Plato (Allegory of the Cave)
Plato’s Allegory of the Cave is,
one of the philosophical writings in the form of allegory. An allegorical
writing is the type of writing having two levels of meanings: literary and
allegorical meanings. A literary meaning is the content or the subject
matter and allegorical meaning is the symbolic or metaphorical suggestion. In
allegorical writing characters, actions and setting are used as symbols and
they should be interpreted to make the allegorical meaning. In the Allegory
of the Cave, Plato has given a description of the cave of the cave world.
In the outer world, there is light and everything is
clearly visible. If one of the chained people is released from the cave
world, and if he is taken to the outer world he cannot see anything at first
because his eyes dazzle in the light. But if he stays in the outer world,
slowly and gradually he begins to identify everything and he comes to realize
that the outer world is the real world and the cave world is the unreal
world. He becomes gratified with himself and remembers the other people in
the cave. He gives pity and sympathy over the cave people who are lost in
darkness. He thinks that it is better to be the slave in the outer world
rather than being the king inside the cave. Even though, he does not want to
go back to the cave world, his eyes dazzle more if he is taken back to the
cave world, and he can’t count anything inside darkness. If he attempts to
persuade the people inside the cave saying that the outer world is the real
world, and the cave world is unreal, his ignorant friends kill him.
The allegory of the cave has also
allegorical meaning because so many symbolic suggestions are used in this
writings. The dark cave symbolically suggests the contemporary world of
ignorance and the chained people symbolize ignorant people in this ignorant
world. The raised wall symbolizes the limitation of our thinking and the
shadow symbolically suggest the world of sensory perception which Plato
considers an illusion. In his opinion, the appearance is false and reality is
somewhere, which we cannot see. Plato as an ideal philosopher says that the
appearing world is just the imitation or photocopy of the real world. The
shadows represent such photocopy and, the reality is possible to know with
the spiritual knowledge. The chains symbolize our limitation in this material
world so that we cannot know the reality to know reality; we have to break the
material world. The outer world of the light symbolically suggests the world
of spiritual reality, which we achieve by breaking the chains that are used
to tie us. The dazzling of our eyes for the first time symbolizes difficulty
of denies the material world. The second time dazzling of the eyes symbolizes
our difficulty to accept ignorance after knowing the reality. Hence, in
allegory of the cave Plato has given a criticism over our limited existence
in the material world.
In Allegory of the cave, Plato
has also described about our perception. He says that there are two types of
perception: sensory perception and spiritual perception. Sensory perception
is the world of appearance, which we perceive, with the help of our sensory
organs. For this, world is the world of illusion. It is the world of shadows
so in Plato’s view it is the world of falsehood. The reality or truth is
impossible to perceive with our senses, it is possible through spiritual
perception, which is divine enlightenment. Spiritual perception is possible
when we reject the world of sensory perception so until and unless we break
all the material chains we do not get spiritual perception. It is the ideal
philosophy of Plato and his spiritual perception as an ideal concept.
Plato also talks about true
education or true philosophy. In his opinion education is the process of
learning spiritual knowledge so he even calls true education as true
philosophy. He says that the learning power is the world of becoming and
education is the process of learning called world of being. In other words,
what Plato says is that each and every individual is given the learning power
in to his soul by the divine so that our learning process differs from one
another. A man can learn up to a certain limit and after the limitation is
crossed, he cannot learn more. This concept of learning process differs from
one another. Contemporary professors of education who believed that there is
not predetermined, rejected this concept of learning process that true education
is the spiritual enlightenment, which we learn from the heart. It is also
called true philosophy, which has certain qualities. A true philosophy is
able to make the difference between truth and falsehood, right and wrong as
well as justice and injustice. More over true philosophy makes a person
spiritually illuminated so that he is not concerned with the material world.
Plato also talks about an ideal
state, which is a utopian world. In an ideal state, there is equality among
the people because no one is superior or inferior in this world. There is
free flow of knowledge justice and truth, everywhere in the ideal state.
Plato is also known as the first communist because of his concept of equality
among the people. In the ideal state, rulers are also true philosopher whose
wealth is not money or gold but spiritual knowledge. Those are the best
rulers to rule the ideal state because they are reluctant to rule and active
to serve the people as true servants. In other words, the rulers at the ideal
state are never thirsty to exercise power, they do not want to impose cruelty
over the people but instead they are worried of the condition of the people
and the welfare of the state. These rulers are based because for them ruling
is not imposing power but it is serving the people. But it is just an ideal
state so practically there is no possibility of such state as such ideal
rulers are rarely found, these true philosophers are not only the rulers but
also best teachers, who should go to the dark and ignorant world to
enlightenment the ignorant people.
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Friday, July 27, 2012
Allegory of Cave
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