English, asked by caballerokrezel11, 1 year ago

In the last stanza, John Godfrey saxe related the legend to the religious wars during his time what do you think is John Godfrey saxe trying to say in this poet?

Answers

Answered by asifkuet
142

Answer:

The Blind Men and the Elephant is an antique parable used today as a notice for people that promote utter truth or exclusive religious claims. The humble reason is that our carnal perceptions and life experiences can lead to limited contact and outsmarting delusions. How can a person with a limited tad of truth turn that into the one and only version of all reality?

When it comes to the moral of the Blind Men and the Elephant, it appears that today’s philosophers end their program too quickly. Doesn’t the picture of the blind men and the elephant also socket to something bigger -- The elephant? Indeed, each blind man has a partial perspective on the neutral truth, but that doesn’t mean objective truth isn’t there. In fact, truth isn’t relative at all.

Answered by soniatiwari214
15

Answer:

John Godfrey tries to say that the religions fight amongst themselves just like the six blind men do after touching different parts of the elephant.

Explanation:

  • In his poem, the "Six Blind Men and the Elephant", John Godfrey talks about how six blind men went to see an elephant.
  • Each of the men touches a different part of the elephant. One claims the elephant to be a wall, another a rope, a tree, a snake and so on.
  • All the six men are partly correct but still cannot agree upon what the elephant looks like, so ultimately they were all wrong.
  • Godfrey compares this with how religions argue against one another when all of them hold just part of the truth. Theological wars are started by those who do not possess full knowledge of what they are talking about.
  • The poet tries to say that religious wars stem from narrow-mindedness and ignorance.

#SPJ3

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