Allegory of the Cave Essay

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    In Plato's Cave, the prisoners are tied down with chains, hand, and foot under bondage. In fact they have been there since their childhood, which much like matrix people are seen as in reality being bound within a pad whereby they are feed images/illusions which keep them in a dreamlike state and they have been in this bondage by virtue of the virtual reality pads in the fields since their youth and like the allegory of the Cave they are completely unaware of such a predicament since in regards to

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    The Allegory Of The Cave

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    2395 years ago Plato said, “Anyone who has common sense will remember that the bewilderments of the eyes are of two kinds, and arise from two causes, either from coming out of the light or from going into the light” (The Allegory of the Cave). Ever since, whether it be 2023 years ago or 9 years ago, Plato’s wise words still ring true. Enter Iron Age Greece, the Trojan war has finally come to an end and the victorious are more than ready to return home to their families with fame and fortune. Ready

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    reality and its ultimate form. In the “Republic”, Plato tried to explain the idea of reality throughout his allegory of the cave; the allegory represents various philosophical ideas about the metaphysics of reality, epistemology, and education. In the allegory, Plato imagined a group of prisoners in a cave where they lived their entire life chained so that

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    The Allegory of the Cave is an allegory or metaphor used by Greek philosopher Plato (427-347 B.C.). Plato uses the Allegory of the Cave to represent the ascent from opinion to knowledge (Kranak, 2002) and ultimately enlightenment. For Plato, opinion was belief, hearsay, imagination and sense experience, for example, experiences that involve sights, smells, sounds, tastes, and feelings. Plato proposed that this type of empirical thinking was unreliable and fallacious (Dennick, 2008). In comparison

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    Plato's allegory of the cave analysis Every human being does have their own dwelling, which is just like the 'cave' in Plato's article. For the most part, certainly we all prefer staying in our 'cave', living our normal lives, believing in whatever shows up in our sights daily rather than exploring or questioning about whether those 'shadows' which we have been seeing years by years are the truth or not. Rarely, there is somebody who tries to make questions about what we are seeing as well

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    living. Plato Flawlessly commands this argument through the meticulous articulation of his allegory of the cave and the analogy of the divided line. Explication As one of the most timeless metaphors in Western Philosophy, Plato’s allegory of the cave disputes the notion that “ignorance is bliss”, appointing education and understanding as a means of reaching the Form of the Good. In the allegory of the cave, Plato provides a narrative of the transition of a prisoner from mistaking

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    The Allegory of the Cave is the story of how Socrates interpreted the town of Athens, Greece to his loyal student Plato. The cave goes way back to 480 B.C. Socrates was Plato’s teacher. Plato praised his teachings and even retold some of his lessons to keep his stories from dying, one of them being the Allegory of the Cave. In Plato’s opinion, the story explains Socrates’ journey in Athens, the political build up, and social highlights. The Allegory of the Cave represents living in Athens. There

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    PHI 111 Part I Plato’s Allegory of the Cave is meant to illustrate the relationship between the two levels of knowledge and the two levels of reality. The first level of reality is pure intellect (outside the cave) and the second is the sense experience (inside the cave). Plato believed that human beings see the world through the eyes of the prisoners in the cave and because of that we do not fully have an understanding of the world around us. In the Allegory of the Cave, the prisoners had never

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    Caves, damp and cold, can be dangerous places. Explorers have been known to lose their sense of direction and light sources, leaving them lost, helpless and facing death without rescue. Though many different lessons can be interpreted from Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, the parable describes the human nature to confuse reality and illusion. It brings to light that a real metaphysical world exists independent of human experience and observation (the world of the “Forms”). Plato uses the Allegory of

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    Plato’s “Allegory of The Cave” is a written dialogue between Socrates and Glaucon, brother of Plato, in which Socrates exposes the lack of education in human nature by invoking the image of prisoners chained up and sitting in a dark cave. The prisoners, whom have been imprisoned in the cave since childhood, can only see straight ahead and are forced to watch dancing shadows on the cave wall which are created by a fire that sits below and behind them, never to see the sun or the outside world which

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