The Allegory Of The Cave, Book VII Of The Republic By Plato

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This essay is on The Allegory of the Cave, Book VII of The Republic by Plato. This paper is written to explain what the allegory, defined by the Oxford Dictionary as “a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one, or a story with two levels of meaning” is as construed by Plato. This paper will 1) Present that the allegory presented in this story is a number of Plato 's key philosophical postulations 2) The strategy he used to explain his philosophical views in The Allegory of the Cave. 3) How do his views affect and or apply to reality, education and media in our society today.
In the Allegory of the Cave, Plato described symbolically the predicament in which humankind finds …show more content…

The "Allegory of the Cave" is just that, an allegory, or a symbolic story. In which, I like to associate Plato 's Allegory of the Cave with education. Applying his analysis of conception of reality, it shows how a person start off in ignorance (chained to the dark well) and has to be compelled, quite against their wishes often, to be unchained and start the "steep and rugged ascent" into the light, enlightenment, or education. The very root of the word "education" is from the Latin for "to lead out of" implying a leading out of darkness or ignorance. Moreover, once a person gets into the light, they do not want to go back into the cave (darkness). Another way to think about this is to ask yourself the question, all that I have learned would I be willing to give up that knowledge? Be it a foreign language, or how to play a musical instrument, or compute in math, or understand the weather? Once you know something, once you understand and have seen the light, you cannot go back into the cave of ignorance. Plato explicitly demonstrates this notion in "The Allegory …show more content…

If they were able to move and look around, they would have seen the truth of the statues, and the fire behind them. The cave is a metaphor for human existence. The people in the cave accept the shadows on the cave wall as reality because this is all that they have experienced. The echoes they hear are assumed by them to be real for the same reason. Plato is trying to illustrate that people know little truth about the reality of the world. The philosopher is the escaped person who goes into the light and can see the true reality of the world around them. Plato argues that it is the duty of the philosopher to inform the people in the cave of the light. This means the philosopher 's role is to tell people of the reality of the world. Plato is saying that, unless we become educated, we human beings are like the prisoners in the cave. We think that we understand the world around us. We think that the things we see and otherwise perceive are real. However, we are incorrect because the things that we perceive are mere shadows. There are true forms of everything that we think we perceive, but we cannot see those forms. In the allegory of the cave, Plato is trying to make us understand that we see shadows and we think they are the real thing. Thus, the main theme of the allegory is that we are ignorant about the true