By Sarah Alsaid - From the gilded words of Willy Wonka‚ "there is no life I know to compare with pure imagination. Living there you’ll be free‚ if you truly wish to be." Living a childhood completely different from all the other children his age‚ Willy Wonka‚ the main character in the movie Charlie and the Chocolate Factory‚ grew up to become one of the greatest chocolate sellers known. With his dad known as the town’s dentist‚ Willy spent his childhood with a mouth full of braces‚ was
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because of the help especially from his mother. Although two stories are similar in that Willy and Forrest are single- minded‚ both characters differ in self- understanding and outcome of their lives. Both Willy and Forrest are similar in that they are single- minded. From attending Dave Singleman’s funeral‚ Willy learned that Dave was loved by dozens of people and that he wants to become just like him. Willy tries to become a great salesman during his entire lifetime; however‚ he could not make his
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‘Willy Loman is an anti-hero and an “ordinary man” who chased the wrong dreams.’ In light of this statement‚ how are his death and the play itself a tragedy? Aristotle states that a tragic hero should have a high status in society whilst wielding some sense of nobility. The character must also have greatness and be of noble stature which should be apparent in the play. The protagonist of the play‚ Willy‚ is not obviously shown to have such qualities which could make him an anti-hero. However‚
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After a guided tour of his confection factory‚ Willy Wonka would be the man to be so smitten with them that he would do so . They were selected from a group of five children that were lucky enough to win a Golden Ticket. In both films that Golden Ticket would be the means of catapulting themselves and their families from a life of poverty and malnourishment into the surreal world of a fantasy candy factory and the job of its head chocolatier. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory is the 1971 version
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The Naica mines are naturally occurring caves‚ located in Chihuahua‚ Mexico. The Naica mines are working mines rich in lead‚ zinc‚ and silver‚ which are owned by Mexico’s largest lead producer‚ Industrias Penoles. Within the Naica mines are caves filled with giant selenite crystals‚ discovered by miner brothers‚ Juan and Pedro Sanchez in 2000. The caves were discovered while drilling through the Naica fault during a mining expedition. The giant crystal caves are in the shape of a horseshoe and have
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Plato allegory of the cave (25 marks) Plato is one of the most important Greek philosophers and a pupil of Socrates. He founded the Academy in Athens‚ an institution devoted to research and instruction in philosophy and the sciences. His works on philosophy‚ politics and mathematics which were very influential.The complex meanings that can be perceived from the "Cave" can be seen in the beginning with the presence of the prisoners who are chained in the darkness of the cave. The prisoners are bound
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The Cave and the Christian In Plato’s Republic we have one of the best allegories told‚ the allegory of the Cave. The allegory of the cave goes basically like this: Suppose people were born in a cave and from birth they were chained up and unable to turn their heads. All they could do was to look straight ahead at a wall. Far behind them there was a fire burning and in from of that fire people would walk with object in their hands‚ statues and the like. All the chained prisoners could see would
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Cave paintings were the first forms of art. These paintings first appeared around 31‚000 years ago. The oldest one known is in the El Castillo cave in Spain. This is not a very well-known cave‚ even though I think it should be. The Chauvet‚ Altamira‚ and Lascaux are the most common caves. Cave art is very interesting and has created multiple theories. The first theory of the purpose of this new outburst was just a way to be decorative. I don’t think that is the sole reason for
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Plato’s Allegory of the cave in The Matrix‚ it swirls together Plato’s ideas with a realistic feel. The things that are most clear in The Matrix that relate back to the Allegory of the cave are‚ the forms‚ the blinding soon‚ the escaped prisoner‚ the fire‚ and the idea that the prisoners were living under a blank of lies. The connection between Plato’s work and the work of The Matrix is too strong for it to be unintentional. In Plato’s ideas of the Allegory of the cave‚ the forms play a key part
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Plato’s classic The Allegory of the Cave and seminal science-fiction film The Matrix at first glance seem to have nothing in common. The first is written and set in the ancient times‚ revolving around Socrates telling his follower Glaucon about chained prisoners in a primitive cave watching shadow puppets lighted by a fire burning at the cave’s opening. The latter is a futuristic story set in a world controlled by artificial-intelligent computers that created the Matrix‚ a virtual world programmed
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