"The myth of the cave" Essays and Research Papers

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    Learning about the prehistoric era of art has really opened my eyes to the ways in which humans have developed a sense of documentation. The cave paintings of our prehistoric ancestors that predate the development of written language could arguably be the first examples of humans attempting to preserve their presence for the future generations. In the Chauvet Cave there are many depictions of animals that are now extinct the visual depiction of those animals by the prehistoric people are some of the

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    Allegory of the Cave” refer to the illusionary aspect of the human senses and how easily a fake reality can arise from those tricked senses. Plato would have seen the famous melting clocks representing time’s dynamic nature in dreams and understood their importance to false realities because dreams are a form of false realities. He would conclude that the melting clocks represent the upper world looking down at the lower world; therefore‚ the painting must represent those in the cave who have escaped

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    Plato’s Allegory of the Cave depicts a scene in which people are chained up in a cave‚ that forces them to face the back wall without the ability to turn their heads. There is a fire burning behind them that casts light onto the wall. Objects are held in front of the fire like a puppet show and all the people can see is the shadows of the objects. These humans have been chained in the cave since birth and the shadows that they see are what they believe to be reality. Some of the prisoners might comment

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    In studying all of the symbolism included‚ it becomes apparent that the Allegory of the Cave is a representation of the philosopher’s place in society‚ and the other prisoners reaction to the escaped prisoner returning is representing the reaction people have of philosophers‚ and becoming aware of the truth philosophers hold. The Allegory of the Cave illustrates book 5 and 6 for us by showing the effect education has on the human soul‚ and how education helps us move

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    begins to bond with his wife’s friend‚ Robert‚ a man who is blind. Plato’s Allegory of the cave is a story about a prisoner who is freed from being locked in chains living all of his life underground and finding out a different perspective about a lie he’s been living his whole life‚ being told as a conversation between Socrates and Glaucon. In the stories‚ “ Cathedral” by Raymond Carver‚ and “ Allegory of the Cave” by Plato‚ both authors argue that a person’s reality is not always what is seems to be

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    into words” (p. 28). In this reflection paper‚ I will compare and contrast Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave” with the motion picture‚ The Matrix. I will demonstrate some understanding of the principal areas of Philosophy covered

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    correlate with the walls in Plato’s allegory of the cave by identifying with the lack of personal thought and opinions that make up an individual. Just as the prisoners of Plato’s Cave are subjected to a false reality of shadow puppetry so are the citizens of Pleasantville subject to conformity. However‚ once personal choice is explored citizens of Pleasantville cannot go back to living as they once did‚ just as the enlightened prisoner of Plato’s cave cannot return to past beliefs with his newly found

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    Plato was a Greek philosopher‚ a former student of Socrates and also taught another famous philosopher who was named Aristotle. In Plato’s Allegory of The Cave‚ he tended to focus upon the idea that the world is not what is seems. The world in this point of view is extremely similar to the shadows that dance along the walls of the cave in his writing. Plato believed we cannot see the world for what it truly is and that it is merely a shadow of what we believe exists. In his belief of Theory of

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    The Danger of the Cave Date Critical thinking is very important to our relationships with each other and with ourselves. It requires someone to make a little more effort to figure out the whole story. Sometimes people are very good at this such as the man from The Allegory of the Cave and Chimamanda Adichi‚ while others such as the woman from The Lunch Date‚ cannot form new perspectives and base outlooks on assumptions and stereotypes. Being a critical thinker requires a person to gain and use knowledge

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    or knowledge as it were‚ are rich with questions about life. Many philosophers follow down their own rabbit hole to arrive at answers to common themes yet from an entirely different perspective. In the case of The Apology and the Allegory of the Cave as well as the story of the Good Brahmin‚ both Socrates and Voltaire did exactly that‚ arrived at similar conclusions yet walked an entirely different path to arrive there. The paragraphs below briefly discusses this. ------------------------------------------------------------

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