Hubris(excessive pride or arrogance)
Creon's tragic flaw is hubris, thinking he can set the laws of human beings above the laws of the gods.
Odysseus' tragic flaw is his pride.
cassius' tragic flaw was jealousy
Hubris - Compare with Nemesis
He was not brought down by a tragic flaw, but by honor, not a flaw but a key charactaristic in his admirable personality.
Creon's tragic flaw is hubris, thinking he can set the laws of human beings above the laws of the gods.
Odysseus' tragic flaw is his pride.
cassius' tragic flaw was jealousy
His tragic flaw was that he was too religious.
tragic flaw
Hubris - Compare with Nemesis
they both have a tragic hero with a tragic flaw in JC: Brutus; whos tragic flaw is his naivity In TFA: Okonkwo; who tragic flaw is being like his father (being feminine)
According to Aristotle, a tragic hero's flaw is known as hamartia, which is often translated as a "tragic flaw" or mistake in judgment. This flaw leads to the hero's downfall and is typically related to their own character traits or actions.
He was not brought down by a tragic flaw, but by honor, not a flaw but a key charactaristic in his admirable personality.
Juliet does not have a "tragic flaw". It's a fiction invented by Victorian moralists.
Ambition
it was his jealousy