Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, from The Republic, describes prisoners chained in a cave since birth, seeing only shadows of puppets cast on a wall, mistaking these shadows for ultimate reality. One prisoner escapes, sees the real world, understands the sun (representing the Form of the Good) as the source of all truth, and realizes shadows are mere copies; he then returns to enlighten the others, but is met with disbelief and hostility, symbolizing the philosopher’s difficult role in leading humanity from ignorance (the cave) to true knowledge (the Forms). 

This farmer explains the Echo Chamber in political talk radio, mostly right-wing, by bringing up Plato’s story about the man in the cave, he really goes into detail, you can watch more of his videos here. I call him the Phamily Pharm Philosopher.

Strangely enough this video about the isolation of North Korea is like an entire country living in a cave. The most astonishing part is after a foreign volunteer surgeon repairs the vision of 1,000 patients in 10 days (cataract surgery) and they don’t thank him, they get on their knees and praise a photo of their leader. Reminded me of a MAGA rally.

I think if we continue down the path we are on in the United States, we will all be living in caves eventually.

By l3wis

2 thoughts on “The Man in the Cave”
  1. Neanderthals loved caves. They say that many of us are running around today with some Neanderthal DNA. I would love to do an analysis on this of us all, because something tells me that within MAGA is found the greatest concentration of such past genetics. #Winning #TigerBlood&AdomisDNA

  2. Socrates was always my favorite. He drank the hemlock. He was the Jimmy Jones of his time. Now, young people today may think I’m talking about a sub shop, but what I’m really talking about is the Socratic method, which drives some nuts while others to drink….. to drink Hemlock, that is 🙂

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