preview

Sigmund Freud's Allegory Of The Cave

Decent Essays

Id, Ego, Superego

From the Freud's "The Interpretation of Dreams", there are three parts in the human personality that named the id, ego and superego. These parts are developing at different stages of lives and it is not part of the brain or physical but a system. Id is the primitive and instinctive component of personality. It includes all the inherited personalities. It exists in an unconsciousness mind which it can respond immediately and directly without notice. All the newborns are born with the id and later developed the ego and superego. Id will not affect by logic or any other factors.

Ego develops in early stage of the child to distinguish the external reality and inner fantasy. Ego is much logical and make sense to the reality. …show more content…

They were chained, facing a wall, unable to turn their heads. A fire behind them give off a faint light. People carried with animals or objects passed by the fire made the shadow and reflect on the wall. The prisoners name and classify these illusions and believed they were perceiving the actual objects. Suddenly, one of the prisoners is freed and saw the outside world for the first time. He realized there is the actual objects existed and the shadow is merely a reflection. After he can clearly see the object directly and not the shadow, he returned to the cave and shared the story. Since he was outside with the light, he had hard time to see the shadow on the wall. The other prisoners' perspective could not connect with him, they resist violently to let him free them. Plato give the idea that people are ignorant ad stubborn yet hostile to anyone who point it out. The allegory contains the theory of forms developed in Plato's dialogues. For example, the shadow on the wall means the things in the physical world are flawed reflection of ideal forms such as roundness or beauty. The cave can lead to many fundamental questions like the origin of knowledge and the problem of representation. In philosophy, the language views the form as linguistic concepts and the theory illustrate the problem of grouping concrete things under abstract

Get Access