Alyssa Ness Honors English 4B September 7‚ 2010 Plato’s Ideology “The Allegory of the Cave” demonstrates many of Plato’s beliefs‚ impacting the way he views education. …the power and capacity of learning exists in the soul already; and that just as the eye was unable to turn from darkness to light without the whole body‚ so too the instrument of knowledge can only by the movement of the whole soul be turned from the world of becoming into that of being… (Plato 5). This quote implies
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Annotated Bibliography Plato. Allegory of the Cave. Austin: Austin Community College‚ 20 Jan. 2011. PDF file. Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave” draws on the idea that reality is what we make it to be based on what we see and what we experience. To explain this he provides an example of humans who have spent their entire life chained up in an underground cave. He then explains that their reality is the shadows shown in front of them for that is all they see‚ and what they grew up believing. Afterwards
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Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” there is an internal struggle with in the protagonist to escape from the only place he has known as home just to find out that is like out of the cave. Within the cave it is extremely censored on what the people/prisoners are able to see and the only way they are shown anything is through shadow images that are projected upon the cave walls. They are shown manipulated images of birds‚ people‚ and other objects which in turn scares them into staying within the cave. The
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explain “why” unlike other sciences. Sextus Empiricus and Plato were two pioneers of philosophy that greatly contributed to the questioning of things‚ moreover‚ being skeptical even if the things appear to be real or true. The purpose of Plato’s Allegory of the cave was to persuade readers that just because you sense (see‚ hear‚ smell‚ taste) something doesn’t mean that’s the thing you are sensing. This idea of skepticism was also supported by Empiricus‚ but unlike Plato‚ Empiricus is more radical in his
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knowledge needed to succeed. In The Allegory of the Cave‚ Plato’s main message was the effects of education and the lack of it. He used the analogy of being in a cave of darkness. The only knowledge that the prisoners had been from their imagination because they haven’t experienced anything else. This holds the prisoners back from gaining the truth that is outside of the cave. Plato describes an experience of a prisoner that was able to ascend from the cave and see reality outside. He was able
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REAL OR NOT REAL? After reading Meditation 1 Of the Things Which We May Doubt‚ A synopsis of The Matrix‚ and Plato’s The Allegory of the Cave I am convinced that each one of these writings was wrote by the same person. The Matrix is completely about being in a world that is not real‚ kind of like being in a dream like state. Descartes’s meditation is about basically the same thing‚ but trying figure out what is real and what is not. Descartes’s talks about awaking from a dream and then going
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and more. The light is the main focus in this allegory: the prisoner’s knowledge is directly affected by it. 2. In lines 49-52‚ the prisoner is slowly adjusting to the real world‚ which of Plato’s 6 philosophical assumptions is being introduced here? Explain. Plato introduces his assumption that the real world can only be apprehended intellectually. The
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Explain the Analogy of the Cave in Plato’s Republic. Plato uses the analogy of the cave to illustrate the varying degrees of human nature between enlightened and unenlightenment. The varying degrees in enlightenment refer to the varying degrees in which we understand reality. For Plato‚ the highest degree of knowledge‚ or enlightenment‚ is the perception of the “essential Form of Goodness” Plato splits the varying degrees between enlightenment and illustrate epistemology. The stage furthest
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Nature of rule is applied through “virtue‚ wisdom‚ and advantage.” If one is not virtuous in his decision making then he will be unethical; choosing based upon his own personal gain. If he man is not wise then he will have fault in what he does‚ and if he cares for advancing in his position then greed and power will drive him. When a person is not virtuous they won’t make decisions based upon what is ethically right. Without morals and values guiding them their decisions will be self centered
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Plato‚ famous philosopher and student of Aristotle‚ once wrote of his skepticism of common sense in a piece he titled‚ “Allegory of the Cave.” In reference to people chained in a cave he writes‚ “how could they see anything but shadows if they were never allowed to move their heads?” As Plato highlights here‚ certain aspects of our reality will always allude us and thus our own perception of the world is based upon the shadows‚ or the biased perception of what we deem certain. One of these aspects
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