Allegory Of The Cave Essay

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In “The Allegory of the Cave,” Plato addresses one of the most contentious and recurring themes of philosophy and human existence, “What is truth?”. He describes a scenario in which most of the population are prisoners who have been chained and held immobile since childhood: not only are their arms and legs held in place, but their heads are also fixed, compelled to gaze at shadows flickering across a wall. Behind the prisoners is an enormous fire, and between the fire and the prisoners is a raised walkway, along which puppets of various animals, plants and other things are moved. The puppets cast shadows on the wall, and the prisoners watch these shadows. There are also echoes off the wall from the noise produced from the walkway. They do not care what causes the shadows, nor do they try to resist the chains that bind them in place. If they dared to venture even further, they would eventually find their way out of the cave and into freedom, seeing the sun, the ultimate enlightening truth, for the first time.
In a discussion with Glaucon, Socrates asks if it is reasonable that the prisoners would take the shadows they see before them to be “real” things and the echoes to be “real” sounds, not just reflections of something else, since those shadows are all they had ever seen. Wouldn't they assume that someone who could predict the next shadow to appear as one with uncanny insight into the nature of the world? And wouldn't the whole of their society depend on the reality put before them as shadows on the wall?
Socrates then supposes that a prisoner is freed and permitted to stand up. If someone were to show him the things that had cast the shadows, he would not recognize them for what they truly were and could not nam...

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...s aimed at beholding the Good itself. The shadows of the world as he has viewed it before are now seen as falsely held perception and he is eager to share enlightenment with others. Making the ascent out of the cave and into the sunlight above is like moving from ignorance into the intellectual world of the mind.
In a religious context, those who live their lives without God could be construed as the inhabitants of the shadowy cave. One of them leaves the cave where they see the light of the sun (Touched by the presence of God) for the first time. This revelation has granted them a profound insight that they want to share with others. Like an evangelical Christian, they dedicate their time to helping others see the light of God and they return to the shadowy cave to lead the others to the light. They hope to enlighten and thus liberate their former fellow prisoners.

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