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I will prove by my life that my critics are liars.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Critics
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Prove
Life
Liars
More quotes by Plato
Thinking is the soul talking to itself.
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... Societies aren t made of sticks and stones, but of men whose individual characters, by turning the scale one way or another, determine the direction of the whole.
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For when there are no words, it is very difficult to recognize the meaning of the harmony and rhythm, or to see any worldly object is imitated by them.
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If in a discussion of many matters ... we are not able to give perfectly exact and self-consistent accounts, do not be surprised: rather we would be content if we provide accounts that are second to none in probability.
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We are like people looking for something they have in their hands all the time we're looking in all directions except at the thing we want, which is probably why we haven't found it.
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Those who tell the stories rule society.
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If you ask: What is the good of education? The answer is easy: Education makes good men and good men act nobly.
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Rhythm and melody enter into the soul of the well-instructed youth and produce there a certain mental harmony hardly obtainable in any other way. . . . thus music, too, is concerned with the principles of love in their application to harmony and rhythm.
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There are three classes of men lovers of wisdom, lovers of honor, and lovers of gain.
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The essence of knowledge is self-knowledge.
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The doctors will treat those of your citizens whose physical and psychological constitution is good: as for the others, they will leave the unhealthy to die and those whose psychological constitution is incurably warped they will be put to death.
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Kindness which is bestowed on the good is never lost.
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So the well educated man can learn to sing and dance well.
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The choice of souls was in most cases based on their own experience of a previous life... Knowledge easily acquired is that which the enduing self had in an earlier life, so that it flows back easily.
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I fast for greater physical and mental efficiency
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If you are wise, all men will be your friends and kindred, for you will be useful.
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You need some knowledge to recognize knowledge, so where does the first knowledge come from?
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Lessons, however, that enter the soul against its will never grow roots and will never be preserved inside it.
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To fear death, my friends, is only to think ourselves wise without really being wise, for it is to think that we know what we do not know.
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He who without the Muse's madness in his soul comes knocking at the door of poesy and thinks that art will make him anything fit to be called a poet, finds that the poetry which he indites in his sober senses is beaten hollow by the poetry of madmen.
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