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No law or ordinance is mightier than understanding.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Understanding
Ordinance
Mightier
Ordinances
Philosophical
Law
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[The Cretans have] more wit than words.
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Numbers are the highest degree of knowledge. It is knowledge itself.
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No man should be angry with what is true.
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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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But he who has been earnest in the love of knowledge and of true wisdom, and has exercised his intellect more than any other part of him, must have thoughts immortal and divine. If he attain truth, and in so far as human nature is capable of sharing in immortality, he must altogether be immortal.
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What is better adapted than the festive use of wine in the first place to test and in the second place to train the character of a man, if care be taken in the use of it? What is there cheaper or more innocent?
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Arithmetic has a very great and elevating effect, compelling the soul to reason about abstract number, and rebelling against the introduction of visible or tngible objects into the argument.
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Health is a consumation of a love affair of all the organs of the body.
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A grateful mind is a great mind which eventually attracts to itself great things.
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All who do evil and dishonorable things do them against their will.
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Rhetoric is the art of ruling the minds of men.
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As the builders say, the larger stones do not lie well without the lesser.
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For all good and evil, whether in the body or in human nature, originates ... in the soul, and overflows from thence, as from the head into the eyes.
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I was stupid enough to think that we ought to speak the truth about each person eulogised, and to make this the foundation, and from these truths to choose the most beautiful things and arrange them in the most elegant way and I was quite proud to think how well I should speak, because I believed that I knew the truth.
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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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