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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. Theorists have long tried to understand how man knows what he knows, being that there is not guidebook to confirm if his assumptions are correct or merely figments of his own desire to have it be true. Plato and Francis Bacon took this quandary to task and respectively came up with much the same viewpoint about human nature and its capacity to misconstrue, exaggerate and disproportionate what might otherwise be considered the truth. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCPlAlleg.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
confirm if his assumptions are correct or merely figments of his own desire to have it be true. Plato and Francis Bacon took this quandary to task and respectively
came up with much the same viewpoint about human nature and its capacity to misconstrue, exaggerate and disproportionate what might otherwise be considered the truth. Plato and Bacon share
a common belief that people are very narrow-minded when it comes to accepting concepts for what they truly are, choosing instead to put a spin on something that inevitably misplaces
any truth that may have originally existed. Moreover, they collectively assert that when man is presented with indisputable knowledge, he still finds a way to question its validity even
though he has no way to support his own skepticism. Platos Allegory of the Cave and Bacons The Four Idols help to show the effectiveness of this thesis by
outlining the tremendous inadequacy of mans self-seeking approach to understanding the truth of his existence and of the universe around him, which will affect the reader by making him/her more
aware of what he/she deems as the truth. The usefulness of this topic is to show how people are not necessarily the smartest beings when it comes to illustrating
their capacity for cultivating and understanding knowledge; therefore, the value of this study is to encourage people to take a closer look at how truth and knowledge are perceived so
as to expand the approach to incorporate a greater acceptance of understanding beyond mans narrow scope of existence. II. EACH PERSPECTIVE According
to Plato, people are prisoners within themselves, wholly incapable of seeing beyond their small scope of reality, bound by their ignorance and insecurities so they cannot know the truth..
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