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The only real ill-doing is the deprivation of knowledge.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
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Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Deprivation
Ill
Education
Knowledge
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Real
More quotes by Plato
Better to be unborn than untaught, for ignorance is the root of all misfortune.
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No soul willfully does wrong.
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To conquer oneself is the best and noblest victory to be vanquished by one's own nature is the worst and most ignoble defeat.
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So the well educated man can learn to sing and dance well.
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Of all the things of a man's soul which he has within him, justice is the greatest good and injustice the greatest evil.
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One trait in the philosopher's character we can assume is his love of the knowledge that reveals eternal reality, the realm unaffected by change and decay.
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Until philosophers hold power, neither states nor individuals will have rest from trouble.
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Thinking is the soul talking to itself.
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It is not noble to return evil for evil, at no time ought we to do an injury to our neighbors.
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As it is, the lover of inquiry must follow his beloved wherever it may lead him.
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Beauty of style and harmony and grace and good rhythm depend on simplicity - I mean the true simplicity of a rightly and nobly ordered mind and character, not that other simplicity which is only a euphemism for folly.
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Virtue is voluntary, vice involuntary.
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When I hear a man discoursing of virtue, or of any sort of wisdom, who is a true man and worthy of his theme, I am delighted beyond measure: and I compare the man and his words, and note the harmony and correspondence of them. And such an one I deem to be the true musician, having in himself a fairer harmony than that of the lyre.
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Just as things in a picture, when viewed from a distance, appear to be all in one and the same condition and alike.
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Musical innovation is full of danger to the State, for when modes of music change, the laws of the State always change with them.
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Violent pleasures which reach the soul through the body are generally of this sort-they are reliefs of pain.
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Let praise be given equally to women as well as men who have been distinguished in virtue.
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Whenever a person strives, by the help of dialectic, to start in pursuit of every reality by a simple process of reason, independent of all sensuous information - never flinching, until by an act of the pure intelligence he has grasped the real nature of good - he arrives at the very end of the intellectual world.
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Music is to the mind as air is to the body.
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The most beautiful motion is that which accomplishes the greatest results with the least amount of effort.
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