Philosophy: Week 10 (Quiz 1)
When an enlightened one returns to the cave, Plato says such a person will be
"blind and bewildered about cave life" and "yearning to return to the upper world"
In the Republic, Plato argues that all the prisoners in the cave will eventually see daylight.
False
Plato argues that the prisoners in the cave can never be enlightened.
False
Plato maintains that personal freedom is more important than wisdom.
False
Plato thinks that only the rich and powerful can be enlightened.
False
The freed prisoner does not feel obligated to enlighten the others living in ignorance.
False
In Plato's Republic, what does the sun outside the cave represent?
The good
Plato distinguishes between appearance and reality.
True
Plato thinks that few people have insight into what's real.
True
Plato thinks that the prisoners are deluded.
True
The Allegory of the Cave reminds us that people will often prefer comfortable commonplace assumptions to the deeper, sometimes unsettling understanding derived from philosophy.
True
The Allegory of the Cave suggests that there is a difference between knowledge and mere belief.
True
How does Plato characterize the "good"? It
all of these
Who, in Plato's Allegory of the Cave, are the people sitting in the cave?
all of us.
In the analogy of the Sun, the good is to the ______ world what the sun is to the_______ world:
intellectual/visible.
Socrates claims that the people chained in the cave are
like ourselves.
The Allegory of the Cave suggests that the truth is
not always obvious.
What do the shadows on the cave wall represent?
ordinary people's ignorance-infused views of the world
In Plato's Republic, after viewing the Sun, the philosopher returns to the cave
reluctantly
The people chained in the cave view the returning philosopher
resentfully
What does the sun outside the cave represent?
the idea of good
In his Allegory of the Cave, Plato advances the notion that ___________.
there are two realms: one of change and becoming, the other of being and eternal truth
What do the objects observed outside the cave represent?
things as they really are, grasped in the light of reason
In the Allegory of the Cave, the reaction of the prisoners to the enlightened one is
to revile him as ridiculous.
Plato's allegory reminds us that widely accepted opinions can be
wrong