If there is a human fall, it is our fall from nature; our infatuation with knowledge, the this and that of our own constructions, and our concomitant turning away from life, or nature, or so called God's creation — ENOAH
If the misery of our poor be not caused by nature, but by our social institutions, then great is our sin. — Charles Darwin
ou know what Plato's cave allegory might be really talking about, at the end of the day? Maybe it's talking about the time, before the Paleolithic (before cavemen) when men and women were not human. — Arcane Sandwich
The word "natural" is not made meaningless because it has more than one meaning. — RussellA
Maybe it's talking about the time, before the Paleolithic (before cavemen) when men and women were not human. — Arcane Sandwich
:rofl:
Isn’t it about our lack of insight? The absence of wisdom? Not seeing what is real? That’s how I’ve always interpreted it. I don’t think the ancient Greeks had much grasp of palaeontology. — Wayfarer
Plato’s cave was never about actual cave-dwellers, or actual caves. — Wayfarer
It's philosophy 101, right? That section of the Republic is plainly allegorical, with the Sun representing the knowledge of the Good, towards which all should aspire. The 'ascent' from the 'Cave' is 'painful', and should the one who has ascended return to the cave and try and explain to the cave-dwellers the magnificence of the outside world, they'll want to kill him. The mainstream interpretation is that the cave represents the world of sensory experience, the ascent to the Sun represents the insight into the forms or intelligible principles which are only discernable to the 'eye of reason'. It is followed by the 'allegory of the divided line' which describes the levels of knowledge, from (mere) belief or opinion, through mathematical knowledge (dianoia) and then noesis (higher knowledge.) — Wayfarer
None of this makes much sense to us moderns, because being committed to materialism and empiricism, we're essentially cave-dwellers ;-) — Wayfarer
Why would Plato need an allegory to say that? — Arcane Sandwich
I think it's fair to say that I'm respectful of your idealism and spiritualism. Wouldn't you agree? — Arcane Sandwich
Have you ever come across someone who didn't understand it? I haven't. Think about it. — Arcane Sandwich
Nothing you've said in the brief exchange we've had about 'the allegory of the Cave' would indicate that you interpret it accurately :brow: — Wayfarer
Maybe it's talking about the time, before the Paleolithic (before cavemen) when men and women were not human. — Arcane Sandwich
Give me an example of what you would describe as a mainstream intepretation? — Wayfarer
You came in with this:
Maybe it's talking about the time, before the Paleolithic (before cavemen) when men and women were not human. — Arcane Sandwich
which I for one have never encountered elsewhere. — Wayfarer
This exemplifies only one among billions of unprecedented and inconceivably large improbabilities associated with the presence of our species. We could just as easily have made the same point by describing a modern technological artifact, like the computer that I type on to write these sentences. This device was fashioned from materials gathered from all parts of the globe, each made unnaturally pure, and combined with other precisely purified and shaped materials in just the right way so that it could control the flow of electrons from region to region within its vast maze of metallic channels. No non-cognitive spontaneous physical process anywhere in the universe could have produced such a vastly improbable combination of materials, much less millions of nearly identical replicas in just a few short years of one another. These sorts of commonplace human examples typify the radical discontinuity separating the physics of the spontaneously probable from the deviant probabilities that organisms and minds introduce into the world. — Terrence Deacon
When the solar system formed, a small fraction of its initial chemical inventory included the element plutonium. Because the longest-lived isotope of plutonium has a half-life of about 81 million years, virtually all the primordial plutonium has now decayed. But in 1940 plutonium reappeared on Earth as a result of experiments in nuclear physics; there are now estimated to be a thousand tonnes of it. Without life, the sudden rise of terrestrial plutonium would be utterly inexplicable. There is no plausible non-living pathway from a 4.5-billion-year-old dead planet to one with deposits of plutonium. — Paul Davies
I don’t think the ancient Greeks had much grasp of palaeontology. — Wayfarer
Plato was addressing an intuition he had (I speculate, from Socrates) that humans approach things already and inevitably "clouded" by the concepts history has constructed. — ENOAH
Besides, what does it mean to say that h.sapiens is ‘part of nature’? Why is that meaningful or important? — Wayfarer
If mankind is a part of nature, then no act of mankind within nature is open to judgement. However, if mankind is separate to nature, for what reason does mankind have a responsibility to nature, and if mankind does have a responsibility, then its relationship with nature may be open to judgement. — RussellA
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