Plato’s allegory of the cave is commonly read as a story about ignorance and enlightenment. This essay focuses instead on the neglected problem of return: how knowledge gained beyond familiar frameworks is translated back into a language formed under more limited conditions. It argues that many contemporary difficulties in science arise not from lack of data or mathematical rigor, but from the uncritical reuse of linguistic and narrative structures that were never designed to describe realities beyond intuitive, low-dimensional experience. Using modern physics—particularly string theory—as an illustrative case, the essay suggests that science often replaces old projections with new ones, creating an illusion of understanding. Genuine progress, it argues, requires acknowledging the limits of language and adopting humility toward what cannot yet be expressed.
Peter Mikuláš (Sun,) studied this question.