The woman saw how beautiful the tree was and how good its fruit would be to eat and she thought how wonderful it would be to become wise. So she took some of the fruit and ate it. Then she gave some to her husband, and he also ate it. As soon as they had eaten it, they were given to the understanding and realized that they were naked; so they sewed fig leaves together to cover themselves. That evening they heard the Lord …show more content…
Focusing on The Salem Witch Trials of 1692, Miller takes us through the chilling journey of seventeen-year-old Abigail Williams and her witch hunt. Abigail and her cousin Betty Parris delved in to witchcraft in the woods of Salem, Massachusetts, under the influence of their slave, Tituba. As a result, Betty fell deathly ill and would lie unmoving on her bed. Many doctors came to see her, but none of them could diagnose what Betty had until a reverend came to visit her. The reverend recited scripture over Betty and she convulsed. The only answer to why that reaction would occur was sorcery. Abigail, scared she would be blamed for the cursing of her cousin, immediately pointed the finger at Tituba Things quickly spiraled downward from there. Abigail and Betty, fearing for their own lives, started blaming others besides Tituba for practicing witchcraft. These accused women were summoned to court and tried as witches. Abigail and Betty would be present for the trials and convulse as if the women had put a spell on them, condemning many innocent lives. Although some of Millers facts are not historically accurate, the truth remains that Abigail falsely testified against other people because she was afraid for her own life and …show more content…
The first is extinction: the state of being extinguished, or of ceasing to be. Delving a little more into psychology, phobias such as: fear of heights, fear of water, or fear of enclosed spaces, can all be traced back to the fear of extinction. That heart flutter humans experience when coasting down a roller coaster or looking over a steep cliff happens because the brain is imagining the body falling for a moment. The second category is mutilation: the state of being mutilated; depravation of a limb or an essential part. Albrecht states that the fears of animals or reptiles often stem from this division. The third is loss of autonomy: the fear of being immobilized or paralyzed. Albrecht says loss of autonomy can cause damage in realationships. The fourth category is separation: the fear of abandonment. Every being has some sort of “abandonment issues”, no one would actually wish to be alone forever. Being with and around other people fuels our human nature…we can’t live without one another. The last category is ego death: the fear of humiliation or