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  • Crash Course Philosophy is brought to you by Squarespace.

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  • Weve spent a couple of lessons thinking about how philosophers reason.

  • Now it’s time to do some actual philosophy.

  • And one of the most important hallmarks of philosophical thought is that

  • you should never take things at face value.

  • You should always be willing to accept that there’s more to the world than meets the eye.

  • Because, whatever truth seems obvious today, might turn out to be not so true at all.

  • It’s one of the more daunting pursuits in philosophy -- pondering what’s really real,

  • as opposed to what you think is real, and how you could ever know the difference.

  • Fortunately, there are some guides who can help you on your journey, when youre exploring the nature of reality.

  • And you know who’s really helpful here? Leonardo DiCaprio.

  • I mean, I guess you could say that a lot actors can transport you to another reality if theyre good enough.

  • But that’s not what I mean.

  • I’m talking about Inception, that movie where Leo plays a thief who steals ideas from

  • people by invading their dreams.

  • A super-handy ability if you want to, say, steal corporate secrets from a CEO, or military plans from a head of state.

  • But after a while, it becomes hard for some members of Leo’s team to tell the difference

  • between one dream and another, or to discern dreams from reality.

  • The whole film is populated with people who live in a dream world, convinced theyre living real-life.

  • To them, the dream is all there isit has become their reality.

  • But from the perspective of those outside the dream, who see their sleeping bodies,

  • the reality theyre chasing is simply false.

  • It’s a real cool premise for a movie. I haven’t ruined it for you -- you can still

  • watch it. And the fact is, the same concept has been around for thousands of years.

  • The basic question that Inception asks has vexed philosophers all the way back to the

  • very roots of Western philosophy.

  • Is it possible that my current reality isn’t real at all?

  • Before we had Leonardo DiCaprio to walk us through this question we had Plato.

  • [Theme Music]

  • Around 2400 years ago, Plato wrote his famous book, The Republic, in which he describes

  • -- probably better than anyone before or since -- the nature of reality.

  • He does it by telling a story about prisoners who have been chained since birth in a dark cave, facing a blank wall.

  • All kinds of people and objects pass behind the prisoners, and a fire casts the shadows

  • of those things onto the wall in front of the prisoners.

  • These shadow images are all the prisoners ever see, and they come to understand the shadows as reality.

  • Now just hold up a minute and imagine what your view of the world would be like, if all

  • youve ever seen are shadows. You wouldn’t know that there was anything more.

  • 3D wouldn’t even be a concept for you.

  • The prisoners spend their whole lives understanding only this shadow reality, until one day one

  • of them escapes from his chains, and crawls into the daylight.

  • After spending a lifetime in fire-lit darkness, the man is blinded by the sun at first.

  • But in time, he comes to see the things outside the cave are far more real than the shadow

  • images that he once took for reality.

  • They have substance. They occupy an extra dimension.

  • Think about how that would feel. To suddenly realize that everything you believed just

  • minutes ago turned out to be merely faint outlines of reality.

  • This is what happens to a lot of the characters who inhabit the world of Inception:

  • Once they realize there can be multiple layers of reality, they never look at the world around them the same way again.

  • And for many of them, the experience becomes intoxicating.

  • This is also what happens to Plato’s escaped prisoner.

  • He goes back into the cave to tell his friends the exciting news about what he’s found.

  • But the conversation doesn’t go the way he thinks it will.

  • He expects them to be amazed by his discovery -- he figures theyll be as eager to join

  • him as he is anxious to get back.

  • But they all think he’s crazy. As far as theyre concerned, he’s babbling about

  • somehigher realitythat theyve never seen, or heard of, or have any evidence for.

  • To make matters worse, going back into the fire-lit cave, after being in the sunlight,

  • temporarily blinds the man again.

  • So, from his friendsperspective, his journey into the outside world has actually damaged him,

  • because now he can’t even see the shadow images that were once his whole world.

  • Now, you don’t have to be Plato, or Christopher Nolan, to dream this stuff up.

  • In fact, you might have experienced a diluted version of this kind of reality-shock for yourself.

  • For example: Do you remember your first teddy bear?

  • That bear was, philosophically speaking, your only contact with,

  • and your only way of understanding, the concept of a bear.

  • Then one day, you went to a zoo, or a wildlife refuge, or a national park, and you saw an actual bear.

  • And suddenly you realized that your previous understanding ofbearwas way, way off.

