Abstract
The text—drawing inspiration from the tale of the three waves in Plato᾿s
Republic—focuses on the final journey of Odysseus, foretold by Homer’s Teiresias in the
Odyssey. This journey—undertaken alone with an oar on his shoulder to a land where people
know nothing of the sea—represents a stage in the path of moral maturation, essential for
achieving a serene old age, concluded with a gentle death among happy people, and a fulfilled
life. It symbolizes the path to a confrontation with something beyond ordinary experience.
Plato points to the need for a similar journey, as in the Allegory of the Cave, where the most
important lessons are learned not from others but through individual effort, by turning
away from what we know in everyday life. At the end of his final journey, Odysseus is to face
the question of whether the oar he carries, symbolizing the hardships of his journey back
from Troy to Ithaca, is in fact a winnowing fan—a farming tool used to separate the grain
from the chaff. The final journey is essential to—using Plato’s language—achieving inner
harmony, which is the basis of justice, a virtue Odysseus appears not to have fully attained
before this journey