reality.
reality.
The movie "The Matrix" is a giant reference to Plato's myth, with the Matrix as the cave, and Neo being an escapee. Neo's first words outside of the Matrix are "My eyes…
Early in the movie, Neo pulls a book off of a shelf, Baudrillard’s Simulacra and Simulations, and opens it to reveal that it contains electronic contraband. In an instant, the directors ask us to consider his work. It completely avoids asking the logical question that follows after finding out that all of 1999 is an illusion: How are we to determine the truth or reality of any experience? The moment we believe that our senses are untrue, we can never fully trust them again. The Cartesian advice that fits this scenes is: “it is the mark of prudence never to place our complete trust in those who have deceived us even once.” (Descartes 60) With The Matrix being…
In the cave lives chained prisoners who can not move or escape from where they stand. They do not know of the “real world” that exists outside of the cave because a wall separates these two worlds. Since the prisoners have never been set free they do not know the truth about “real life”. The prisoners in this story represents Truman Burbank because, all of his life he has been trapped inside of this “cave”. Since Truman has never discovered the truth about his fake, televised life, he does not know what the real world has to offer. In Plato, Allegory of the Cave, one of the prisoners finally has the chance to leave the cave and explore the real world. Once he does this, he realizes the life he has been living inside the cave is not realistic and he refuses to go back in the cave. This also connects to the situation Truman is put in because once Truman realizes the life he has been living is fake, he escapes to the real world. He leaves the “cave” he spent most of his life in to move on, challenge himself and enter a new…
3 At the end of the cave allegory, Socrates implies that most men would want to escape the cave and see reality as it really is. However, in his betrayal of Morpheus, Cypher implies that it is better to live in the artificial world of the Matrix. Which is…
The two texts that include The Matrix and Plato’s Allegory of the Cave both have similar ideas in the way that they both show how everyone has a different idea on what reality is. Plato’s Allegory of the Cave shows a cave where people have been kept since birth. The people are tied up in a way which has them only able to see the shadows in front of them and nothing else either side or behind them. The reality for these people that are tied up is just the shadows of all different things that are walking along behind them including people and animals. When one of the prisoners escapes his bonds he goes out and sees the real world for what it truly is and this person goes back to try to tell the other prisoners. The other prisoners just see the escaped prisoner as a shadow with a voice that they can’t understand. The Matrix is very similar because Neo the main character starts out living in a fake reality of the real world and then gets shown what the actual reality is.…
Nevertheless, towards the end of the allegory Delia climbs the Chinaberry tree for shelter because of the snake that Sykes left loose around their house. He did it with the intention of scaring or possibly to kill his wife. Delia stated “Sykes, Ah wants you yuh take dat snake away fum heah, you down starve me” (1037). It was also said that after Delia heard Sykes scream and knew that he was dead that “she could sacredly reach the Chinaberry tree where she waited in the growing heat while inside she knew the cold river was creeping up and up to extinish the eye” (1040). Delia is basically getting a sign of relief since Sykes is now gone. But she stays on the Chinaberry tree. This tree has significant meaning to slavery. It was toxic herbal…
Comparing and contrasting the synopsis “The Matrix” to Plato's “The Allegory Of The Cave” and also Descartes “Meditation I Of The Things Of Which We May Doubt” which have several similarities and also some differences. In all three of these stories the main idea is that reality is in question. In the Matrix, the human being is in a pod like machine that is controlled by a computer simulating what we think and know to be reality. Reality is not only created but manipulated to deceive what is truly surrounding you, when you are clearly in a pod unaware of what reality really is. In Plato's “The Allegory of the Cave” this also focuses on two different realities based on what is in fact real and what is perceived. Plato's view on the prisoners being fooled into a false reality by placing fake objects around them to trick their perception of reality and also put them in a one track state of mind, while life goes on outside of where they are captive. This is similar to The Matrix because in both stories the people are being manipulated to believe a reality outside of what is truly happening at the present time. In both stories, the person that has been captive for a certain period of time but then is able to experience reality outside of just manipulated perception has doubts, they are in disbelief of what they are actually able to witness for the first time. Reality, not perception but what is truly real happening and not being simulated or manipulated so that you would be fooled into believing something that is not real. In the Matrix, Neo lived a pretty normal life as an everyday human being but could not sleep well and like Plato stated that the prisoner would have to sense something, get some kind of feeling that something just was not quite right about his surroundings and the way they were existing. Another similarity is that the prisoners and pods were being manipulated to believe a false reality by people above them.…
The Allegory of the Cave is about a group of people who have lived in a cave since their childhood. These people not only live in this cave, but they are also chained and made to face a blank wall. Even their heads are shackled such that they cannot look behind them or at the sides. On the blank wall in front of them, a fire that is behind them projects shadows of objects that are passing behind them. When one of them is released to the outside world, the people who remain in the cave do not believe the version of the story concerning the reality of the shadows they have spent the whole of their lives watching and analyzing.…
Yes, I’m sure you remember the 13 children from the original story but we’re now in the future and these kids are all grown up! They knew it would be extremely hectic if they had more than one child with their spouse so they all had just one. 13 only child’s with 12 other cousins. Pretty smart if you think about it. Anyway, these cousins all grew up with each other. No doubt about it they knew everything about the other. Before the parents knew it those kids were growing up, and fast! They all wanted more freedom! They wanted cell phones, later curfews, and more allowance money. They grew attitudes too. The parents knew they had no choice but to do to their…
