When we get too involved in online matters, disconnecting from the internet and getting a hold of the real world is an analogy to the Greek Philosoper’s work
- Imma need a full report and analysis posted on philosophy memes - I better stop smoking weed then - that’s touching grass - More like burning grass… - But it’s a controlled burn 🤓 - I lost all of my weed in a series of small fires. - It was arson. 
 
 
 
 
- Or do more? 
 
 
- I mean not really, kind of the opposite. - Touch grass is a call to action - to discard the convenient abstractions enabled by words alone, and to embrace the messy, gritty complexity of physical reality itself. - The allegory of the cave is the opposite: a wry lament about the inherent limitations of perception itself. You can’t experience physical reality at all; you’re just a bot in the chatroom of your senses, and there’s no such thing as stepping outside it. Your senses may be a lot more detailed than words, but it’s only a matter of degree. - Plato didn’t believe we’re fundamentally limited by our senses in an absolute sense, though. He leaned toward the possibility of transcending the limitations of sensory perception to grasp higher truths. 
 
- I mean yeah shadows in the cave wall is a pretty great analogy for how we see our world through social media not a lot of nuance or detail - teeve/radio before internet, news paper before that and church before peasants learned how to read propaganda. 
 
- What is this grass of which you speak? Is it a new app? Does it have haptic feedback when you touch it? I could really go for some haptic feedback. 
- Dammit, this is a pretty good shower thought. Fine, have my upvote. 
- deleted by creator - You mean to say “… but they are in their phone”, which can be shortened to “they’re in their phone” - The clue was in the fact that you had “their” twice, so one of them must’ve been wrong! 
 



