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Time is the moving imago of the unmoving eternity.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Moving
Time
Unmoving
Management
Eternity
More quotes by Plato
We will be better and braver if we engage and inquire than if we indulge in the idle fancy that we already know -- or that it is of no use seeking to know what we do not know.
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Rhetoric is the art of ruling the minds of men.
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A delightful form of government, anarchic and motley, assigning a kind of equality indiscriminately to equals and unequals alike!
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Nothing in human affairs is worth any great anxiety.
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Where love reigns, there's no need for laws.
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For every man who has learned to fight in arms will desire to learn the proper arrangement of an army, which is the sequel of the lesson.
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There's a victory and defeat-the first and best of victories, the lowest and worst of defeats-which each man gains or sustains at the hands not of another, but of himself.
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No one ever dies an atheist.
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Our greatest blessings come to us by way of madness, provided the madness is given us by divine gift.
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Music is to the mind as air is to the body.
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Courage is a kind of salvation.
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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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Putting the shoe on the wrong foot.
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Socrates said that, from above, the Earth looks like one of those twelve-patched leathern balls.
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The race of the guardians must be kept pure.
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The object of knowledge is what exists and its function to know about reality.
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The man who hath music in his soul will be most in love with the loveliest.
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Rhythm and harmony enter most powerfully into the inner most part of the soul and lay forcible hands upon it, bearing grace with them, so making graceful him who is rightly trained.
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Let him take heart who does advance, even in the smallest degree.
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Arrogance is ever accompanied by folly.
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