Introduction
The notion that individuals possess agency over their destinies is a cornerstone of human psychology, fostering a sense of purpose and accountability. However, numerous literary and cinematic works interrogate this assumption by depicting fate as an inexorable force that subsumes human choices. This essay examines how The Iliad by Homer, the film The Matrix (1999), and the film Final Destination (2000) illustrate that free will does not oppose fate but rather facilitates its fulfilment. Through detailed analysis, it argues that apparent choices, while providing an illusion of control, operate within predetermined boundaries, reinforcing destiny. Drawing on literary criticism and philosophical perspectives, the discussion highlights how these narratives challenge simplistic views of agency, revealing a paradoxical interplay where resistance to fate ultimately affirms it. The essay is structured around key texts, exploring themes of prophecy, resistance, perception, and identity, before concluding on broader implications for understanding human behaviour.
Fate as an Unquestionable Force in The Iliad
In Homer’s The Iliad, fate emerges as an omnipotent structure governing mortals and gods alike, with human decisions serving merely as conduits for its realisation. Achilles, the epic’s central hero, faces a pivotal choice: a long, obscure life or a short one marked by eternal glory. This dilemma initially appears to embody free will, as Achilles weighs his options amid the Trojan War. However, as he reflects, “if I stay here and fight, I shall not return alive but my name will live forever” (Homer, 1919, Book 9). This statement underscores that his alternatives are preordained, not freely invented; he selects from fates already decreed by the Moirai, the Greek fates who, as Cartwright (2016) notes, dictate destinies beyond even divine intervention.
This mythological framework, where fate transcends power hierarchies, emphasises its absoluteness. Cartwright (2016) explains that the Moirai’s threads represent unalterable lifespans, binding figures like Zeus himself. Achilles’ prowess—his martial skill and strategic acumen—does not grant escape but shapes the manner of his doom. For instance, his withdrawal from battle due to wounded pride and subsequent return fueled by Patroclus’s death propel him toward the prophesied end. These emotional drivers, seemingly personal, align seamlessly with fate, suggesting agency is internalised within destiny’s design. Dodds (1951) argues this reflects a Greek view of agency as illusory, where individuals act under unseen influences, mistaking compulsion for choice.
Furthermore, prophecy in The Iliad amplifies this paradox. Roberts (1984) observes that oracles in Greek literature often self-fulfil through the behaviours they provoke. Achilles knows his fate yet pursues glory, interpreting it as purposeful rather than inevitable. This awareness does not empower alteration but refines commitment, internalising fate into identity. Arguably, such integration transforms potential despair into heroic resolve, illustrating how fate operates subtly through cognition and emotion, not overt coercion.
Impersonal Inevitability in Final Destination
Shifting to modern cinema, Final Destination presents fate as a mechanistic, impersonal system devoid of moral or divine oversight, where human efforts to evade death inadvertently ensure it. The protagonists, having foreseen and survived a plane crash, believe they have cheated fate, only to encounter a relentless sequence of fatalities. As one character warns, “you can’t cheat death” (Final Destination, 2000), encapsulating the film’s fatalistic core. Unlike The Iliad’s structured mythology, here fate manifests as an algorithmic “design,” indifferent to intention.
The film’s ingenuity lies in how resistance becomes complicit in fate’s execution. Characters employ logic and prediction to anticipate perils, such as interpreting omens or altering environments, yet these interventions create Rube Goldberg-like chains leading to demise. This mirrors Rice’s (2004) definition of fatalism, where outcomes remain fixed irrespective of action; efforts to subvert merely adapt the path, not the endpoint. For example, attempts to “skip” one’s turn in death’s order often precipitate the very accidents feared, transforming proactive agency into fatal irony.
Psychologically, this breeds escalating dread, stripping the illusion of control without compensatory meaning. Unlike Achilles’ purposeful embrace, these characters’ resistance heightens helplessness, prompting reflection on responses to inevitability: defiance versus acceptance. Typically, the film suggests resistance amplifies suffering, as failed predictions erode sanity. This contrast with The Iliad highlights fate’s variability—sometimes offering narrative solace, other times exposing raw powerlessness—while underscoring that human reasoning, however sophisticated, cannot transcend predetermined structures.
Perception and Choice in The Matrix
The Matrix reimagines fate within a simulated reality, questioning whether perceived choices mask deterministic underpinnings. Neo’s arc revolves around his prophesied role as “The One,” initially rejected in favour of self-determination. The Oracle’s intervention complicates this: by declaring him not The One, she influences actions that fulfil the prophecy, later clarifying, “You’ve already made the choice. Now you have to understand it” (The Matrix, 1999). This implies choices are retrospective recognitions, not originations, embedded in a programmed matrix.
Perception here is key, as Neo’s growth stems from reconceptualising reality, bending its rules through belief. McKenna and Coates (2023) describe determinism as behaviour shaped by antecedent conditions, aligning with Neo’s journey where free will feels authentic yet operates within systemic constraints. His decisions—rejecting then embracing his role—do not disrupt the simulation but optimise his function within it, suggesting knowledge reinforces boundaries rather than dismantling them.
Moreover, the film’s temporal structure portrays time as illusory progression toward fixed points. Neo’s “awakening” unfolds sequentially, building inevitability through layered revelations, much like the gradual unveilings in The Iliad and Final Destination. Identity, too, intertwines with fate: Neo’s self-definition evolves from doubt to conviction, yet remains conditioned by the matrix’s architecture. This perspective enriches the discourse, proposing that agency, while meaningful experientially, is circumscribed, serving destiny’s narrative arc.
The Interplay of Fate, Time, and Identity Across Texts
Examining these works collectively reveals fate’s operation through time and identity, not merely events. In The Iliad, time accumulates decisions toward prophecy’s climax, exposing fate incrementally. Final Destination uses sequential delays to feign malleability, distinguishing postponement from true aversion. The Matrix manipulates perceived time within simulation, where awareness enhances integration, not liberation.
Identity further complicates agency: Achilles crafts heroism from fate, Final Destination’s characters face erosion of self through futility, and Neo negotiates imposed destiny. These dynamics suggest choices shape fate’s experience—infusing meaning or despair—without altering outcomes. Therefore, free will and fate coexist symbiotically, the former propelling the latter’s realisation.
Conclusion
In summary, The Iliad, The Matrix, and Final Destination collectively dismantle the binary of free will versus fate, portraying agency as fate’s instrument. Through Achilles’ heroic acquiescence, the futile struggles in Final Destination, and Neo’s perceptual evolution, these narratives demonstrate that choices, prophecies, and resistances reinforce predetermination. This challenges anthropocentric views of control, implying broader philosophical implications: human purpose may derive not from autonomy but from meaningful navigation of constraints. Indeed, such insights encourage reevaluation of personal responsibility, fostering resilience amid life’s inevitabilities. Future literary studies might explore how contemporary media further evolves these themes, bridging ancient and modern understandings of destiny.
References
- Cartwright, M. (2016) Moirai. World History Encyclopedia.
- Dodds, E. R. (1951) The Greeks and the Irrational. University of California Press.
- Final Destination (2000) [Film] Directed by James Wong. New Line Cinema.
- Homer (1919) The Iliad. Translated by A. T. Murray. Harvard University Press. (Original work from c. 8th century BCE)
- McKenna, M. and Coates, D. J. (2023) Compatibilism. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Rice, H. (2004) Fatalism. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Roberts, D. H. (1984) Apollo and His Oracle in the Orestes. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
- The Matrix (1999) [Film] Directed by The Wachowskis. Warner Bros.

