"Idols of the cave" Essays and Research Papers

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    Even in this abridged version‚ Plato’s fable "The Allegory of the Cave" reflects the vast wisdom of Plato‚ his teacher and the philosophers of his time. The story’s meaning and lessons are as significant today as they were then‚ and its inclusion in The Republic is well earned. The intentions of Plato in sharing this story seem to be fairly simple. As with all of the works that he included in The Republic‚ he is attempting to convey a message that relates to government and leadership. I also believe

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    Allegory of the Cave 29

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    limits of reason and morality. Having freedom equals having the power to think‚ to speak‚ and to act without externally imposed restrains. As a matter of fact‚ finding freedom in order to live free is the common idea in Plato with "The Allegory of the Cave"; Henry David Thoreau with " Where I lived and What I lived for"; and Jean Paul Sartre with " Existentialism". Generally‚ Plato‚ Thoreau‚ and Sartre suggested that human life should be free. They differ in what that freedom is. Plato thinks it is found

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    A Bridge to Wisemans Cave

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    ESSAY by Mitch Wolfe In the book‚ A Bridge to Wiseman’s Cave‚ James Maloney makes the main characters‚ Beryl‚ Harley and Carl act and seem extremely real and life like to the reader‚ he manages to do this by exploring deeply into each of these three characters different personalities and how they handle the different events that happen in the story and shows how their personalities change at the different stages‚ for example Carl wants to be accepted by the community and will do whatever it

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    The cave in the allegory basically represents believers of empirical knowledge. As a child‚ I was easily susceptible to this form of knowledge. I was known as “the quiet one” or the girl that always keeps to herself. The biggest cause of this is the way I have been brought up. Growing up as an only child and a female in a Guyanese household to immigrant parents‚ I have been taught ways of life that are very contrasting to the ways of life that are taught in Canada. The society where my parents came

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    Faust claims to love Gretchen‚ but how can someone hurt the person they love? In the "Mountain and Cave" scene‚ Faust left Gretchen because he wanted to feel closer to nature‚ yet Mephistopheles believes Faust is stalling. Faust declines the thought and says his love for Gretchen is real‚ he says "However far‚ I’m near to her and crave her‚ she never is forgotten‚ never spent‚"‚ yet he goes back to her knowing he will destroy her. He describes Gretchen as a little hut that gets crushed by a water

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    Case 5.1 Our Everyday Idols Questions: 1. What learning theories apply to the way in which viewers form their perceptions of reality based on reality TV programs? • Consumers are predominately exposed to vicarious/observational learning theory or operant conditioning. (Hint define and elaborate vicarious learning theory (monkey see‚ monkey do) or operant conditioning via rewards and punishments) • Reality programs provide viewers to learn various life skills. (Use case facts to explain/justify

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    This is knowing what you don’t know‚ and admitting to it. It is also the belief that wisdom is the property of higher power. I have had the pleasure of reading two of Plato’s most famous writings “The Apology” and “Allegory of the Cave” and discussing

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    In “The allegory of the Cave” Plato argues that education is not a matter of making the blind to see but of turning the learner “in the right direction.” What he means by this is that education is not about feeding someone information and expecting them to take it as the truth. It is about encouraging them to seek out the truths in the world around them‚ and helping them acquire the tools to do so. This point is extremely relevant to education today‚ which is mostly about test scores‚ and textbooks

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    prisoners he is talking about‚ Glaucon responds by saying that it is a strange image‚ and then Plato replied by asking: “like ourselves; and they see only their own shadows‚ or the shadows of one another‚ which the fire throws on the opposite wall of the cave?” My answer to this question would be yes‚ because even in our modern lives‚ there are people who are never exposed to the truth and they take what they have heard as the real truths which are those shadows that Plato was talking about. At a certain

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    Plato’s Allegory of the Cave  The “Allegory of the Cave” starts off as a story told by Socrates to Glaucon. In this story‚ a group of people live in a cave underground. They are bound and unable to move or turn their heads‚ and so can only look straight in front of them.  Before them is a wall and behind them a fire burns. Others in the cave pass before the fire holding

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