  • Bears don’t have button eyes and little smiles made of thread. Theyre not soft. You couldn’t hug one.

  • The bear you spent your first years of life snuggling with, was just a shadowy imitation

  • of the reality of bear-ness.

  • Now, check out this somewhat more mature example:

  • Maybe you were the first member of your tweeny group of friends to discover the wonders of

  • romantic attraction. You mightve felt like your eyes were open to a whole new world that

  • your pals were still blind to.

  • And when you tried to explain to them what had happened to you? And how you felt?

  • They probably thought you were crazy. And the feeling was probably mutual.

  • And this is what our poor protagonist goes through when he re-enters the cave.

  • So why does Plato tell us this story?

  • It’s not just about little a-ha moments, like when we discovered that bears and boys

  • were not what we once thought they were. It’s more than that.

  • Plato wants us to see that we, right now, are prisoners in a cave.

  • Everything in our world is actually a mere shadow of a higher reality.

  • Just as the man in the story once mistook shadows for real things, we are currently

  • prisoners in a cave of our own.

  • But rather than mistaking shadows for the material objects of the ordinary world, our

  • mistake is thinking that the material objects of the ordinary world are the most real things.

  • In fact, Plato says, the physical world that we think is the most real, is actually a mere shadow of a higher truth.

  • If this surprises you, think about how many beliefs were once accepted as absolute fact

  • only to later turn out to be completely false

  • The shape of the earth. The idea that the Earth was the center of the universe.

  • The belief that heroin, and tobacco, and lobotomies were good for people.

  • Those so-called facts turned out to be far from the truth.

  • So, there’s a lot packed into this little story.

  • Plato is urging you to consider that the world is not really as it seems.

  • And making a statement about philosophy. Doing philosophy is hard.

  • Accepting that much of what youve always believed might actually be false can make you uncomfortable.

  • You might feel temporarily blinded.

  • You may learn just enough to know that your old beliefs aren’t reliable, but you don’t

  • yet know enough to feel comfortable with these new ideas, either.

  • What’s more, your old friends, who aren’t on this journey with you, might think youve lost your mind.

  • Or they might take you for an arrogant, pedantic jerk who thinks they have all the answers.

  • But philosophy is also awesome.

  • Because, once you get through the growing pains, you can see things in a new way, and

  • you can see through things that used to fool you.

  • And that brings us to another puzzle. Consider this argument:

  • No cat has 2 tails. Every cat has one more tail than no cat. Therefore, every cat has 3 tails.

  • Now, youre probably thinking, that’s just clearly wrong. That’s not much of a puzzle.

  • I mean, the two premises sound right enough. But the conclusion iswha?

  • This puzzle exploits a strangeness in the language that we use to discuss certain ideas

  • -- specifically the ideas of nothingness, absence, or emptiness.

  • In premise 1, ‘no catrefers to an absence of cats.

  • Think about things with 2 tails, and none of those things you think of are cats. Because

  • you probably can’t even think of anything with two tails.

  • But in premise 2, the language tricks us into understandingNo-Catas an existent thing,

  • rather than an absence of a thing. The way it’s phrased, No-Cat could conceivably

  • be that elusive creature that has 2 tails.

  • So this leads us to the conclusion that, if the No-Cat has 2 tails, and every cat has

  • one more tail than it does, then every cat must have 3 tails! Which is just wrong.

  • And it takes a moment to understand the source of our confusion.

  • The conclusion is faulty, because it mistakes the absence of something for the presence of something.

  • But it strikes us as plausible, on some level, because language has duped us into considering

  • a reality where a creature called No Cat with two tails is actually a thing.

  • Figuring out puzzles like this is kind of like flipping a switch -- first youre confused,

  • and then the cause of the confusion seems obvious.

  • It’s just a matter of sorting through what’s really real.

  • And Plato thinks philosophy is like that too -- going from the darkness into the light

  • is both disorienting and rewarding.

  • It’s kinda too bad in this case, though. Because: a cat with three tails? I’d kind

  • of like to see that. Though, to be honest I’d mostly just like looking at any cat.

  • And with that, we wrap up this episode of Crash Course Philosophy. Today we learned

  • about Plato’s famous Myth of the Cave, questioned the relationship between appearance and reality,

  • and talked about the process of philosophical discovery.

  • Next time, were going to disappear even deeper into the hole of shadow and disbelief

  • all in the hopes of eventually emerging into the light.

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  • This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

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