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Plato's Philosophical Concepts in The Matrix

 

            Plato's Philosophical Concepts in The Matrix .
             Andy and Larry Wachowski's The Matrix (1999) may seem like your ordinary Science Fiction film at first viewing. With advanced technology, special effects, and action scenes jam packed into almost every frame, it is initially challenging to separate this picture from other great Sci-Fi films of the late 20th century. Only after viewing this film several times and focusing solely on the text and not the graphics, the viewer may recognize the depth of the script and the many philosophical concepts throughout. Plato's work "The Allegory of the Cave", a selection from his text "The Republic", is the strongest example of the use of philosophical views in The Matrix.
             Plato's "Allegory of the Cave" is a story used to describe the control that society and the government has over ordinary citizens. He begins his story by describing a dark underground cave where a group of citizens or prisoners have been chained since birth to a wall. The prisoners are chained in such a way that they have an extremely limited view of the cave, they are only able to see the wall in front of them and no one or nothing else. The prisoners view of reality is solely based upon this limited view of the cave wall which is a poor copy of the real world. From childhood, ".their legs and necks [have been] in bonds so that they are fixed, seeing only [what is] in front of them. As Plato goes on to later explain, "the truth would be literally nothing but the shadows of the images (The History Guide)." Since this life is all the prisoners have known since birth, they do not realize that they are prisoners at all, they simply believe that this is the extent of living.
             The second group of people in the cave described by Plato are those who are in control of the images the prisoners see, or in other words the puppet-handlers. Walking behind the prisoners, the puppet-handlers hold up various objects found in the real world.


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