Question: The Allegory of the Cave is a conversation between Plato and Glaucon which takes place in which of Plato’s famous works?

Answer Options:

A. Apology
B. Phaedo
C. Crito
D. Meno
E. The Republic

Answer: E. The Republic

 

Question: For Plato, true “reality” exists in —- which can only be ascertained or reached through —-.

Answer Options:

A. Perfection; logic
B. Forms; intuition and reason
C. Language; rhetoric
D. Material substance; our senses
E. Emotions; self-expression

Answer: B. Forms; intuition and reason

 

Question: The freed prisoner returns to the cave and attempts to convince those still chained in the cave that what they know about reality isn’t “real reality.” And modern-day philosophers who critique science such as Popper, Kuhn, and Feyerabend would argue that the free prisoner is challenging the cave dwellers’:

Answer Options:

A. Religious beliefs
B. Sense of identity
C. Paradigms
D. Loyalty to each other
E. Emotional attachment to the cave

Answer: C. Paradigms

 

Question: Who is Glaucon?

Answer Options:

A. Plato’s mentor
B. The narrator
C. Plato’s brother
D. A friend of Socrates
E. Plato’s star pupil

Answer: C. Plato’s brother

 

Question: The Allegory of the Cave would be MOST relevant to which of the following psychological courses?

Answer Options:

A. Industrial & Organizational Psychology
B. Abnormal Psychology
C. Sensation and Perception
D. Race and Ethnic Relations

Answer: C. Sensation and Perception

 

Question: What is an “allegory”?

Answer Options:

A. A poem
B. A story revealing a hidden meaning
C. An act in a play
D. A philosophical debate
E. A philosophical tenet or belief

Answer: B. A story revealing a hidden meaning

 

Question: Plato didn’t trust the senses to get in touch with “reality” or “truth.” He believed intuition and reason were the paths to understanding what was the ultimate truth. Scientists today (and hopefully psychologists who believe themselves to be scientists) would not exactly feel comfortable with Plato’s method of obtaining the truth because it violates the cardinal principle that science (above everything else) must be:

Answer Options:

A. Rational
B. Deductive
C. Empirical
D. Subjective
E. Politically correct

Answer: C. Empirical

 

Question: One could make the argument that Plato’s Allegory of the Cave is one of the most influential early writings giving rise to the philosophical movement known as:

Answer Options:

A. Rationalism
B. Objectivism
C. Catholicism
D. Politics
E. Existentialism

Answer: A. Rationalism

 

Question: The ideas, images and concepts espoused in the Allegory of the Cave have found their way into the psychological work and concepts of many psychologists including all of the following EXCEPT:

Answer Options:

A. Freud, Jung and other psychoanalytic thinkers
B. Piaget, Binet and other developmental theorists
C. B.F. Skinner and other behaviorists
D. Cognitive psychologists such as Vygotsky, Piaget and Jerome Bruner
E. Howard Gardner, Robert Sternberg and Alfred Binet who studied intelligence

Answer: C. B.F. Skinner and other behaviorists

 

Question: Plato’s division of reality into the material world (which can only be known through our imperfect senses) and ultimate truth (which can only be known through reason, intuition and intellect) is historically very significant because it pointed to the psychological and philosophical concept of a split between the body and the mind. This split is generally referred to as:

Answer Options:

A. Humanism
B. Dualism
C. Objectivism
D. Rationalism
E. Functionalism

Answer: B. Dualism

 

Question: The freed prisoner, upon reentering the cave and sharing his newfound insights and revelations about the world outside of the cave is greeted how by those still chained within the cave?

Answer Options:

A. As a prophet
B. As an enlightened teacher
C. With ridicule, suspicion and disbelief
D. As a pioneer

Answer: C. With ridicule, suspicion and disbelief

 

Question: Upon escaping the cave and entering the world outside of the cave, the freed prisoner experiences which of the following?

Answer Options:

A. Shock at the world he discovers outside the cave
B. After adjusting, he begins to realize his former view of reality was wrong
C. He begins to see the Sun as the source of life
D. He begins to see that his former life, and the guessing games he and his fellow prisoners played is useless
E. All of the above

Answer: E. All of the above

 

Question: The shadows represent the — and those who believe empirical evidence ensures knowledge.

Answer Options:

A. Perceptions
B. Stereotypes
C. Convictions
D. Doubts

Answer: A. Perceptions

 

Question: Which of the following statements would Plato most emphatically DISAGREE with?

Answer Options:

A. Trust your senses
B. To thine own self be true
C. Knowledge is power
D. Expand your horizons
E. Think outside the box

Answer: A. Trust your senses

 

Question: Who were the “capos”?

Answer Options:

A. German officers
B. Relatives of inmates
C. Fellow Jews who worked inside the camps
D. American rescue personnel
E. German guards

Answer: C. Fellow Jews who worked inside the camps

 

Question: Frankl had an opportunity to flee Austria before being rounded up and sent to the concentration camps. Why didn’t he take that opportunity?

Answer Options:

A. He lacked the necessary visas and paperwork.
B. His wife refused to leave Vienna.
C. His private practice was doing so well he couldn’t afford to leave it.
D. He remained to try to protect his parents.
E. He had a phobia of traveling.

Answer: D. He remained to try to protect his parents.

 

Question: Frankl writes that in the early days and weeks of camp experience, many inmates lived with the illusion of ___.

Answer Options:

A. Hope
B. Retribution
C. Reprieve
D. Self-importance
E. Identity

Answer: C. Reprieve

 

Question: Once the initial shock of being in the camp wore off, prisoners often experienced the second stage which was characterized by ___.

Answer Options:

A. Fear
B. Panic
C. Psychosis
D. Apathy
E. Hope

Answer: D. Apathy