Think about the story a minute. What it tells you is that if you are ugly you will get nowhere in life. For people to like you, you need to turn beautiful. [[SarcasmMode Not the feel good story of the year.]]
** I'd just like to notice this is not an Aesop Fable. The point is made, though...
*** True, but it is used as one. People use it all the time to comfort children who feel disliked.
** I'd say its actual point is more about perseverance, and not giving up on yourself. Had the cygnet given up and not struggled to survive the winter, he might have never made it to his "swany-ness". So it's more about "don't give up on life."
* So, "The North Wind And The Sun"... the stated aesop is "kindness, gentleness, and persuasion win where force fails", but my mind never gets over the fact that the Sun clearly cheated. There was ''no way'' the North Wind could take off the traveler's coat, even with kindness, gentleness and persuasion!
** In some versions it's a cloak, which would be more feasible. And anyway, the North Wind did take him up on it, so he can't really complain.
*** The point I'm putting is that, applying the moral to the story, the wind would never get the man to take the coat off with kindness and whatnot. Answering my own qualm, the story shouldn't be taken to face value, but it'd be more effective if both Sun and Wind had the means to make the man take out the coat with gentleness and whatever, and not only one of them.
**** I think it was more of a "whose way is better" contest, not a "let's see who can find the best way fastest."
**** And besides, what do you mean by "no way"? If the North Wind had blown as a gentle, swirling, inviting breeze, it might have enticed the traveler to stop for a rest, take off his coat, and play for a while in the pleasant wind.
** Hey, AintNoRule.
* In all of the fables you have an animal or whatever anthropomorphized and imbued with a really basic nature, so as to illustrate a single human quality. Right. So in the fables that end with one character proving his point over another, what happens to the loser? Sometimes they die or are destroyed, like in TheFarmerAndTheViper, but sometimes, like the above one about the North Wind and the Sun, it just ends. The North Wind's whole reason for existence has just been proven pointless, but presumably he can't change his nature, so what's he supposed to do about it? Just keep blowing pathetically at travelers while the Sun lies back and smirks? Why doesn't he get to cash in on the moral like the reader?
** The fables aren't about teaching the loser, they're about teaching the reader, like a cautionary tale. So yeah, the loser gets a pretty raw deal.
** All the North Wind has to do is accept that he is not very good at making travellers take off their coats, but he ''is'' very good at making travellers grab their coats really tightly in tacit acknowledgement of the North Wind's power, and be content with that.
* The Man and the Satyr:
-->''A Man and a Satyr once formed a bond of alliance. One very cold wintry day, as they talked together, the Man put his fingers to his mouth and blew on them. On the Satyr inquiring the reason, he told him that he did it to warm his hands. Later on in the day they sat down to eat, the food prepared being quite scalding. The Man raised one of his dishes towards his mouth and blew in it. On the Satyr again inquiring the reason, he said that he did it to cool the meat. "I can no longer consider you as a friend," said the Satyr; "a fellow who with the same breath blows hot and cold I could never trust."''
--->''A man who talks for both sides is not to be trusted by either.''
:: Perfectly good moral, terrible metaphor. There's nothing wrong with the fact that humans can blow hot and cold. The Satyr just doesn't get it.
