Plato's Allegory Of The Cave

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Reading Response #2: Detailed Analysis on “The Allegory of the Cave” by Plato
In the essay “Allegory of the Cave” by Plato, Plato portrays the concept of how education of a soul can lead toward enlightenment. He wants the audience to know that experiencing new education can give new knowledge. His viewpoint relates to his idea of forms as people struggle to see the reality beyond the delusion. He emphasizes that ideas are not the way world observes it. He wants to show that people see things that are not real and accepts unreal things as reality. He depicts that people accept things that are unreal without knowing the reality. He also portrays that finding out that the reality is not real makes them understand that they believed in false reality. He wants people to have knowledge about the reality to …show more content…

Plato wants to show importance of enlightenment in order to demonstrate that people will find out that they believed in unreal things, people will understand the reality that what they believed in was actually a false reality, and people will have experience that will educate them to believe in the real reality.
Plato wants to give importance to enlightenment, which can help people to come out of the false reality that they believed was real. People will know what is a real reality and what is a false reality, and people will understand the importance of being educated. Plato mentions, “in every way believe that the truth is nothing other than the shadows of those artifacts?” (Plato 281). Prisoners would believe that the shadow on the wall is the reality, but actually they did not know that images on wall are just shadow as they have not seen the outside world other than the cave. People believe in what they see, but they are unaware of other things that they do not see, and they only believe in things that they see. Plato want to tell to the audience that what we believe in and what we see is not always true. Plato mentions,

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