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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which compares and contrasts Socrates’/Plato’s Allegory of the Cave and his Divided Line. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JA7_RAcaveli.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
work on Socrates called The Republic. In many ways they are both part of the same thing, approaching a way of explaining consciousness in human beings. In truth they fit
together in many ways, just describing different aspects of a whole one could say. The following paper examines the two, comparing and contrasting what they have in common and what
they speak differently of in relationship to the overall notions. A Comparison and Contrast of The Cave and The Divided Line In The Republic The Divided Line comes
before The Cave and as such some could well argue that it is something of an introduction to thoughts and ideas concerning what Socrates will present in The Cave. In
The Divided Line Socrates is presenting images or ideas to the listeners as it involves elements more along the lines of geometry. Glaucon, who is the other person in the
dialogue, does not seem to understand Socrates first illustration and so Socrates moves into a geometric description stating that the divided line is divided between things that are visual and
intellectual. He indicates how the visual is made up of the lines that the geometry student draws or perceives but that the intellectual is comprised of all that the geometry
student sees in relationship to what the image can present: "but of the ideas which they resemble; not of the figures which they draw" (Plato The Republic VI). The
connection between the visual and the intellectual in this Divided Line are similar to what Socrates illustrates in the Cave for in The Cave the individuals being described, at first,
only see the visual and do not have any comprehension of the intellectual. This Divided Line helps the reader understand what Socrates is saying in The Cave when he explains
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