The most evident similarities between the motion picture The Matrix, Plato’s Allegory of the Cave and Descartes’ Meditation is that these works question and inquires the truth of the World around us and raises doubt about the legitimacy of our feeling of recognition. In other words, all three pieces of work question what is real and what reality is. The Matrix is a film that goes up against the genuine and the part of a convoluted, fake digital reality. Before Mr. Anderson (Neo) revelation of the authenticity, Morpheus ask him, “Have you ever had a dream that you are so sure was real? What if you were able to wake up from that dream, how would you know the difference between that dream world and the real world?” (The Matrix) Morpheus inquiry addresses right away the …show more content…
The writing composed by Plato highlights comparable subjects that are presented in The Matrix, apparently the possibility of disparate substances one just might realize. The Matrix is also similar to Descartes’ ideas on power and impression of people’s mind.
Despite the fact that every one of the three of these sources are asking comparable questions, it is chiefly their method for noting these inquiries that recognizes them from each other. The motion picture The Matrix depicts a general public that has been tricked and assumed control by a PC framework, while a little gathering of nonconformists unite as one to battle its control – while this band perceives that the world they had faith in for so long was not really reality, they have figured out how to remove themselves from the Matrix's grip. However in both Plato and Descartes' speculative circumstances there is no real way to get