Allegory of the Cave Essay

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    belief can be better perceived through Plato and the Wachowski siblings. In “The Allegory of the Cave” and The Matrix Plato and the Wachowski siblings’ depict that in order for man to become enlightened he must have an innate desire to learn the truth, thus he will go through

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    In the allegory of the cave, Socrates is explaining to the student how we are blinded by what we are only allowed to see. If we were to see the truth, then we would return to tell the others, but they would not believe you. If you put that into today, you could compare it to the conspiracy theorists. They think that the government is hiding us from the truth, and that the only way to learn is to go beyond the boundaries set by the law. If you saw the report about the Roswell incident, you would see

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    countries from each other. This causes societies to know and believe different things about wars, their ancestors, and other world events. Because of these differences, many people have contrasting perspectives on the world, alike to those in the Allegory of the Cave. Even in Spartan Discipline, some qualities of their schooling can be found in modern day societies. Education can have a huge influence on the opinion of what is right, similar to how those in the Melian Dialogue had different moral values

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    In the ‘The Allegory of the Cave’, Plato uses a philosophical situation to help us as the reader to examine our perception of life by what is around us. Plato uses such an abstract situation to show that we can mistake the information that we gain due to our position in a situation for truth. In Plato’s allegory, he begins with a set of three people, prisoners of the cave that have never seen anything other than what the cave and their binding allows. “The prisoners are tied to some rocks, their

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    In Plato’s work The Republic one of his books Allegory of the Cave envisions the world as a dark cave, human beings as trapped prisoners, and all of our experiences as nothing but shadows on a wall. The way we perceive things around us and the way we lead our lives is actually not the truth. Comparing the effects of education and the lack of it on our nature in this case classes that we have already grown accustomed to. Plato’s Allegory of the Cave is a reminder of what it would be like if we only

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    brought, if not repose, at least an insensibility that resembled it” (Dumas 133). Dantes concludes that he was suffering as a result of a plot against him. His anger drives him to imagine suffering on those who wronged him. This is analogous to Plato’s allegory in that, in this moment, Dantes is exposed to a new form of knowledge: the identity of the object, which in this case, is evil. Plato writes, “will he not have a pain in his eyes which will make him turn away to take refuge in the objects of vision

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    Plato’s Allegory of the Cave Part A The stages of Plato’s “cave journey” begin with people stuck in a dark cave. They are chained from birth, unable to move their bodies and can only see straight ahead. A fire behind them creates the shadows of objects being flashed on a wall in front of them. They have never seen the real objects, so they believe the shadows of the objects to be real. The people stuck in the cave begin a guessing game; trying to guess which objects will appear next, and whoever

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    In Plato's Allegory of the Cave, the group of men live their life with only a singular view of the cave. As a result, their perception of reality becomes warped. Irving Janis noted that a significant aspect of groupthink was the tendency to have a "collective rationalization" that would serve as justification for their beliefs. When the escaped prisoner returns to the cave, the chained prisoners claim that his eyes are now ruined, thus proving that the prisoners are content living in their own ignorance

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    In Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave,”, three prisoners have been trapped in a cave for their entire lives... They cannot look at anything, but the stone wall in front of them. Since birth, these men have been stuck and have never seen anything but the interior of the cave. Behind the prisoners is a fire; its flame gives off shadows of the objects behind it. One day, one of the prisoners manages to escape from his bindings and leave. The prisoner is shocked at the new world outside. As he becomes used

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    In “Allegory of the Cave,” Plato illustrates a conversation between Socrates and his student, Glaucon, about prisoners trapped within a cave since childhood with “their legs and necks in bonds so that they are fixed, seeing only in front of them.” The only source of light these prisoners have is “…a fire burning far above and behind them. Between the fire and the prisoners there is a road above, along which see a wall, built like the partitions puppet-handlers set in front of the human beings and

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