Allegory of the Cave Essay

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    Comprehending the Mind's Aging Eye "The Allegory of the Cave," by Plato, explains that people experience emotional and intellectual revelations throughout different stages in their lives. This excerpt, from his dialogue The Republic, is a conversation between a philosopher and his pupil. The argument made by this philosopher has been interpreted thousands of times across the world. My own interpretation of this allegory is simple enough as Plato expresses his thoughts as separate stages.

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    The allegory of the cave is a very confusing story in my head. It starts as People shackled to the wall with only the fire for light. Then to one of them breaking free or getting released and going out of the cave to only be blinded. We confuse reality with shadows everyday. They both relate to each other because shadows aren't the real thing. Do you think shadows are confused with reality? Commonly everyday they get confused. This explains why we confuse fake with real things in life. So this

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    especially Neo and Morpheus gave us the hints to all this ideas. The most obvious philosophical work in the film is that which is connected to Plato’s Allegory of the Cave. In one of the allusions of the Allegory of the Cave, the prisoners viewed the shadows dancing on the wall as what is real and what truly exists. In the film, the Matrix symbolizes the cave thus “It (Matrix) is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth.” (Morpheus, 28:07). Morpheus exclaimed in the movie

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    The Matrix and “Allegory of the Cave” have two different views of how reality is formed. In The Matrix the machines manipulated what the humans thought. The people thought this was reality, because this was all they knew. They all experienced what the machines wanted them to. The people in the movie did not have free will their choices were formed by illusions programmed into their brains. The machines used the human thoughts for energy to keep them alive and functioning. Determinist would view this

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    Montag reflects the prisoner’s journey from illusion to enlightenment with the support of other characters; as shown by the evolution of the protagonists in Fahrenheit 451 and “Allegory of the Cave.” Much like the prisoner’s commencement in the stage of illusion, where he is stuck staring at shadows on a wall, Montag starts his journey in a stage of illusion blanketed by the darkness of false happiness, that Mildred also resides in. The men continue to mirror each other as they both move forward

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    conversation between Socrates and Glaucon in “the Allegory of the Cave” to explain the process of getting knowledge is. The allegory presented a prisoner who was shackled in a cave and was forced to see only the shadows that were shown to him. Then Socrates presented a possibility of that prisoner breaking free and slowly finds the light source. At first he saw the fire and his eyes already hurts, and he raged at the person who dragged him outside of the cave. However, with some effort and time on his own

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    In “The Allegory of the Cave” Plato writes how Socrates described two kinds of people, those that are enlightened and knowledgable and those that are ignorant and remain in the dark. Socrates uses reason to show the difference between those that have been enlightened and those that are ignorant as he describes prisoners that have been bound in chains since they were children and have never seen the sun. The prisoners see shadows of passing figures displayed on the cave walls. As these shadows are

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    The Allegory of the Cave ties in with our world and society we live in today in many ways. One way would be that our world we live in values education a lot, more than a lot of things. In Plato: “Allegory of the Cave” the prisoners value education just as much as we do in the modern century. The prisoners praise one another if they guess the right shadow that is going to be displayed. If they guess the wrong shadow then they make fun of one another. As they sit there in the little cave for most of

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    Essay on Plato's Allegory of the Cave

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    like doing and do what made them happy as an individual, would they be criticized? In Plato’s Allegory of a Cave he describes an example of people conforming to the norm they were born into and then shows the results of a person emerging from this community

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    excerpt regarding “The Allegory of the Cave,” and Rene Descartes’s book, Meditations on First Philosophy, in the excerpt concerning “Meditation I of the Things of Which We May Doubt,” have influenced the epistemological realm. Furthermore, they have influenced Hollywood. For instance, in 1999, Andy and Lana Wachowski directed a film, The Matrix, that had similar epistemological attributes. The Matrix contains similar and contrasting features with “The Allegory of the Cave” and “Meditation I of the

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