Think you know it all? Plato's cave and new psychology research reveal why true self-awareness starts with admitting what you don’t know.
Plato's Cave promised to provide a safer alternative for families living in extended stay motels in Branson. However, one family who lives there says it's not what they expected. After not even three ...
You’re a prisoner, held in a dark cave. Your hands are tied behind you and you can only look straight ahead at the cave wall. Your captors keep you occupied by putting objects on it. To pass the time ...
Plato's Allegory of the Cave by Jan Saenredam, according to Cornelis van Haarlem, 1604. Source: Wikimedia Commons The Allegory of the Cave (circa 380 BCE) Human beings spend all their lives in an ...
A sentiment echoes across the United States, and it stems from “the people.” Just last week, “the people” elected a president. How can we understand this political moment better? Let’s go back to ...
They are providing an alternative to low-income housing while businesses are shut down, and people are out of work. “We are having a number of folks who are living with roommates for argument’s sake ...
BRANSON, Mo. — A place intentionally opened for international workforce housing is now an all-inclusive affordable housing development. Ronda Cady, general manager of Plato’s Cave, says they’re hoping ...
Imagine you are inside a cave, chained with others and facing a blank wall. All you can see are shadows cast against the wall from the light outside. Plato tells this story in “The Republic”: “Imagine ...
Imagine being raised from birth as a slave to a reality that never existed. That’s the idea in Book VII of Plato’s “Republic” (380 BC) in a conversation between Glaucon and his teacher Socrates who ...
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