Plato describes a cave where people are chained up and can only see shadows cast on a wall. He parallels these shadows to the things that people see in the world around them, the materialistic reality that most people base their lives on. He parallels the chains to norms, customs, traditions, habits, etc. Plato believes that because people are so preoccupied with these shadows of the truth, they ignore the real truth. He parallels these shadows to the things that people see in the world around them, the materialistic reality that most people base their lives on. So, it makes sense that Plato wouldn't want to discount the possibility of a philosopher king based on the fact that he has never seen one, because it could be the "shadows" fooling him into believing that no such man exists. Aristotle, on the other hand, bases his beliefs on what he can see, and what has been proven.
Good tragedy raises fear, pity. Pity is sympathy. We Identify Oedipus the king in order to have......
Join Now or Login to view the rest of this paper.
Approximate Word Count: 1917
Approximate Pages: 8 (260 words per double-spaced page) |