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He who is of a calm and happy nature, will hardly feel the pressure of age
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Calm
Pressure
Age
Happy
Nature
Disposition
Feel
Optimism
Feels
Hardly
Aging
More quotes by Plato
No law or ordinance is mightier than understanding.
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Kindness which is bestowed on the good is never lost.
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All the gold upon the earth and all the gold beneath it, does not compensate for lack of virtue.
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There is no harm in repeating a good thing.
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The poets are nothing but interpreters of the gods, each one possessed by the divinity to whom he is in bondage.
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Knowledge of the soul is the only universal truth and the only wisdom - all other knowledge is transient.
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All learning is in the learner, not the teacher.
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The honour of parents is a fair and noble treasure to their posterity, but to have the use of a treasure of wealth and honour, and to leave none to your successors, because you have neither money nor reputation of your own, is alike base and dishonourable.
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Let brother help brother.
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Is virtue something that can be taught?
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Are these things good for any other reason except that they end in pleasure, and get rid of and avert pain? Are you looking to any other standard but pleasure and pain when you call them good?
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For though a man should be a complete unbeliever in the being of gods if he also has a native uprightness of temper, such persons will detest evil in men their repugnance to wrong disinclines them to commit wrongful acts they shun the unrighteous and are drawn to the upright.
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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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To go to the world below, having a soul which is like a vessel full of injustice, is the last and worst of all the evils.
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Cooking is a form of flattery....a mischievous, deceitful, mean and ignoble activity, which cheats us by shapes and colors, by smoothing and draping.
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Access to power must be confined to those who are not in love with it.
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I to die, and you to live. Which is better God only knows.
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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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Only the dead will know the end of the war.
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There is no necessity for the man who means to be an orator to understand what is really just but only what would appear so to the majority of those who will give judgment and not what is really good or beautiful but whatever will appear so because persuasion comes from that and not from the truth.
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