Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
No law or ordinance is mightier than understanding.
Plato
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Understanding
Ordinance
Mightier
Ordinances
Philosophical
Law
More quotes by Plato
Man is a biped without feathers.
Plato
Follow your dream as long as you live, do not lessen the time of following desire, for wasting time is an abomination of the spirit.
Plato
States will never be happy until rulers become philosophers or philosophers become rulers.
Plato
Nothing in human affairs is worth any great anxiety.
Plato
I shall never alter my ways, not even if I have to die many times.
Plato
The greater part of instruction is being reminded of things you already know.
Plato
I would have you imagine, then, that there exists in the mind of man a block of wax... and that we remember and know what is imprinted as long as the image lasts but when the image is effaced, or cannot be taken, then we forget or do not know.
Plato
Numbers are the highest degree of knowledge. It is knowledge itself.
Plato
All learning is in the learner, not the teacher.
Plato
To honor with hymns and panegyrics those who are still alive is not safe a man should run his course and make a fair ending, and then we will praise him and let praise be given equally to women as well as men who have been distinguished in virtue.
Plato
Haughtiness lives under the same roof with solitude.
Plato
There are some whom the applause of the multitude has deluded into the belief that they are really statesmen.
Plato
Virtue is a kind of health, beauty and good habit of the soul.
Plato
The cure of the part should not be attempted without the cure of the whole.
Plato
Arrogance is ever accompanied by folly.
Plato
As the builders say, the larger stones do not lie well without the lesser.
Plato
All who do evil and dishonorable things do them against their will.
Plato
They deem him their worst enemy who tells them the truth.
Plato
So the well educated man can learn to sing and dance well.
Plato
The makers of fortunes have a second love of money as a creation of their own, resembling the affection of authors for their own poems, or of parents for their children, besides that natural love of it for the sake of use and profit.
Plato