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Allegory
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Allegory is a literary and philosophical device in which characters, settings, and events carry sustained symbolic meaning beyond their surface narrative. Students encounter it across literature, philosophy, and humanities courses because it sits at the intersection of storytelling and argument, making abstract ideas accessible through concrete imagery. The most prominent work in these papers is Plato's Allegory of the Cave, drawn from The Republic, in which prisoners chained before a wall interpret shadows as reality until one escapes into the light. This scenario has remained a cornerstone of academic inquiry because it dramatizes fundamental questions about knowledge, truth, perception, and the examined life.

Student papers on this topic take several consistent approaches. Philosophical summary and close reading are common, with many essays unpacking Plato's cave, its prisoners, shadows, and the ascent toward light as stages in understanding reality. Comparative analysis also appears frequently, most notably in papers pairing Plato's allegory with the film The Matrix to explore how the same ideas translate across centuries and media. Some papers place the allegory in dialogue with other thinkers such as Descartes, while others extend into Christian allegory, examining texts like The Pilgrim's Progress and the treatment of characters like Faithful at Vanity Fair.

A strong essay on allegory requires a focused thesis about what the symbolic layer reveals that a literal reading cannot. Evidence should trace specific images — light, shadows, the cave wall, the journey upward — back to the abstract concepts they represent. The most common pitfall is summarizing the narrative without analyzing the symbolic structure, which reduces an interpretive essay to mere plot description and leaves the deeper argument undeveloped.

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Paper Undergraduate
Religious Messages in Everyman Book
Identify several religious messages in "Everyman" that can be expressed as enduring moral themes
Essay Doctorate
Philosophy Matrix II Ancient Quest for Truth
Philosophy Matrix II: Ancient Quest for Truth Historical review of human knowledge shows, at least in part, an unsteady progression from myth to half-scientific, half-philosophical thoughts to philosophy, culminating in the teachings of Plato and Aristotle and beyond them in the teachings of Plotinus. Pre-Socratic Philosophers such as Pythagorus, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Melissus, Zeno and Anaxagoras rejected mythological explanations of life and beyond, choosing to explore the rational explanations about the "essence" of things. As a result, Pre-Socratic philosophers, posed questions, posited theories, borrowed from each other, expanded on each other's theories and often disagreed. This early Greek Philosophy continued to develop until it "flowered in the two great philosophies of Plato and Aristotle." Plato and Aristotle considered theories of Pre-Socratic philosophers and rejected, explained, synthesized and incorporated elements of those theories as they saw fit. Plato built on Pre-Socratic Philosophy's stress of the rational and moral by his expanded theories of knowledge in 4 steps along a divided line, his Doctrine of Forms, which were deemed an "enormous advance" on prior pre-Socratic theories, and his theory of morality that expanded prior thought to point to "an absolute moral code." Aristotle built on Pre-Socratic Philosophy by further synthesizing the Doctrine of Forms, developing his First Principle and Theory of Ethics, for several examples. In sum, the philosophies of Plato and Aristotle are deemed an early and highly significant culmination of human thought's progression from myth to philosophy.
Paper High School
Young Goodman Brown Dies \"Sad,\"
This is a planned revision of the third revision of a paper the point of which is to learn to incorporate criticism. Many writers argue or assume that Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown's gloominess; suspicion; desperation etc. indicate that he gave up on the possibility of redemption for humankind after a series of paranormal experiences in which he came to the conclusion that all people are inherently sinful. Certain key actions after his realization, however, indicate that the character must have preserved some hope for the possibility of being admitted into heaven for some individuals, or else he would not have tried to save a little girl, or had a family, or in fact been morose, paranoid, distressed etc. at all. Author's comments are incorporated in this fourth revision; although those comments were stylistic rather than substantive and so the main argument remains the same as having been tacitly approved in the last round.
Paper Undergraduate
Managing Organizational Change
While change is inevitable in everyone's life, the reaction we choose to change is completely our own decision. The book, Who Moved My Cheese? By Spencer Johnson begins with a class reunion where friends discuss how…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Influence of the Renaissance
Renaissance, in its general understanding is viewed as a historical age in Europe which covered the period between the Middle Ages and the Reformation. Its extent was from the 14th to the 16th century.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Socrates Said That the Unexamined
Socrates said that the unexamined life is not worth living, and the quest for knowledge, and especially for self-knowledge, is key to finding any meaning in life. We might consider the issue to be the meaning of living…
Paper Undergraduate
Billy Budd and Moby Dick
The two highly praised novels by Herman Melville -- Billy Budd and Moby Dick -- have rightfully been placed among the list of great works by American novelists. And when those two novels are compared and contrasted…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Nietzsche's Zarathustra and Platonic philosophy
The Importance of Truth and the Education of Ignorance
Paper Undergraduate
Nicholas Carr (2003) Draws Parallels
¶ … Nicholas Carr (2003) draws parallels between the rise and fall of other capital-intensive industries and it. By referring to it, Carr is referring to Information Technologies, which in the context of his article are…
Research Paper Doctorate
Italo Calvino\'s the Castle of Crossed Destinies
Historians differ on the origin of tarot cards. Most believe that Egypt was the first to use similar images and symbols. Tarot is also represented from the early Greek, Roman, Norse and Indian cultures to the Italian…