Platonism, Cartesianism and Hegel's Thought in The Matrix Trilogy
Platonizam, kartezijanizam i Hegelova misao u trilogiji Matriks
Abstract
In this article I will try to interpret changes in Neo, the main
character in The Matrix Trilogy, against the background of the ideas of Plato
and Descartes, as well as Hegel’s from his Philosophy of History and The
Phenomenology of Spirit. Although “philosophical” The Matrix Trilogy is
not long-winded and boring film: instead of talking endlessly, the characters
are working ceaselessly, and that work is changing them. Contrary to widespread
opinion, this interpretation does not find the presence of Descartes’
hyperbolic doubt in the first part of trilogy, but first film sees as a pure Platonism.
Nevertheless, there are the Cartesian motifs (e.g. dualism, freeing
mind from preconceived opinions, acquiring different habits of belief). The
result of the first film is the position of Hegelian unhappy consciousness.
This is just a preparation for the key moment of whole Trilogy that is the
dialogue between Neo and Architect. Neo’s decision to chose to save Trinity
is interpret...ed in Hegel’s terms of the infinite right of the subject to satisfy
himself in his activity and work; because of that, this, sixth Neo is new. After
showing the differences in the objectives of Neo and Agent Smith, and transformations
of the objectives of humans, the third part of the article analyzes
the very end of the Matrix Revolutions, using Marx’s ideas, with some references
to Plato and Nietzsche.
Keywords:
dualism / free wil / unhappy consciousness / philosophy of history / NietzscheSource:
Filozofija i društvo / Philosophy and Society, 2013, 268-282Institution/Community
IFDTTY - JOUR AU - Milidrag, Predrag PY - 2013 UR - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/107 AB - In this article I will try to interpret changes in Neo, the main character in The Matrix Trilogy, against the background of the ideas of Plato and Descartes, as well as Hegel’s from his Philosophy of History and The Phenomenology of Spirit. Although “philosophical” The Matrix Trilogy is not long-winded and boring film: instead of talking endlessly, the characters are working ceaselessly, and that work is changing them. Contrary to widespread opinion, this interpretation does not find the presence of Descartes’ hyperbolic doubt in the first part of trilogy, but first film sees as a pure Platonism. Nevertheless, there are the Cartesian motifs (e.g. dualism, freeing mind from preconceived opinions, acquiring different habits of belief). The result of the first film is the position of Hegelian unhappy consciousness. This is just a preparation for the key moment of whole Trilogy that is the dialogue between Neo and Architect. Neo’s decision to chose to save Trinity is interpreted in Hegel’s terms of the infinite right of the subject to satisfy himself in his activity and work; because of that, this, sixth Neo is new. After showing the differences in the objectives of Neo and Agent Smith, and transformations of the objectives of humans, the third part of the article analyzes the very end of the Matrix Revolutions, using Marx’s ideas, with some references to Plato and Nietzsche. T2 - Filozofija i društvo / Philosophy and Society T1 - Platonism, Cartesianism and Hegel's Thought in The Matrix Trilogy T1 - Platonizam, kartezijanizam i Hegelova misao u trilogiji Matriks SP - 268 EP - 282 DO - 10.2298/FID1304268M ER -
@article{ editor = "Jovanov, Rastko", author = "Milidrag, Predrag", year = "2013", abstract = "In this article I will try to interpret changes in Neo, the main character in The Matrix Trilogy, against the background of the ideas of Plato and Descartes, as well as Hegel’s from his Philosophy of History and The Phenomenology of Spirit. Although “philosophical” The Matrix Trilogy is not long-winded and boring film: instead of talking endlessly, the characters are working ceaselessly, and that work is changing them. Contrary to widespread opinion, this interpretation does not find the presence of Descartes’ hyperbolic doubt in the first part of trilogy, but first film sees as a pure Platonism. Nevertheless, there are the Cartesian motifs (e.g. dualism, freeing mind from preconceived opinions, acquiring different habits of belief). The result of the first film is the position of Hegelian unhappy consciousness. This is just a preparation for the key moment of whole Trilogy that is the dialogue between Neo and Architect. Neo’s decision to chose to save Trinity is interpreted in Hegel’s terms of the infinite right of the subject to satisfy himself in his activity and work; because of that, this, sixth Neo is new. After showing the differences in the objectives of Neo and Agent Smith, and transformations of the objectives of humans, the third part of the article analyzes the very end of the Matrix Revolutions, using Marx’s ideas, with some references to Plato and Nietzsche.", journal = "Filozofija i društvo / Philosophy and Society", title = "Platonism, Cartesianism and Hegel's Thought in The Matrix Trilogy, Platonizam, kartezijanizam i Hegelova misao u trilogiji Matriks", pages = "268-282", doi = "10.2298/FID1304268M" }
Jovanov, R.,& Milidrag, P.. (2013). Platonism, Cartesianism and Hegel's Thought in The Matrix Trilogy. in Filozofija i društvo / Philosophy and Society, 268-282. https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1304268M
Jovanov R, Milidrag P. Platonism, Cartesianism and Hegel's Thought in The Matrix Trilogy. in Filozofija i društvo / Philosophy and Society. 2013;:268-282. doi:10.2298/FID1304268M .
Jovanov, Rastko, Milidrag, Predrag, "Platonism, Cartesianism and Hegel's Thought in The Matrix Trilogy" in Filozofija i društvo / Philosophy and Society (2013):268-282, https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1304268M . .