Answer:
Acquiring true knowledge requires questioning one’s perception.
Explanation:
Plato's "Allegory of the Cave," tells an allegorical story of how man is so blind with his own concept of knowledge that he assumes anything that he can see or know as the real knowledge and finds it hard to accept other truths. Through this allegory, Plato implies that true knowledge is perceived only when a man utilizes philosophical reasoning to understand the true nature of reality.
In this allegorical story, Plato presents an image of men in a cave who are prisoners. the cave represents knowledge and the chained 'prisoners' are able to only see and perceive one side, that is the scene in front of them. They are unable to move their necks or see things behind or even on the sides of the caves. Their vision is limited to the front only and their shadows. So, according to him, <u>man needs to question his own perceptions if he is to acquire true knowledge, only then will he be able to perceive the true nature of reality.
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Answer:
False.
Explanation:
It was Geoffrey Chaucer who was the poet of the fourteenth century and who helped in the development of Middle English. Chaucer is also known as the "Father of English Literature". He is considered as the great poet of the fourteenth century or "Age of Chaucer". Chaucer had contributed around two-thousand words in English dictionary. He wrote in English during the time when French and Latin was in much use in literature. His magnum opus "The Canterbury Tales" can be considered that bank.
So, it was not Shakespeare who wrote in the fourteenth century but Chaucer. Shakespeare wrote during the Elizabethan Era starting from 1558-1603.
There is no nine hundred In it hundred place. p.s. the 3,000 is missing a zero.
What is one advantage of including the image of skateboarder in the middle of the passage?
B.
It proves people are much happier when they skateboard than they are doing any other activity