Paradise Lost (1667) by John Milton (1608–1674) emerges as a theologically inflected epic wherein classical poetics, sacred temporality, and rhetorical artifice coalesce to dramatize the corruption and potential redemption of moral agency. At the heart of this theodical narrative lies a trenchant repudiation of sophistry, manifest in Satan's deliberate subversion of Aristotelian modes of persuasion—ethos, pathos, and logos—which he weaponizes not to disclose, but to occlude the verity of God. Milton employs the Aristotelian tragic structure—hamartia, peripeteia, anagnorisis, and catharsis—not as mere formal apparatus but as a theological grammar through which the moral arc of humanity is inscribed. Milton's earlier compositions, notably "On Time" (1631–33) anticipate this polemical posture by repudiating scholastic pedantry and embracing a poetic vocation divinely ordained and attuned to kairos—the providential moment of truth's irruption. As Milton affirms in Prolusions (1620s), the distinction between kairos and chronos in PL becomes architectonic: Satan manipulates chronological time to engender epistemic obfuscation, deferring moral recognition and distorting causal coherence. His rhetoric disfigures free will, inducing Eve to transgress under the illusion of autonomy. In antithesis, sacred utterance—whether angelic oracle or the Son's redemptive proclamation—operates within kairotic temporality, wherein speech coincides with truth and discloses eternal purpose. Through this dialectic, Milton reconfigures classical tragedy as a theological cosmology, wherein properly oriented rhetoric comes to be an instrument of illumination. Thus, PL represents a radical transmutation of Aristotelian Poetics: a sublime fusion of rhetoric and metaphysics whereby sophistic decay is superseded by kairotic disclosure, and the epic form is reoriented toward the crucible of moral and spiritual discernment.
Ryujiro Tatsuno (Tue,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: