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Courage is a kind of salvation.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Thrive
Philosophical
Salvation
Courage
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More quotes by Plato
There are few people so stubborn in their atheism who, when danger is pressing in, will not acknowledge the divine power.
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For the poet is a light winged and holy thing, and there is no invention in him until he has been inspired and is out of his senses and the mind is no longer with him. When he has not attained this state he is powerless and unable to utter his oracles.
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Knowledge is true opinion.
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God is truth and light his shadow.
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We will be better men, braver and less idle, if we believe that one must search for the things one does not know, rather than if we believe that it is not possible to find out what we do not know and that we must not look for it.
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This world is indeed a living being endowed with a soul and intelligence ... a single visible living entity containing all other living entities, which by their nature are all related.
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As the builders say, the larger stones do not lie well without the lesser.
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Through obedience learn to command.
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As there are misanthropists or haters of men, so also are there misologists, or haters of ideas.
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Until philosophers hold power, neither states nor individuals will have rest from trouble.
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When you swear, swear seriously and solemnly, but at the same time with a smile, for a smile is the twin sister of seriousness.
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The ludicrous state of solid geometry made me pass over this branch.
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For it is obvious to everybody, I think, that this study [of astronomy] compels the soul to look upward and leads it away from things here to higher things.
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So where it is a general rule that it is wrong to gratify lovers, this can be attributed to the defects of those who make that rule: the government's lust for rule and the subjects' cowardice.
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Everything that deceives may be said to enchant.
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Time is the moving imago of the unmoving eternity.
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Nothing in human affairs is worth any great anxiety.
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I fear this is not the right exchange to attain virtue, to exchange pleasures for pleasures, pains for pains and fears for fears, the greater for the less like coins, but that the only valid currency for which all these things should be exchanged is wisdom.
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Rhythm and melody enter into the soul of the well-instructed youth and produce there a certain mental harmony hardly obtainable in any other way. . . . thus music, too, is concerned with the principles of love in their application to harmony and rhythm.
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. . . the triumph of my art is in thoroughly examining whether the thought which the mind of the young man brings forth is a false idol or a noble and true birth.
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