Allegory of the Cave Essay

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    The Republic (The Allegory of the Cave), and Descartes Meditation I, have a lot more in common than I thought each story had, but had a lot of differences as well. They all examine the reality that they are living in. The Matrix is about how computers are controlling human beings. They think they are living in this world where you wake up, go to work, get married, have kids, and die. The reality is that it was all lie. Plato’s Cave is about individuals who have been put in a cave from birth. They

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    I believe that Plato’s cave allegory is about perception and enlightenment. In the tory Socrates says, “And if they were able to converse with one another, would they not suppose that they were naming what was actually before them”. Here, Socrates is explaining that the people in the caves would perceive the shadows as reality- even as they are just shadows. Socrates says, “see what will naturally follow if the prisoners are released and disabused of their error….Will he not fancy that the shadows

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    is the best way to live but then there are other people who think they’re have a good life without a whole lot of water. In The Allegory of the Cave the cave people thought it was good that they could see and guess what the shadows were. They thought that even though they couldn’t move they thought that the way the lived was better than what the slave saw outside the cave. “Men would say of him that up he went and down he came without his eyes, and that it was better to not even think of ascending;

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    The ‘Allegory of The Cave’ was presented by Plato in his work, the ‘Republic’. The allegory begins with a parable about people who are in a cave, and can’t move their heads. They can only look forward and see the shadows of themselves and the characters behind them on the wall. They believe that this is the whole reality. The screen controls these people and their feelings. They can’t move their heads from the screen. When they are freed from the cave, and outside, they are blinded by the glare of

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    tale which Socrates tells an associate two men are tied up in a cave their whole lives, never seeing sunlight and only perceiving the world by the sounds and shadows of people and objects on their cave’s walls (Plato, n.d.). Eventually one of the men is freed and is stunned to discover that what he thought was the world his whole life was only a shadow of it (Plato, n.d.). While not in the story, someone had to tie up the men in the cave before the story took place, like Neo and the other inhabitants

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    the other persons and sometimes that can get a little out of hand, depending on who you are dealing with. I guess the major point in all this is to never judge a book by its cover, always learn yourself. In Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave”, there are these prisoners that live in a cave and have never seen any natural sunlight. They can only see shadows of things displayed on the wall by the light coming from the fire. The prisoners get happy and interested by the shadows they see. The shadows could

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    this modern movie has with Plato’s Allegory of the cave. Two very different stories clash as one if you look at it correctly. The Allegory being the main component of the two and why they relate, I will describe in detail what I obtained from the script. I will then describe to you the main highlights of the movie and the characters. Continuing with why these two seemingly different things are much more alike than most may think at first glance. Plato’s Allegory is an interesting philosophy scenario

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    In “Allegory of a Cave” Plato brings a ‘what if’ situation in which one of the prisoners is released of their shackles and is allowed to remove themselves from the cave. When going past the entranceway, it first distressed him, causing him an almost immediate pain. Going through the entranceway, the shadows which once represented truth will be nothing compared to the reality. This represents how hard it is to transition to the complete form of truth and understatement after being forced to grow accustomed

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    In the story, “Allegory of the cave,” by Plato, it explains how there were human beings living in a cave chained up facing the wall since they were children. As they grew older all they were able to see were the shadows of people crossing animals, tools, statues etc. on a bridge behind them. Since they could not turn their heads to look, their mind couldn't wrap around what they were really looking at. As if they weren't looking into reality. They had no knowledge of the outside world what so ever

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    Of all the things that could unfold, "The Allegory of the Cave" and "The Parable of the Seed" suggest that the effect of the pursuit of knowledge emerges a multiplication of the knowledge. First, The Allegory of the Cave by Plato gives a story that indicates the effect of pursuing knowledge being a sense of duty to enlighten others. The story is of two men who have been chastened since childhood. The prisoners have known nothing other than shadows on a cave

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