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The most effective kind of education is that a child should play amongst lovely things.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
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Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
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More quotes by Plato
One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors.
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God ever geometrizes.
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The Dance, of all the arts, is the one that most influences the soul. Dancing is divine in its nature and is the gift of God.
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It gives me great pleasure to converse with the aged. They have been over the road that all of us must travel, and know where it is rough and difficult and where it is level and easy.
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The music masters familiarize children's minds with rhythms and melodies, thus making them more civilized, more balanced, better adjusted in themselves, and more capable in whatever they say or do, for rhythm and harmony are essential to the whole of life.
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Ignorance of all things is an evil neither terrible nor excessive, nor yet the greatest of all but great cleverness and much learning, if they be accompanied by a bad training, are a much greater misfortune.
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Remember how in that communion only, beholding beauty with the eye of the mind, he will be enabled to bring forth, not images of beauty, but realities (for he has hold not of an image but of a reality), and bringing forth and nourishing true virtue to become the friend of God and be immortal, if mortal man may.
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Fields and trees are not willing to teach me anything but this can be effected by men residing in the city.
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States will never be happy until rulers become philosophers or philosophers become rulers.
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The soul is like a pair of winged horses and a charioteer joined in natural union.
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Train children not by compulsion but as if they were playing.
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He who does not desire power is fit to hold it.
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Conversion is not implanting eyes, for they exist already but giving them a right direction, which they have not
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Courage is knowing what to fear.
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The wise man will want to be ever with him who is better than himself.
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Lust is inseparably accompanied with the troubling of all order, with impudence, unseemliness, sloth, and dissoluteness.
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