** Maybe I'm being hypocritical, but you're taking the story too much to face value. This being a Greek fable, the story pretty much existed to illustrate the moral. It actually looks more like a joke with a moral, in fact...
*** Yeah, but it ''doesn't'' illustrate the moral. There are other Aesop's fables that have more or less the same point, like the OriginMyth about how bats were trying to be birds and beasts at the same time and were banished to live in darkness when both groups found out about it. That one makes sense, as the bats were actually trying to suck up to both sides of a conflict. All the man was trying to do was warm up his hands and cool down his food. It's using a metaphor ''inside'' the fable, which kind of kills the point.
*** That bugged me too, along with mild ParanoiaFuel. I was slightly traumatized about blowing to warm myself/cool my food for a while after reading that...because the version I read didn't even give the metaphorical explanation.
** The ''real'' problem with that is that the man's breath was pulling towards a comfortable (for him) medium. It's an argument against moderacy, assuming it wasn't translated wrong.
** I think the problem is that it went from moral story to a clever pun. Also, one wonders why we should be taking moral lessons from ''satyrs''.
*** Exactly. Satyrs were almost always depicted as complete asshats. StrawMan argues against moderation and in this case does not have a point.
* The frog and the Ox. Not all creatures can become as great as they think, English translation; the story boils down to don't try to be something your not, and be complacent with where you are in life. What kind of moral is that? When has being accepting of your lot in life ever achieved anything. Every thing great in life from the wheel to the A-bomb came from someone saying "This sucks, I want something better, I know what I could do..." No person we remember in history lived a life of mediocrity.
** And those are the oxes. The frogs are the ones who try to be big, and may even become big, but don't have what it takes to stay big. Think what happens if you give a homeless person a bag with one million dollars, great chances are they'll just blow it all in possessions they won't be able to maintain. So they "blow up" and get back to the first peg. This doesn't mean they can't become that big, just that they aren't doing it right(and, in that regard, the fable doesn't give an alternative that's not "die and be born again").
*** Uh, no. Oxen are born into their great stature, frogs are not. saying that the frog is going about it the wrong way is a confirmation of the idea that he should just be happy the way he is, small and miserable. The ox did NOTHING to achieve its great status, and the frog showed initiative and tried to accomplish something. The oxes are the people who were born into power.
**** ValuesDissonance, peasant. Suck it up and get back to watching your employer's goats. * RimShot* Don't forget to tithe to your goddesses!
**** Alternately, the point is that the frog's goal was delusional. The impossible will always be impossible no matter how hard you try. Because for every person who succeeded in achieving something amazing there are at least one hundred others who pursued an impossible dream to misery and ruin.
* What is the point behind "The Moon and her Mother"? To put it in short, the Moon asks for her Mother to make her a dress. Her Mother complains she can't, as the Moon keeps changing size as it passes through its phases. Then it ends. [[http://childhoodreading.com/?p=128 Here's a link to the story.]] What is the point?
** Agreed; that is weird. However, I'm going to offer that it may be a moral about commitment. To have a dress made is something of a commitment, you put time and material and energy into it. However, a commitment like that is lost on the Moon, because she changes size all the time. So perhaps the moral is, "Know your own nature; don't make commitments you can't keep, and don't enter promises with people who are fickle."
----
<<|ItJustBugsMe|>>

