Allegory of the Cave Essay

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    Society is filled with naivety. People rely on the majority, blindly follow power, and often don’t look at the big picture. Humans have the innate ability to believe what is in front of them without requiring inquiry. This matter is what Plato’s Allegory of the Cave is entirely revolved around: a person’s beliefs, reasonings, and reactions about truth and the world around oneself. Similarities between people today and the characters in Plato’s dialogue are all but few; people’s actions and thinkings are

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    Introduction a. Background information: The Metaphor of the Allegory of the Cave” by Plato is to show the difference in which we perceive and believe in what is real. This essay would be about Plato Allegory and what is happening nowadays with fake news. b. Thesis: The main idea of Plato Allegory is the opinion that everything we perceive in this world are reflections of the ultimate forms, which represent reality. And This discussion on Plato’s Allegory help us understand people truth and belief in fake

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    My Allegory of the Cave The widely opened front door, that just as matriarchal arms open security, wellness, and love to your new creation, welcomes me to this concrete shaped structure, surrounded by enormous Araucaria trees with colorful crochet rounding their massive trunk. As I walk in, the green walls rebirth my inherited Amazon flora, creating a fluidity that protects and guide me inside. Running barefoot, I can feel the crocodile leather-like floor, where my feet can intertwine with the social

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    problems. To support my claim, I will look at The Inferno by Dante and The Allegory of the Cave by Plato, whose interpretations of light appear to work well with one another. First, I will analyze the significance of in a non-religious context. Second, I will analyze the significance of in a religious context. Thirdly, I will show why this metaphor of light yield problems for the viewer of light. In Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, light represents a definitive truth. After seeing “the form of the good”

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    relationship between certainty and doubt is still intrinsically linked, and doubt is necessary to experience true certainty. In Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave,” he depicts a scenario in which a group of individuals lives their entire lives chained in a cave, only ever able to see their shadows on the cave wall. Effectively, Plato speaks of how the shadows on the cave wall would be their only sense of reality, which would limit their perception of the world. The people would have no

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    “Allegory of the Cave”, by Plato was a scenario to explain the understandings of reality and human perception. It goes in depth talking about what steps a person would take in understanding their new perceived reality. The text describes the main person going through a ‘metamorphosis’, if you will, of his cave reality to the outer world and seeing the sun. I believe people can learn and adapt and are still able to understand what their previous perception would be. Humans are born with an innate

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    In Plato's allegory of the cave, the prisoners are chained inside the cave and are facing a wall in which a fire burns behind them. However, behind them also exists a path in which individuals can walk. Those individuals bring puppets and cast the puppets' shadows on the wall so the chained individuals can watch them. The prisoners can only see the shadows on the wall and can hear the sounds of the echoes within the caves. Plato's allegory of the cave can be compared to multiple distinctions within

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    another to be the greatest, ignoring the reality of life. In the “Allegory of the Cave,” Plato justifies this by displaying a parable that serves as a metaphor for life. This parable teaches the reader how people wish to remain in their comfort zones and disregard the truth. It portrays the struggle of facing different realities that alter the illusion of one's life. In the story, he described a group of prisoners chained inside a dark cave; their only source of light comes from a burning fire that is

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    The allegory of the cave proposed by Plato includes the representation of the levels of knowledge. As we get closer to the exit, we get more knowledgeable and wiser we get, thus becoming better selves. Literature represents part of this knowledge, it has been a fundamental part of understanding our society, and has archived and developed the events and thoughts that made the world in which we live today. The more we read, the more we understand about us as well as learning from other peoples’ experiences

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    The Matrix is a modern work based on Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave.” Neo and the prisoner play parallel roles in their journey for freedom, and ultimately truth. In their journey, both have common themes of being suspicious of one’s senses and the agony of knowledge. On the other hand, the two have different obstacles: the prisoner must go against his own beliefs, while Neo is against both his own mind and an outside force. In essence, despite the difference of characters, both the movie and the

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