Analysis Of Plato's Cave Allegory

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Do we really understand the world we live in and see everyday? Is our everyday perception of reality a misinterpretation, which somehow we can’t break free from? A famous Greek philosopher by the name of Plato sought out to explain this in an experiment he called the Cave Allegory. I will discuss what the Cave Allegory is as well as talk about the movie Interstellar, which is a great example of Plato’s Cave Allegory and how it relates to Plato’s ideas. The question we have to answer first is, what is Plato’s Cave Allegory? The Cave Allegory was Plato’s attempt to compare what he called “the effect of education and the lack of it on our nature”. Plato had another Greek philosopher by the name of Socrates describe a group of people who lived …show more content…

In one scene we can see Cooper slingshot, using the black hole, into the tesseract. He then communicates back to the people on earth to help save the human race. The tesseract is the exterior of the “cave” and at the same time the tesseract uncovers the cave of knowledge. This knowledge is the only hope for Cooper to communicate what he has learned, and the knowledge to be able to save humanity. In the opening of the movie we see Cooper on his struggling farm and doing anything to save the farm, as well as a school system that is tailored to keeping putting out more farmers, opposed to teaching critical thinking skills and other real world skills. This alludes to the prisoners in the cave. Seeing what they think is reality and not wanting to change or see another side of reality and conform to what they see as the truth because it’s what they are used to, it’s their everyday reality. Interstellar is a great movie in many ways to the Cave Allegory. Plato would be …show more content…

Whether it’s in the news, TV shows, or movies, it’s happening all the time. It also happens in our everyday personal lives. We get caught in a routine and keeping doing it and it bothers us if that routine is broken or that someone tells us that we should stop doing that daily routine. Plato wants us to look beyond the cave to see what is around us and what is real, not the fake reality that the world sometimes projects. Like Cooper in Interstellar, he stepped outside the “cave” to find a hope for humanity, and at the same time found the tesseract, or the outside of the “cave” again, and found the knowledge he needed to help his daughter figure out the gravity equation and save humanity from dying out. Plato wants us to spread the knowledge of what’s really out there, rather than be prisoners

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