Saturday, August 31, 2019
Reflection About Platos Allegory of the Cave Essay
This should already be clear to you: -The shadows of ideas projected on the wall = opinions, illusions. -The wall = the material world seen by us. -Ideas are the basis of reality and not the material world. The most important thing you can do is: ââ¬Ë Know thyselfââ¬â¢, practice self-reflection, learn more about yourself than what you believe you are. Here I will go further: The material world is largely an illusion, it is always changing. By just looking at it, one cannot learn anything. There is also another world: an eternal world of ideas. It is made up out of eternal unchanging forms of things. This world can be known through reason alone. The material world (world of things) is a manifestation of this eternal world of ideas. Using the allegory, Plato pictures the everyday situation of man. He can speak, hear, and encounter the world without actually being aware of the world of Ideas. True knowledge can only be gained from the world of ideas. The world of things merely generates opinions or illusions. lato depicts these worlds as existing on a line that can be divided in the middle: the upper part of the line is the world of ideas and the lower part is the world of things. Each region can further be divided in two. In the world of things, there are ââ¬Å"illusionsâ⬠, which composes the lower region, and ââ¬Å"beliefsâ⬠, which composes the higher region. The illusions are the shadows represented by the artistic works of the craftsmen and poets. The beliefs are manââ¬â¢s knowledge of individual things, which may sometimes be true but is often times false because individual things are constantly changing. The world of ideas, on the other, can be divided into ââ¬Å"reasonâ⬠(the lower part of the region) and ââ¬Å"intelligenceâ⬠(the higher part of the region). Under reason is the knowledge of things like mathematics. And under intelligence is the knowledge of the highest and most abstract categories of things, for example, understanding the ultimate good. Here are some examples that I want to give: ââ¬â the idea of giving: ââ¬Ëwhen you give something to a person, you create a bond between yourself and the otherââ¬â¢; the other shows you gratitude for your gift. BUT in real life (material world) it can be so that a particular person has had some nasty experiences with giving presents (some people arenââ¬â¢t that gratefull) and therefore creates an aversion for ââ¬Ëgivingââ¬â¢. He has formed a wrong ââ¬Ëopinionââ¬â¢ about the idea of giving. ââ¬â Poker hands: in poker KK is a very good hand, this is mathematically so. Some pokerplayers however lost a lot of chips with this hand, because an Ace fell on the table. This means that in the future they will tend to misjudge their hand (because of their experiences with it) and underestimate it (contrary what is known in probability theory) ââ¬â e.g. you learned from your environment that all black people are bad. This is in a sense a shadow on the wall of the cave. Instead of fixating on the shadow, you must force yourself to look behind that what you have learned (or passively accepted) before. Then you will find out that what you have learned before isnââ¬â¢t the truth. ââ¬â fear of snakes: you start panicking because you thought you saw a snake in your yard, but it is only a garden hose. When you return you see the truth, it was your own fear that gave you a misjudgment. ââ¬â The entire idea behind science is basically based on this: instead of assuming certain things to be true, scientist tend to do a lot of research and experiments before they will claim a theory about something. In a real situation you should discard your own opinions and strife for the truth. The truth will hurt (just as staring in the flame). It wil hurt you AND others. It is in part conquering your fears, and be open minded in all situations. Questioning yourself always is truely a hard task. (many who have left the cave, came back because it was just too difficult living in the light of reason)
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