there and what is not‚ or what actually exists and what doesn’t. Understand and accept that Parmenides views are tenable yet also counterintuitive. His views open our eyes to knowing that the fundamental nature of reality has nothing in common with how we experience and interpret our world. I as well would disregard and agree with Parmenides on senses being very misleading because everyone’s senses are not the same as well as having such factors from the external environment can alter these as well
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The dissemination of truth comes with fierce repudiation. The ancient works of the Bible and Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” express this everlasting theme. Jesus and the Platonic Prisoner walk together‚ hand in hand‚ to spread their great truths in their responding body politic to mature. However‚ they could just as easily remain stagnant in their position of superiority and would logically be better off keeping to themselves. But they did not. These two great teachers feel a strong and dutiful obligation
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What does Socrates mean when he says that “an unexamined life is no life for a human being to live?”. As I read Plato’s Apology‚ Euthyphro and The Allegory of the Cave‚ I could sense two things about unexamined life. First‚ unexamined life means someone who lives in self-reflection such as sin‚ guilty‚ and self-examination. According to Socrates‚ for living life‚ the most important one is that should be analyzed and explore the mind itself. One of an important thing‚ self-reflection of our inner
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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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The Way of Change Humans are all different but yet everyone is still the same in a sense. Plato‚ one of the worlds smartest and sharpest philosophers to ever live wrote an interesting book about this named “The Allegory of the Cave”‚ it’s a very interesting book an covers many aspects of life. Everyone can be afraid of trying new things‚ or live in cycle of laziness. But until people realize within themselves that are living a life of these unsatisfactory problems they will never be able to over
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Allegories are‚ as many would say‚ “as old as time‚” and rightly so. Known to use symbols to portray veiled messages‚ allegories have been used in a plethora of stories‚ including Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave‚” which is a short story written in Ancient Grecian times‚ and the Wachowski Brothers’ The Matrix‚ which is a movie produced in 1999. In “The Allegory of the Cave‚” three prisoners are chained in a cave. In that cave‚ there are moving shadows that the prisoners perceive as real. This goes
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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
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he went to listen to Socrates‚ and learned a lot from Socrates about how to think‚ and what sort of questions to think about. When Socrates was killed in 399 BC‚ Plato was very upset (He was 30 years old when Socrates died) . Plato began to write down some of the conversations he had heard Socrates have. Practically everything we know about Socrates comes from what Plato wrote down. After a while‚ though‚ Plato began to
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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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Plato’s "Allegory of the Cave" - Analysis and Summary The "Allegory of the Cave" by Plato represents an extended metaphor that is to contrast the way in which we perceive and believe in what is reality. The thesis behind his allegory is the basic opinion that all we perceive are imperfect "reflections" of the ultimate Forms‚ which subsequently represent truth and reality. In his story‚ Plato establishes a cave in which prisoners are chained down and forced to look upon the front wall of the cave. In
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