Changed: 496

Removed: 6077

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Just moving the page over to the punctuated title.


* The story of the tortoise and the hare just bugs me. Its moral is supposed to be "slow and steady wins the race", but that's not it at all. It's a story about overconfidence and humility. If the hare had kept running, he would have won, regardless of how slow and steady the tortoise moved. It's only because he decided to thumb his nose at the tortoise by taking a nap before the finish line. The real moral of the story is don't underestimate your opponent and always be a good sport.
** Already discussed here: [[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/JustBugsMe/TheTortoiseAndTheHare The Tortoise and the Hare]].
* The story of the ugly duckling. Think about the story a minute. What it tells you is that if you are ugly you will get nowhere in life. For people to like you, you need to turn beautiful. [[SarcasmMode Not the feel good story of the year.]]
** I'd just like to notice this is not an Aesop Fable. The point is made, though...
*** True, but it is used as one. People use it all the time to comfort children who feel disliked.
* So, "The North Wind And The Sun"... the stated aesop is "kindness, gentleness, and persuasion win where force fails", but my mind never gets over the fact that the Sun clearly cheated. There was ''no way'' the North Wind could take off the traveler's coat, even with kindness, gentleness and persuasion!
** In some versions it's a cloak, which would be more feasible. And anyway, the North Wind did take him up on it, so he can't really complain.
*** The point I'm putting is that, applying the moral to the story, the wind would never get the man to take the coat off with kindness and whatnot. Answering my own qualm, the story shouldn't be taken to face value, but it'd be more effective if both Sun and Wind had the means to make the man take out the coat with gentleness and whatever, and not only one of them.
**** I think it was more of a "whose way is better" contest, not a "let's see who can find the best way fastest."
* In all of the fables you have an animal or whatever anthropomorphized and imbued with a really basic nature, so as to illustrate a single human quality. Right. So in the fables that end with one character proving his point over another, what happens to the loser? Sometimes they die or are destroyed, like in TheFarmerAndTheViper, but sometimes, like the above one about the North Wind and the Sun, it just ends. The North Wind's whole reason for existence has just been proven pointless, but presumably he can't change his nature, so what's he supposed to do about it? Just keep blowing pathetically at travelers while the Sun lies back and smirks? Why doesn't he get to cash in on the moral like the reader?
** The fables aren't about teaching the loser, they're about teaching the reader, like a cautionary tale. So yeah, the loser gets a pretty raw deal.
* The Man and the Satyr:
-->''A Man and a Satyr once formed a bond of alliance. One very cold wintry day, as they talked together, the Man put his fingers to his mouth and blew on them. On the Satyr inquiring the reason, he told him that he did it to warm his hands. Later on in the day they sat down to eat, the food prepared being quite scalding. The Man raised one of his dishes towards his mouth and blew in it. On the Satyr again inquiring the reason, he said that he did it to cool the meat. "I can no longer consider you as a friend," said the Satyr; "a fellow who with the same breath blows hot and cold I could never trust."''
--->''A man who talks for both sides is not to be trusted by either.''
:: Perfectly good moral, terrible metaphor. There's nothing wrong with the fact that humans can blow hot and cold. The Satyr just doesn't get it.
** Maybe I'm being hypocritical, but you're taking the story too much to face value. This being a Greek fable, the story pretty much existed to illustrate the moral. It actually looks more like a joke with a moral, in fact...
*** Yeah, but it ''doesn't'' illustrate the moral. There are other Aesop's fables that have more or less the same point, like the OriginMyth about how bats were trying to be birds and beasts at the same time and were banished to live in darkness when both groups found out about it. That one makes sense, as the bats were actually trying to suck up to both sides of a conflict. All the man was trying to do was warm up his hands and cool down his food. It's using a metaphor ''inside'' the fable, which kind of kills the point.
*** That bugged me too, along with mild ParanoiaFuel. I was slightly traumatized about blowing to warm myself/cool my food for a while after reading that...because the version I read didn't even give the metaphorical explanation.
** The ''real'' problem with that is that the man's breath was pulling towards a comfortable (for him) medium. It's an argument against moderacy, assuming it wasn't translated wrong.
** I think the problem is that it went from moral story to a clever pun. Also, one wonders why we should be taking moral lessons from ''satyrs''.
* the frog and the Ox. Not all creatures can become as great as they think, English translation; the story boils down to don't try to be something your not, and be complacent with where you are in life. What kind of moral is that? When has being accepting of your lot in life ever achieved anything. Every thing great in life from the wheel to the A-bomb came from someone saying "This sucks, I want something better, I know what I could do..." No person we remember in history lived a life of mediocrity.
** And those are the oxes. The frogs are the ones who try to be big, and may even become big, but don't have what it takes to stay big. Think what happens if you give a homeless person a bag with one million dollars, great chances are they'll just blow it all in possessions they won't be able to maintain. So they "blow up" and get back to the first peg. This doesn't mean they can't become that big, just that they aren't doing it right(and, in that regard, the fable doesn't give an alternative that's not "die and be born again").
*** Uh, no. Oxen are born into their great stature, frogs are not. saying that the frog is going about it the wrong way is a confirmation of the idea that he should just be happy the way he is, small and miserable. The ox did NOTHING to achieve it's great status, and the frog showed initiative and tried to accomplish something. The oxes are the people who were born into power.
**** ValuesDissonance, peasant. Suck it up and get back to watching your employer's goats. * RimShot* Don't forget to tithe to your goddesses!

----
<<|ItJustBugsMe|>>

to:

