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Fahrenheit 451 Research Paper

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Cecelia Zaleski Mr. Thomson ELA 11 Honors 28 April 2024 Fahrenheit 451 Final Essay The Allegory of the Cave has a meaning that people need to dig deeper to find, just like when reading Fahrenheit 451. Both stories use real life hints and clues to teach the reader a lesson. These stories have the same message, ignorance. In The Allegory of the Cave, the prisoner who was let out to see the outside world is seen as crazy. In Fahrenheit 451, Guy Montag is the only person that he is aware of that knows the truth, until he is led to others that have the same goals as him. In today's world, everyone also goes through things just as blindly as these characters. In The Allegory of the Cave, the hidden message is ignorance. The definition of ignorance …show more content…

Arc Studio Blog describes it as, “The world is only as big as we can imagine” (Plato’s Allegory of the Cave: Explained - Arc Studio Blog). The world around the prisoners is all that is there. The outside world is non-existent. The goal of The Allegory of the Cave is to expand imagination, even when it is hard to believe, and not normal to be around. When Plato wrote it out to have a prisoner be able to see the before non-existent world, he made it so that there would be little chance that the others would believe him. Seeing this new world was scary for the prisoner, then they were used to a fire that created pictures for their “entertainment,” but passing that fire was a world of opportunity that they would never know about. The darkness of the cave made it extremely difficult for the prisoners' eyes to adjust, which scared the other prisoners leading them to call him crazy. If they all believed in this prisoner, their lives would have been completely different and had real meaning. They were too afraid to imagine the truth laid out before them. Similar to The Allegory of the Cave, Bradbury uses these themes in Fahrenheit

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