"How the allegory of the cave parallels with christian thoughts" Essays and Research Papers

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    Allegory of the Modern Day Cave “Plato’s Allegory of the Cave” was the philosophical story of people who lived in this cave‚ and never left. They were bound to one spot‚ and could never move. The only light was this fire in the middle of the cave‚ that was on the other side of a wall that separated the fire from the cave dwellers. There were also other people who carried objects above their heads on the fire side of the wall. This made shadows on the actual cave walls‚ which were the only things

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    2. (1) Briefly describe Plato’s allegory of the cave. (2) Then state how the allegory expresses Plato’s position on (a) the place of the Philosopher-Kings in Plato’s utopia‚ (b) Plato’s distinction between opinion and genuine knowledge (wisdom)‚ and (c) Plato’s position on the motives of the Philosopher-Kings for ruling. 3. (1) What is Plato’s dualistic

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    THEO 104: Introduction to Christian Thought Study Guide Week 1: Introduction to Theology Textbook Readings: Towns: Introduction & Ch. 1 1. What year was Jesus born? 4BC in Bethleham‚ South Palestine to an unknown family 2. When was Christianity made Rome’s National Religion? 313 AD 3. What is the Incarnation? God becoming man and taking on flesh 4. Does the Bible states that Jesus was the creator of the world. Yes (John 1:3; Col. 1:16) 5. Did Jesus claim to have

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    there’s no privacy and therefore no room for intellectual exploration and creativity"(Snowden 2013). Snowden asserts that creativity lies in the mind‚ and to be creative is to have unprecedented ideas and subjects that are completely unanticipated. But how can we be creative if our every move is anticipated by the government? What if we want to intellectually create something different‚ but it’s seen as a threat by the government? Alarmingly‚ modern culture heavily depends on technology to exist‚ survive

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    As educators we are challenged with the questions “Why?” from our students on a daily basis. We generally have an intuition about how we arrived at this conclusion‚ but how are we going to actually explain this rule of thinking. Just like when we are faced to make behavioral decisions. Will we judge our decision on the situation and the student‚ the protocol‚ or the consequence about the decision.. Educators or leaders make this decision based on whether they are idealist or pragmatist. Idealism

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    The Cave and the Christian In Plato’s Republic we have one of the best allegories told‚ the allegory of the Cave. The allegory of the cave goes basically like this: 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

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    very similar to the form of government described in the Republic by Plato‚ especially The Allegory of the Cave. Both are descriptions of totalitarian dystopic governments included the separation of people by professional class‚ assignment of profession and purpose by the state‚ and the absence of traditional family units‚ replaced by state-organized breeding. If Jonas‚ the leader‚ is the man released from the cave‚ then his obligations as a leader and his obligations to knowledge are the same. The

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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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    Inception and the Allegory of the Cave The movie “Inception” is a great example of Plato’s Allegory of the Cave. The idea that through a dream you can achieve a state of enlightenment directly relates to changing a way of thinking. The hero in the movie Cobb has demons to exercise from his former way of thinking In order to achieve his goal of “reality”. His sun or enlightenment is ridding himself of his wife Mal and showing himself the reality with Fisher. Mal represents the old way of thinking

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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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