The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien begins by describing what exactly a hobbit is. Hobbits are little people‚ about half our height with thick curly brown hair on their head and feet. They are inclined to be fat at the stomach and wear bright colors. They live in a land called The Shire. In this land they lived in nice comfortable holes in the ground. In one particular hole lived Bilbo Baggins. Bilbo’s father was a solid and comfortable hobbit but Bilbo’s mother was from the Took family. Belladonna Took’s
Free The Hobbit
the death he is bringing back to reclaim the mountain. Another one of these completely unnecessary use of additional characters and storylines is the love story between Kili and Tauriel. Even the addition of Tauriel’s character into the story of The Hobbit is completely unnecessary. Her love story with Kili doesn’t really serve to enhance the plot of the story‚ its use is just to lure the audience into a love story. Another disappointment
Premium Fiction Literature Love
caring anymore about physical attraction. After all stages‚ the boy will ultimately come to loving beauty itself and all beautiful things. This gradual climb to the final vision is similar to the climb out of the cave in Plato’s "Allegory of the Cave." In the "Allegory of the Cave‚" the chained down prisoners are limited with their perception on reality. At first‚ they can only see moving shadows on the wall in front of them. Once released‚ the prisoners’ sense of reality is changed as they can
Premium Platonism Plato Theory of Forms
“The Allegory of the Cave” The Allegory of the Cave can be broken down in many ways. It basically states that people are chained to the wall in a cave and they have nothing to look at but the shadows of one another. This is all that they know of that exists; no one has ever been outside the cave. We have to look real hard for the hidden messages or what the author is trying to allude to in this story. I think the main point of this story is the author trying to give us an example of how or the
Premium Plato Knowledge Ontology
Homer demonstrates Life’s journey in several different situations. These situations are lead by actions that reveals an example of karma and how people don’t always get what they want. An allegory implies that even when a reward is as precious as Penelope‚ people do not always get what they want. An allegory also illustrates how when advices are ignored and continuously do wrongdoings‚ punishments occur. The suitors get frustrated and causes these actions because they want nothing else other than
Premium Plato Philosophy Knowledge
no drama‚ no adventure‚ and no excitement‚ or‚ a life filled with drama‚ bloodcurdling adventure‚ and full on excitement. The choice is yours. So choose wisely. Summary: In the book‚ The Hobbit‚ Bilbo‚ a hobbit‚ gets his call to adventure when Gandalf‚ a magical wizard‚ comes knocking at the door of his hobbit hole‚ giving him the chance to go on an adventure with a group of dwarves on a quest to reclaim the kingdom of Erebor. This magical journey takes Bilbo on a path through goblins‚ wolves‚ and
Premium
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
Premium Human Truth Reality
have a sentence structure that varies so it is more entertaining. I gave The Hobbit straight 4’s on all of criterion‚ now I know this may seem like a baffling choice but hear me out first. As much as I liked the writing in The Hobbit the writing in The Princess Bride was on a completely different level. To give them both straight fives wouldn’t have been fair. J.R. Tolkien had some good writing in The Hobbit‚
Premium The Lord of the Rings The Hobbit J. R. R. Tolkien
Allegory of the Cave Summary Plato’s Allegory of the Cave presents an enthralling concept that holds strong to this day. In the allegory three main ideas are illustrated : that we have been conditioned to a definite reality since birth‚ we scorn being brought into the ‘light’ of knowledge‚ and that we (as a society) reject anything that contradicts the notions of our preconceived reality. Clever Plato took these ideas and weaved them into an intriguing story of prisoners trapped in an underground
Premium Plato Epistemology Knowledge
In the Plato’s allegory of the cave‚ a scenario is laid out for us to imagine. The people in the scenario have been in a cave since birth and are bound in a manner that does not allow them to look around but only in front of them. From this position they can only see shadows cast from behind them. Here they see the shadows cast by statues placed on a partial wall. They believe these shadows to be the real because this is the only thing they have ever known. Then one prisoner is freed from his bonds
Premium Ontology Plato English-language films