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The very few differences between these two works include the fact that the Matrix has no forms while the Allegory of the Cave does. Also, unlike Plato’s prisoner, who manages to find his way out of the cave without any help from others, Neo is helped out by Morpheus.…
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Suppose people were born in a cave and from birth they were chained up and unable to turn their heads. All they could do was to look straight ahead at a wall. Far behind them there was a fire burning and in from of that fire people would walk with object in their hands, statues and the like. All the chained prisoners could see would be these shadows on the wall, they could hear the noises and sounds that some of the people made and would think that those shadows and noises were really. Their idea of what was true, what was reality would be skewed. All they had ever known was the shadows.…
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I am applying for a secretarial job that was open for a while at a small office supply company. I…
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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.…
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The movie Matrix can be considered a modern allegory of the allegory of the cave. Like the people in the cave, humans, trapped in the Matrix, see only what the machines want them to see. They are deceived into believing that what they hear and see is the only reality that exists, and accept the illusions of their senses as the only part of truth. But Neo, the main character, is forced to face the painful truth, when he is pulled out of the capsule that kept him prisoner of the virtual reality of the Matrix. Neo suddenly discovers that what was before his life, were only shadows, reflections of…
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In Descartes’ Meditations on First Philosophy, Plato’s The Allegory of the Cave, and the synopsis of The Matrix, there are many similarities as well as a few differences. One of the most notable differences that can be observed is that Meditations in First Philosophy begins and ends in the same reality, whereas The Allegory of the Cave and The Matrix begin with the deception of an alternate reality. Another difference that can be detected is the presence of forms in The Allegory of the Cave, which is Plato’s theory that there are perfect ideas or templates that exist outside of our physical world. The strongest common thread that can be traced through these three texts is the metaphysical question of what is ultimately real. Another common theme that can be observed in each of the texts is skepticism over the reliability of each of the main character’s senses and perceptions of reality.…
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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.…
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Both Neo and Prisoner were deceived into believing in a falsehood: that they lived in the real world. In the Matrix, Neo lived most of his life without knowing he was a prisoner of the machines. When he escaped, he realized that he lived his life in a virtual world that felt indistinguishable from the real world. In the Allegory of the Cave, the Prisoner thought that…
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In this movie, we are introduced to a world in which machines had imprisoned man into a virtual world called “the matrix”. There the main protagonist “Neo” founds himself living in this world in questioning whether is real or not, and manages to scape with the help of a group of survivors from the real world. Yet the real world was not what he expected, earth was devastated by a long war between man and machines, and what is left of humanity lives in an underground city were the sewers of the old world use to be. We can consider the Matrix to be the cave, and the shadows projected by the fire, it also presents two possible outcomes from finding true knowledge. In the allegory, Plato believes that if an individual manages to escape from the cave it could end up in two ways. The first way indicates that if a man manages to escape the cave, he would be overwhelmed by the light, and the actual shapes of the shadows he saw, “Don’t you think he would be puzzled, and believe what he saw before was truer than what was shown to him?”(Plato pg2) indicating that the individual who got out would have trouble believing the things from outside the cave would be real. In the movie Neo faces the same problem when he is liberated from the matrix believing that the real world was actually a dream. The second way this could end up is if the individual finds himself to overwhelm by the real world to the point that…
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One of the finest points that Plato made in his essay, was that if a man were to gaze at shadows all his life, the man would surely believe this to be reality. “To them, I said, the truth would be literally nothing but the shadows of the images.” This quote defines what humans see as reality. It shows that what we see, we know to be true. Plato wanted his apprentice to consider the option, that maybe what we know to be true is in fact a lie. The Matrix also relays this concept to the modern day world. Morpheus states, “The Matrix is a computer generated dreamworld.” This Dream-world is much like the shadow images that the prisoners in Plato’s cave experienced. The People in both believed the deception that veiled them from the truth to be real. When in fact their reality was far from the truth, this represents the knowledge a human gets in life. If a person only learns of shadows his entire life, when…
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The prisoners in the story were only allowed to see shadows in the cave and it’s what they believed as true. In the story Plato states that the prisoners came to know reality as nothing more as “the shadows of those artificial objects” (Plato 50). Most people have only seen a narrow and small perspective of the world with a skewed sense of reality. They only know what’s happening around the globe from what’s told through the news outlets and from the surroundings. Lack of knowledge of things they haven’t seen or people they haven’t encountered before is someone’s personal “cave”. Throughout the story the theme of not believing everything you see and hear is prevalent and can be used in every person’s life.…
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After listening to your feedback on the paper that I turned in, as nice as you were at choosing your words regarding what my paper reflected. I had to sit with myself and really think about where those ideas and thoughts had come from that I wrote down cause when I listened to what you were saying, all I could think about was “that doesn’t sound like me”! It had to be though because no one else wrote that paper for me. After a lot of thought I went back quite a few years to a time when I was an active member of Alcoholics Anonymous because my drinking and behavior got out of hand and I needed help. It got me through a period of time, but I have still managed to stay sober three years after leaving AA, and I was told that was an impossible thing for a person to do. They tried to convince me that the ONLY way that I had a chance at recovery was to stay with the program. The problem with that is there were a lot of things about the program that I didn’t care for. I cringe at organized religion the same as I now do AA for the simple fact that it has to be all or nothing! You have to believe everything they tell you and do everything they tell you exactly how they tell you to or you’ll relapse and get drunk. I had the same experience as a child when I was forced to go to Catholic Church. The only difference is I was going to hell. Hell here, hell after here. How depressing when you are just a person with some problems reaching out for help? That was supposed to help me. What I am trying to say is this: In those meetings and in the big book they drill it into your head like brainwashing that selfishness and self-centeredness is the root of your problems. That everything is all about you and you are nothing more than a selfish pig that doesn’t do anything for anyone else unless there is something in it for you. There are many other things that drove me out of there but this one is what I’ll stick with cause it stays on the subject of my paper. I didn’t realize how much of…
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In the the cave there are a group of prisoners bond form their neck to their feet facing a stone wall. They have been their since childhood. All they know of is what the puppeteers have shown them through the fire images. They hear sounds made by the puppeteers. And the shadow of images cast from the fire. They think that this is reality because it is all they have ever known. One prisoner is lead away from his shackles and is lead out of the cave. He his blinded by the sun at first. Once his eyes had adjusted to the light he see’s a tree a real green tree that is alive. Not the shadow of a tree shown by the puppeteers. The prisoner also see’s his reflection in the water. He see’s the world in its entirety. He has been enlighten. Just as the prisoner was getting a grasp of the real world he is lead back into the cave. The other prisoners are mocking him for what they thought of as a…
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Both The Matrix and Plato's “Allegory of the Cave” suggest that humans experience discomfort when confronted with the truth, especially when it contradicts their prior beliefs. This discomfort may be so great that they will not accept the reality and resort to their previous beliefs that are false. Plato imagines prisoners in a cave—seeing nothing but shadows cast on the wall. While spending their entire lives in the cave, the chained prisoners are only able look forward at the shadows cast on the blank wall, which are projected by people and other objects passing between the prisoners and a fire. Since these shadows are the only images the prisoners see, they must constitute the real…
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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…
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