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Plato's Allegory Of The Cave

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According to Plato, reality consists of two realms: the physical world, which we experience with our five senses, and the world made up of forms and ideas. Plato explained that forms are the perfect templates that exist somewhere in another dimension, yet he does not specify where, and these templates are the ultimate reference point for all objects that we observe in the physical world. Plato implied that our lives, which we perceive as solid reality, are in fact just a shadow. Plato explained this further through his allegory of the cave. He created a scenario of a cave with three prisoners inside, who had been there their whole lives. They could never see outside the cave, yet they could always see the shadows on the wall of the cave from …show more content…

It is only when you are united with God and you see the light that you can truly experience the perfect templates of the real world. The forms are involved in the physical world, yet they are imperfect and can never truly represent the perfect world. Another example is a chair in your house is an inferior copy of a perfect chair that exists somewhere else in another dimension. Plato further explained that whenever you evaluate one thing as better than another, you assume that there is an absolute good from which the two objects can be compared, so you intuitively know that a chair with four legs is better than a chair with three legs. Plato provided indirect proof of the forms by saying that the soul is immortal and exists before the body itself, therefore it already has an acquired knowledge and humans must therefore try to listen to their soul and allow their soul to guide them in order to experience the perfect world. Evidence to back this statement up is that a deaf and blind child can easily attract attention and knows how to smile from a very young age, despite not being able to learn these characteristics due to their disability, therefore the soul must have previous experience of carrying out these tasks (and so must have previous knowledge of the forms), otherwise how else would the child have known how to do these

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