The Matrix Skepticism Essay

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Skepticism: The Matrix In The Matrix (1999), the world is not quite what it appears to be. Everybody perceives life to be nothing extraordinary, unaware of the devastating truth that lies within their experiences. In the film, Keanu Reeves stars as a computer programmer/hacker named Thomas Anderson, who goes by the alias “Neo”. The plot consists of Neo’s search for the truth behind the computer-generated world, “The Matrix”, or what he used to call ‘reality’. The entire movie revolves around a philosophical question posed by the 17th-century French philosopher Rene Descartes. Descartes believed that one could not know what is real based solely on sensory experiences. We cannot distinguish what is a real experience from a dream experience. …show more content…

There comes a point in the movie where Neo must choose between a red pill or a blue pill. The red pill will disrupt Neo’s coding in the Matrix and allow Morpheus and his team to retrieve Neo out of the Matrix. The blue pill, however, will keep Neo in the Matrix with no memory of the truth that Morpheus had given. Neo seems to struggle with making the decision of which one he should choose. Choosing the red will give him the truth he has been searching for, but at what cost? What could be behind the matrix? Choosing the blue will put Neo back to where he started, and he’ll forever have the sense that something is off about the world he is living in. I think this accurately describes what everyday people would face. There are plenty of discussion about what is real and what is not. That’s what being a skeptic is. But if we were given the opportunity to reveal the truth, would we take it? Would we be willing to give up everything that we know in order to discover a greater knowledge in risk of it being more disastrous? I believe a majority of us would remain in the safe place we call “reality” instead of risking our peacefulness in what we know to be true. The world we live in could very well be actual reality. There could be no illusion or false experiences. But there are no cold hard facts that would …show more content…

The goal of the film is not just to entertain viewers with an intriguing sci-fi experience, but to have them question everything they know. How do you know what is real? How do you know you are not in a pod plugged into a supercomputer that sends neural coding to your brain? The Matrix proves that the only information you can legitimately know is the fact that you

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