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I guess everyone knows Plato's allegory of the cave. He assumes people are in caves and then, he suggests that there is a possibility of "going out of the caves", gaining several nice properties with this. Do we have evidence that he noticed that we could "get out of a cave" and still be inside another "cave"? And that there could be an arbitrary number of nested caves?

Red Banana
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    The thing about allegories and metaphors is that they are selected to express one's conception, not the other way around. The cave only matters to the extent that it visualizes Plato's theory, and no more than that. Infinite regress of caves adds nothing interesting as in the end for Plato One is and all multiplicity ends there. – Conifold Mar 07 '18 at 04:40
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    Plotinus has levels of being from the One through the Nous and the Soul and material reality. I understand your question as whether our intelligibility or participation in being can keep taking us deeper without end. – Frank Hubeny Mar 07 '18 at 20:39
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    Agree with Conifold but you've hit on exactly the problem facing the makers of The Matrix. The plot-line is sound up to a point but fudges the issue in the end. I suspect Plato would have been well aware of this problem. –  Mar 08 '18 at 12:52
  • @Conifold What is the definition of "interesting"? – Red Banana Mar 08 '18 at 17:54
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    @PeterJ Watch this. – Red Banana Mar 08 '18 at 18:01
  • @BillyRubina - Thanks. Not really my sort of thing but I get the connection. –  Mar 09 '18 at 09:48
  • @PeterJ The curious thing about this episode is that they are stuck in a simulation inside a simulation inside a simulation... And they notice that they are in the simulation because it lags and some glitches occur. – Red Banana Mar 09 '18 at 16:38
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    On Plato's conception getting out of a cave does not count as getting out unless it takes you all the way to the One, and that can be illustrated with a single cave just as well as with a chain of caves. By the way, Greeks denied the existence of actual infinity so infinite chain was not a possibility anyway, as for dispensing with a finite chain Aristotle does it explicitly when he goes from a chain of movers all the way to his Unmoved Mover. Plato did not bother with such distractions. – Conifold Mar 12 '18 at 06:08
  • The analogy motivated his theory of forms. Forms have a form in their own right, the form of the good, but that's supposed to be as deep as it goes. Your question is best reformulated as "did Plato know of the infinite-regress criticism of the theory of forms"? – J.G. Jan 01 '22 at 22:25
  • One would not generally say they are out of a cave if they are still in a cave. It would be considered all one cave. – Ryan Pierce Williams Aug 28 '22 at 10:37
  • That's the infinitive regress of the Third Man Argument: a super-form partaking in the form and the particulars, a super-super-form partaking in the super-form and the form, a super-super-super-form ... you never get out of the nested caves! – viuser May 31 '23 at 22:43

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That is your proposition and not Plato's. But I have to tell you the rule of the cosmos, that is "There is beginning, there is intermediate, and there is the end". One has begun to achieve the end trough intermediates. In fact, there is no continuity just as you want it to be in an infinite process, but this process of getting out of the darkness and reaching the light happens in everything and in every moment, therefore you never get out of the cave to enter another cave, although you may have come out of the cave a thousands of times.

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    There is no guarantee to any of that. Those are just "random" propositions that can be believed or not. – Red Banana Jan 09 '21 at 05:56
  • @BillyRubina: As is your proposition of considering these caves as nested, as opposed to singular or adjacent. – Flater May 05 '21 at 15:22
  • We still don't know whether the cosmos (if the cosmos means something like 'our universe and all other universes) had a beginning. – Futilitarian Dec 26 '22 at 10:21
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If Plato's metaphor was inspired by the contrast between dreaming and awakening (not too big of an "if," but still), then no, he didn't notice that his metaphor could've naturally incorporated layers of caves modulo the notion of "false awakenings" in dream theory.

Then again, I don't know what the "state of the art" was in dream theory back then, AFAIK mystical interpretations of dream content and even the dreaming state itself were fairly common at the time. How much analysts tracked concepts like lucid dreaming, then, I don't know (lucid dreaming as a phenomenon seems to undermine supernaturalistic theories of the dream state, since being able to "reprogram" dream contents at will lends itself to viewing those contents as primarily subjective).

For what it's worth, weak sleepers-awakening analogies in intellectual self-development remain a blight on our society, at least insofar as "conspiracy theorists" use these analogies to justify their apophenia as equivalent to the "awake" state. But Plato would not necessarily have been very sympathetic to conspiracy-theorism by the by (he might've shared some premises, like distrust of government on account of what the Athenian regime did to Socrates, but he also seems to have favored a kind of elitism that is significantly, albeit not exclusively, at odds with how a lot of conspiracy theorists portray themselves). Moreover, then, however, had the Western history of ideas operated on footnotes to a Plato who recognized the peril of layered false awakenings, perhaps apophenics and their mental kindred would be less quick to believe that learning "the truth" about one layer of social dishonesty meant catapulting themselves directly to "the truth" in itself; perhaps instead, that is, they would've been more cautious about the next layer they found themselves on.

But I'm not Karl Popper, I don't want to blame Plato that stridently for the state-of-affairs of our world right now.

Kristian Berry
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