The movie The Matrix has many similar themes and differences to “The Allegory of the Cave”. The Matrix is about a man named Neo, he believes that he’s a normal man with a normal life but then he is contacted by a man named Morpheus. Morpheus exposes Neo to the truth that his world, where he is just regular Tom Anderson is made up. The Matrix, was created by sentient machines that subdue the human population, while their bodies' heat and electrical activity are used as an energy source. Neo is reluctant to accept this truth that his original world, the matrix it is called, does not in fact exist. This relates to the “The Allegory of the Cave”, because Neo lived in ignorance his whole life, not knowing his reality was not the only one.…
In “The Allegory of the Cave,” Plato embodied a metaphor that compares the way in which we see and believe is actual reality. He creates a cave where prisoners are chained down and are forced to stare at the dark wall in front of them. They are sheltered from any light. You can also perceive this in a different sense, for example all that they see in the world is darkness and that they do not know the difference between what is real and what they consider as “real.” “Like ourselves, I replied; and they see only their own shadows or the shadows of one another, which the fire throws on the opposite wall of…
Plato’s classic The Allegory of the Cave and seminal science-fiction film The Matrix at first glance seem to have nothing in common. The first is written and set in the ancient times, revolving around Socrates telling his follower Glaucon about chained prisoners in a primitive cave watching shadow puppets lighted by a fire burning at the cave’s opening. The latter is a futuristic story set in a world controlled by artificial-intelligent computers that created the Matrix, a virtual world programmed for the humans to live in, as an attempt to keep the human race contained and under control. Although Plato’s The Allegory of the Cave and The Matrix were created in two very different centuries, they are related in many ways. Within the similarities between the two stories, themes that relate to both of the stories are presented.…
Socrates then goes on to the second part of the allegory, where a single prisoner is freed and finds out what was making the shadows on the wall, but has no reference point to understand this new information as all he knows are the shadows. This is difficult period of accustomization that Neo also underwent after being unplugged as he tried to become adjusted to the way things truly were. Upon choosing the red pill, Morpheous and his team underwent a process to extract Neo from the Matrix. When he “woke up” he awoke in the harsh reality that machines were creating the shadows, creating the Matrix and everything that he previously perceived. Upon being brought aboard Nebudchadnezzar (Morpheous' ship), Neo was devestated that everything he previously knew was false but, like the prisoner would have to do once he was freed from the cave, would eventually overcome the idea of there being nothing but the Matrix and learn to embrace his new reality. This is best summed up by: "Most people, including ourselves, live in a world of relative ignorance. We are even comfortable with that ignorance, because it is all we know. When we first start facing truth, the process may be frightening, and many people run back to their old lives. But if you continue to seek truth, you will eventually be able to handle it better. In fact, you want more! It's true that many people around you now may think you are weird or even a danger to society, but you don't care. Once you've tasted the truth, you won't ever want to go back to being ignorant" –…
What if the world everyone perceives as a reality is only an elaborate deception? Human beings believe they are living in realities because they do not know of anything else. What they feel, see, hear, taste, and feel all contribute to their subconscious belief of physical existence. As people dream, however, they usually cannot recognize that they are not living through the events—that is, until they wake up. What if they do not wake up? How would they know the difference between their false perceptions and reality? The Ancient Greek philosopher Plato explores this concept within an example he uses in his work The Republic. In his example, known as the “Allegory of the Cave”, Plato uses an allegorical cave to show how humans are uncomfortable when exposed to the truth and that they are manipulated by higher authorities. In their 1999 motion picture The Matrix, the Wachowski brothers use a computer program to display similar ideals of Plato's allegory, including how humans are controlled and negatively react to the truth. Plato's “Allegory of the Cave” serves as a philosophical basis to The Matrix, as both works suggest that humans express discomfort while exposed to truth and both argue that people are controlled by higher authorities.…
The Matrix directly relates to Plato's Allegory of the Cave. In both works, discovering the truth about reality is the major concept. In the cave, men are chained up and all they know is shadows of puppets that are displayed before them, illuminated by a fire that blazes in the distance. These shadows that the men see on the wall are all they know; this is reality to them. Much like in The Matrix how the people that are in the "Matrix" are unaware of that they are living in a world that doesn't actually expose the people to reality. What they know of in the matrix is reality to them. The shadows on the wall and the matrix both cover up the true reality that exists outside of the people's comfort zone. Neo and Plato's released prisoner go through similar realizations. Both Neo and the released prisoner are chained down (literally and metaphorically) from understanding the truth behind reality. The released prisoner is tied in a way that he cannot move and his head always faces in the direction of the wall. He finds out the truth behind the shadow's that he has known as reality. He soon figures out the real creatures that merely cast their shadows before him. In comparison, Neo is tied down to a massive wall where machines control the lives of the people in the matrix. Neo also realizes the truth when he takes the red pill, which allows him to escape from the Matrix and into the real world, therefore living the truth of reality, even though it is more difficult than life inside the Matrix. Neither the released prisoner nor Neo realize they are prisoners until they are introduced to the truth of reality. The prison of the Matrix is described by Morphius when he says to Neo, "It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth." Both Neo and the prisoner can be seen as heroes because they want to help the people who are still blinded by their false conception of reality. Neo is successful in fulfilling his prophecy of becoming "The…