Plato’s Allegory of the Cave relates to social media use in that the media has developed and maintained a strong hold on society‚ similarly as to how the cave encapsulates the prisoners. Nowadays‚ media has become the basis of truth‚ where society soaks in this information and takes it as fact. However‚ how can one determine if these findings that are presented are genuine or just a mere illusion? Plato’s Allegory of the Cave explains how people only base their perception of the world on their experiences
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The Allegory of the cave represent how people perceive illusion versus reality. It shows how the environment around us and even the people effect how we perceive information and our surroundings. Education and knowledge is gained by what we hear and see. The story is based around the men of this cave and how they were chained up from their childhood until adulthood. “Here they have been from their childhood and have their legs and necks chained so that they cannot move‚ and can only see before them
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misconceptions of the world. Bacon takes a more logical and scientific approach in philosophy using results and data to determine the truth behind “how we know what we know” and how not to be deceived by our mind’s own capability. On the other hand‚ Plato believes that with time one will be able to see the light if it chooses because everyone was born knowing but with a vague
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Our Responsibility When I first heard of the name Plato I automatically thought of playdough‚ even in high school I did not have a clear understanding of who this was‚ or why they were so important. Through the teachings in my Liberal Education class I gained the knowledge that I once did not have‚ not only about Plato and his teachings but also of other philosophers and writers. Plato‚ a student of Socrates helped continue his teachings of self-reflective philosophy and the Socratic Ignorance
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story “The Myth of the Cave” by Plato are limited in their similarities. Even though the similarities are few‚ what is similar provides a big punch because of the deeper meaning in these works. One major thing the stories have in common is that both stories are allegories. An allegory is a work that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning‚ typically being moral or religious based. The flock from Jonathan Livingston Seagull and the remaining prisoners from “The Myth of the Cave” have many similarities
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Allegory of the Cave is a dialog between Socrates and Gloucon in The Republic written by Plato. Plato’s Allegory of the Cave‚ Socrates depicts a long‚ dark cave with a small opening that allows a small amount of light to enter. Inside the cave there group of prisoners‚ who have been in the cave for their entire lives. The prisoners legs and necks are chained to the cave floor so they are unable to move and can only look forward at the cave wall. At the back of the cave there is a fire that they are
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Plato was Socrates’ student for many years and although he leaned many things from him‚ they happened to disagree on the unity of the soul. Socrates divides the soul. Socrates does not seem to deny that the soul is a unity. He seems to believe that the soul is both many and one. Plato came up with his own views on the soul based off of what he learned from Socrates. There are three important factors in Plato’s teachings and that’s justice is better than injustice (because justice is the aerate of
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them to accept what they seen in their daily life. Human without education in the lowest state of learning is like the prisoners have been in the cave since childhood. Darkness in the cave is relates to the initial stage of education that blocking the prisoners from gaining knowledge. In the story‚ “Allegory of the Cave”‚ Socrates‚ who is a mentor to Plato‚ mentions‚ “The people have been in this dwelling since childhood‚ shackled by the legs and necks. Thus they stay in the same place so that there
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Plato‚ "The Allegory of the Cave" "And whereas the other so-called virtues of the soul seem to be akin to bodily qualities‚ for even when they are not originally innate they can be implanted later by habit and exercise‚ the of wisdom more than anything else contains a divine element which always remains‚ and by this conversion is rendered useful and profitable; or on the other hand‚ hurtful and useless. Did you never observe the narrow intelligence flashing from the keen eye of a clever rouge
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Breaking Free of the Cave “The Republic”‚ Plato’s longest work‚ has many views about philosophy and characters within and there is one character that truly stands out and entices you to read on until the very end; that was Socrates. Socrates was a mentor and a friend of Plato’s and in Plato’s eyes‚ he was a great and wise Philosopher that was a martyr for philosophy. Within “The Republic”‚ Plato has written a symbolic account about one of Socrates’ teachings of education or the enlightenment
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