If anyone else can relate to the feeling that these idea's are far fetched in their abstractness, you can take solace in the fact that such criticism has been made for millennia, with the prominent contemporary example of Aristophanes, who lampooned Socrates in his comedic play The Clouds. In the play, the figure of Socrates and the academy, which is called "The Thinkery" (not exactly a term of respect) are harshly satirized. So harshly that Plato even felt that the play tarnished Socrates' reputation to the point of influencing his trial and execution. Aristophanes wrote several comedies critiquing topics like war in Lysistrata, and I think it's funny how even in contemporary Athens, some people dismissed and made fun of philosophers like Socrates and Plato for pretentiously having their heads in the clouds (though again would like to reemphasize that given the philosophical and historical influence of these thinkers, they are well worth studying regardless of how relevant the theory of Forms seems to modern life).
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