Allegory Of The Cave Summary

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3. The Allegory of the Cave tells the story of three men trapped in a cave since birth. They have not seen the outside world or have any knowledge of it. They cannot move, and can only stare at the shadows moving on the wall in front of them, cast by the light of a fire behind them. The prisoners believe that the shadows are real, since they have never seen real objects. They play a game where they try to guess which shadow will come next, and if one guesses correctly, then the others admired him for his cleverness. Eventually, one of the prisoners breaks free and exits the cave, where he finds the real world. He is shocked and disoriented by the bright light of the sun, but quickly adapts. He realizes that his former view of reality was wrong, and learns the true way of things. …show more content…

The cave represents ignorance and how people tend to believe only what they see and hear – they experience the world believing that what they observe is the truth. The shadows on the wall represent the perception that empirical evidence guarantees real knowledge, because to Plato, empirical evidence is only a shadow of the truth. The game represents that a person can seem clever when they actually know nothing, and that in the end it is fruitless to admire someone like this. The escape represents a philosopher, who seeks knowledge outside of the cave. The light he encounters outside the cave represents truth and knowledge. Finally, the return to the cave represents people’s general fear of the unknown, of philosophical truth. Ultimately, the Allegory of the Cave reveals that Plato believes that to become a philosopher, you must think outside of your senses and discount empirical evidence to come to know the truth of the

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