So I was thinking about this the other day.
As far as I know, in the story of Sisyphus, he was "doomed" to push a boulder up a hill, and when it got to the top, it would roll back down. For eternity. He was told he could leave if he was able to get the boulder to the top of the hill (which, of course, he couldn't), and thus he continually tried to push it up the hill.
But as far as I know, he wasn't in a torturous place (i.e. he wasn't being tortured, per se). So he could, in theory, just decide to not push the boulder up the hill. Right?
I asked a friend about it, and he didn't elaborate beyond "That wasn't an option".
As far as I know, in the story of Sisyphus, he was "doomed" to push a boulder up a hill, and when it got to the top, it would roll back down. For eternity. He was told he could leave if he was able to get the boulder to the top of the hill (which, of course, he couldn't), and thus he continually tried to push it up the hill.
But as far as I know, he wasn't in a torturous place (i.e. he wasn't being tortured, per se). So he could, in theory, just decide to not push the boulder up the hill. Right?
I asked a friend about it, and he didn't elaborate beyond "That wasn't an option".

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