* The story of the tortoise and the hare just bugs me. Its moral is supposed to be "slow and steady wins the race", but that's not it at all. It's a story about overconfidence and humility. If the hare had kept running, he would have won, regardless of how slow and steady the tortoise moved. It's only because he decided to thumb his nose at the tortoise by taking a nap before the finish line. The real moral of the story is don't underestimate your opponent and always be a good sport.
** Already discussed here: [[http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/JustBugsMe/TheTortoiseAndTheHare The Tortoise and the Hare]].
* The story of the ugly duckling. Think about the story a minute. What it tells you is that if you are ugly you will get nowhere in life. For people to like you, you need to turn beautiful. [[SarcasmMode Not the feel good story of the year.]]
** I'd just like to notice this is not an Aesop Fable. The point is made, though...
*** True, but it is used as one. People use it all the time to comfort children who feel disliked.
* So, "The North Wind And The Sun"... the stated aesop is "kindness, gentleness, and persuasion win where force fails", but my mind never gets over the fact that the Sun clearly cheated. There was ''no way'' the North Wind could take off the traveler's coat, even with kindness, gentleness and persuasion!
** In some versions it's a cloak, which would be more feasible. And anyway, the North Wind did take him up on it, so he can't really complain.
*** The point I'm putting is that, applying the moral to the story, the wind would never get the man to take the coat off with kindness and whatnot. Answering my own qualm, the story shouldn't be taken to face value, but it'd be more effective if both Sun and Wind had the means to make the man take out the coat with gentleness and whatever, and not only one of them.
**** I think it was more of a "whose way is better" contest, not a "let's see who can find the best way fastest."
* In all of the fables you have an animal or whatever anthropomorphized and imbued with a really basic nature, so as to illustrate a single human quality. Right. So in the fables that end with one character proving his point over another, what happens to the loser? Sometimes they die or are destroyed, like in TheFarmerAndTheViper, but sometimes, like the above one about the North Wind and the Sun, it just ends. The North Wind's whole reason for existence has just been proven pointless, but presumably he can't change his nature, so what's he supposed to do about it? Just keep blowing pathetically at travelers while the Sun lies back and smirks? Why doesn't he get to cash in on the moral like the reader?
** The fables aren't about teaching the loser, they're about teaching the reader, like a cautionary tale. So yeah, the loser gets a pretty raw deal.
* The Man and the Satyr:
-->''A Man and a Satyr once formed a bond of alliance. One very cold wintry day, as they talked together, the Man put his fingers to his mouth and blew on them. On the Satyr inquiring the reason, he told him that he did it to warm his hands. Later on in the day they sat down to eat, the food prepared being quite scalding. The Man raised one of his dishes towards his mouth and blew in it. On the Satyr again inquiring the reason, he said that he did it to cool the meat. "I can no longer consider you as a friend," said the Satyr; "a fellow who with the same breath blows hot and cold I could never trust."''
--->''A man who talks for both sides is not to be trusted by either.''
:: Perfectly good moral, terrible metaphor. There's nothing wrong with the fact that humans can blow hot and cold. The Satyr just doesn't get it.
** Maybe I'm being hypocritical, but you're taking the story too much to face value. This being a Greek fable, the story pretty much existed to illustrate the moral. It actually looks more like a joke with a moral, in fact...
*** Yeah, but it ''doesn't'' illustrate the moral. There are other Aesop's fables that have more or less the same point, like the OriginMyth about how bats were trying to be birds and beasts at the same time and were banished to live in darkness when both groups found out about it. That one makes sense, as the bats were actually trying to suck up to both sides of a conflict. All the man was trying to do was warm up his hands and cool down his food. It's using a metaphor ''inside'' the fable, which kind of kills the point.
*** That bugged me too, along with mild ParanoiaFuel. I was slightly traumatized about blowing to warm myself/cool my food for a while after reading that...because the version I read didn't even give the metaphorical explanation.
** The ''real'' problem with that is that the man's breath was pulling towards a comfortable (for him) medium. It's an argument against moderacy, assuming it wasn't translated wrong.
** I think the problem is that it went from moral story to a clever pun. Also, one wonders why we should be taking moral lessons from ''satyrs''.
* the frog and the Ox. Not all creatures can become as great as they think, English translation; the story boils down to don't try to be something your not, and be complacent with where you are in life. What kind of moral is that? When has being accepting of your lot in life ever achieved anything. Every thing great in life from the wheel to the A-bomb came from someone saying "This sucks, I want something better, I know what I could do..." No person we remember in history lived a life of mediocrity.
** And those are the oxes. The frogs are the ones who try to be big, and may even become big, but don't have what it takes to stay big. Think what happens if you give a homeless person a bag with one million dollars, great chances are they'll just blow it all in possessions they won't be able to maintain. So they "blow up" and get back to the first peg. This doesn't mean they can't become that big, just that they aren't doing it right(and, in that regard, the fable doesn't give an alternative that's not "die and be born again").
*** Uh, no. Oxen are born into their great stature, frogs are not. saying that the frog is going about it the wrong way is a confirmation of the idea that he should just be happy the way he is, small and miserable. The ox did NOTHING to achieve it's great status, and the frog showed initiative and tried to accomplish something. The oxes are the people who were born into power.
**** ValuesDissonance, peasant. Suck it up and get back to watching your employer's goats. * RimShot* Don't forget to tithe to your goddesses!

----
<<|ItJustBugsMe|>>
[[redirect:JustBugsMe/{{Ptitlekz5pnid1}}]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** That bugged me too, along with mild ParnoiaFuel. I was slightly traumatized about blowing to warm myself/cool my food for a while after reading that...because the version I read didn't even give the metaphorical explanation.

to:

*** That bugged me too, along with mild ParnoiaFuel.ParanoiaFuel. I was slightly traumatized about blowing to warm myself/cool my food for a while after reading that...because the version I read didn't even give the metaphorical explanation.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** I think the problem is that it went from moral story to a clever pun. Also, one wonders why we should be taking moral lessons from ''satyrs''.

Top