In his well-known “Allegory of the Cave”‚ the Greek philosopher Plato used the analogy of people lost in a cave to explain his belief that only enlightened philosophers should rule‚ since only they could truly understand the world. When I compared Plato’s ideal government to the workings of a modern democracy‚ I realized how different these two are. The U.S. government relies on the rule of the people‚ and does not limit voting rights or the pursuit of public office to any particular class. If Plato’s
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learning. Pluto described a prisoner being stuck and living inside of a dark cave. He was completely oblivious to the outside world and could only identify with shadows from the fire that was lit in the cave. Soon he became free and was exposed to the real world. He then realized that the shadows he saw in the cave was no comparison to the physical touch of another human being‚ or object. Overtime the prisoner in the cave had newly found knowledge and was able to adapt and adjust to the outside
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The Allegory of the cave is a short story about a prisoner who is locked in a cave with other prisoners. Every day they see shadows of objects or people passing by‚ but they never realized that the shadows and figures they see aren’t the real objects. One of the prisoners breaks free and sees the world for what it really is and finds out that the shadows weren’t real. He comes to this realization when he looks at his own reflection. When he goes to tell the other prisoners they don’t understand or
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another world: an eternal world of ideas. It is made up out of eternal unchanging forms of things. This world can be known through reason alone. The material world (world of things) is a manifestation of this eternal world of ideas. Using the allegory‚ Plato pictures the everyday situation of man. He can speak‚ hear‚ and encounter the world without actually being aware of the world of Ideas. True knowledge can only be gained from the world of ideas. The world of things merely generates opinions
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The Allegory of the Cave and Fahrenheit 451 Comparison Montag – Chained Prisoner Montag is represented as a chained prisoner because he is part of the society. The society is represented as the other prisoners. The chained prisoners can only look one way and can’t move his body. This is reflected on Montag’s society by how they all think the same way. Clarisse – Freed Prisoner Clarisse is the one who is the rebel of the group of prisoners. She tries to go out and learn about the things. “I’m
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The views of ethics vary greatly when talking about Plato and Aristotle. Aristotle has his own views even though such an influential man like Plato taught him. Plato and Aristotle try to deliver this universal system of ethical principals that will determine good and bad. Through doing so they realizes their differences in what they believe. Plato and Aristotle can both agree that good is happiness and in order to continue the good you must exercise self-fulfillment through integrity. Plato believes
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Truman show. The ideas of Plato’s Allegory of the cave and The Truman show describe different views of life. In the Plato’s allegory‚ every person is a prisoner. they live in a world of shadows. what they think is true is not real.the Prisoners believe that their lives in the cave are what is real.The prisoner who escaped first comes back to explain to the other prisoners about the real world. They cannot believe him because they have never seen anything but the cave. Truman and Plato’s work are similar
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Brown" vs. "The Allegory of the Cave" Young Goodman Brown and The Allegory of the Cave have a lot of similarities in their stories. They ’re both talking about a person ’s struggle with good vs. evil. Also‚ they both refer to the darkness vs. the light. People deal with these type of struggles everyday. These two stories seem to be the epitome of that concept. In Young Goodman Brown‚ the story is revolving around a man who lives in Salem and seems to be struggling with his views on religion
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The Allegory Because of how we live‚ true reality is not obvious to most of us. However‚ we mistake what we see and hear for reality and truth. This is the basic premise for Plato’s Allegory of the Cave‚ in which prisoners sit in a cave‚ chained down‚ watching images cast on the wall in front of them. They accept these views as reality and they are unable to grasp their overall situation: the cave and images are a ruse‚ a mere shadow show orchestrated for them by unseen men. At some point‚
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Michael Ehrecke Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave” As Means to Explain “The Apology” Authors sometimes use one work to explain or elaborate on the intricacies of another piece of theirs. Plato is one such example as he uses “The Allegory of the Cave” as means to better decipher “The Apology of Socrates.” Plato himself never appears in either dialogue‚ but it is clear that he disagrees with how Socrates’s trial ended and hopes to prevent another unneeded execution in the future. In “The Apology
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