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What Is The Truth In Plato's Allegory Of The Cave

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In Plato’s short story, the Allegory of the Cave, Plato portrays a scene in a cave that analyzes the human understanding of truth. The story is about a group of men that are chained to a wall for their entire life. The only thing they are exposed to be shadows on the wall and a fire burning behind them. The people keeping these men prisoner are hiding the truth of the outside world. Plato reveals that humans are easily fooled into believing what they see and told is the absolute truth. In Plato’s story the people think that their entire reality is the shadows they see on the walls of the cave. Plato explores that humanity is in a cave and hidden away from the truths. Plato criticizes that humanity does not question what is real.
Plato explores the human understanding of what is real. Plato reveals that it is difficult and stressful realizing the truth. When one of the prisoners climbs out of the cave, the prisoner is exposed to the true reality. The freed prisoner finds what the source of the noises and the shadows are; the fire that he saw his entire life. His life was full of lies. When the prisoner is freed from the cave, Plato explains that the prisoner found it very painful to realize what the outside world really was. The freed prisoner only had one perspective of life the fire ‘Plato says “take a man who is released and suddenly compelled to stand up, turn his neck around, to walk and look up towards the light” (Plato 869). The freed prisoner would “look towards the
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