In the article "Allegory of the Cave‚" Plato talks with one of his students and tries to show the difference between people who think their perception of things they see or hear is the truth‚ and people who can see the actual truth. To make things clear‚ he came up with this allegory where people were living underground. They were chained‚ so they didn’t have a chance to move their body or turn their heads. The only thing they saw was a wall right in front of their eyes. Behind them there was a path
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philosopher‚ born sometime around 428 B.C and died around 347 B.C. Among his many writings in the Republic‚ Plato spoke about government‚ education‚ justice‚ virtues‚ what qualities make people who they are. This paper will focus on Plato’s Allegory of the Cave as it relates to intellectual freedom in contemporary education‚ specifically the limits put on individuals that may hamper their learning or allow them intellectual freedom‚ what those limited in what they are exposed to and how they are taught guide
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Alyssa Ness Honors English 4B September 7‚ 2010 Plato’s Ideology “The Allegory of the Cave” demonstrates many of Plato’s beliefs‚ impacting the way he views education. …the power and capacity of learning exists in the soul already; and that just as the eye was unable to turn from darkness to light without the whole body‚ so too the instrument of knowledge can only by the movement of the whole soul be turned from the world of becoming into that of being… (Plato 5). This quote implies
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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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and Analysis of Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” “Whereas‚ our argument shows that the power and capacity of learning exist in the soul already;” (Plato 4). Spoken by Socrates in reference to the philosophy of life‚ this quote depicts the meaning of broadening our horizons in order to gain knowledge and escape the shackles that confine us in the form of deceit. This quote is portrayed in Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave” as the prisoners detained in the cave are deluded by their perception of reality
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“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 protagonist
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Frank Diez 9/25/08 Humanities Prep Jeannie The Allegory of the Cave The Allegory of the Cave is a story that was written down by Plato‚ and told by Socrates many‚ many years ago. It tells of a cave containing prisoners who have been there since they were very young. Behind them is a fire that is burning‚ and between the fire and the prisoners is a road with a curtain-wall. Behind this curtain-wall are figures of wood and stone‚ including animals and men. Socrates asks if they had
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small and seemingly insignificant cave‚ which is now known as the Sakriya Caves. Inside those caverns is where Torr began to realize his role in the creation of the material world‚ for the Sakriya Caves is where Torr began his fierce battle with the visions of the many souls that were trapped within the gemstone-laden walls of the caves. As he caught glimpses of many lives and a myriad of diverse locations‚ his body began to deteriorate. By the time Torr left the caves‚ most of his skin had eroded
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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 only morally
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Plato truly believed that philosophy was needed for each of us to live and die well. One of the most forceful stories he told and one of the most know allegories today is the Allegory of the Cave. He starts the story by telling Glaucon to envision a cave. Along the entire width of the cave is an entrance. There are people that have lived in this cavern for their entire lives with their heads and legs chained so they cannot move or look anywhere other than directly in front of them. In the very back
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