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Nothing ever is, everything is becoming.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
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Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
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Everything
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More quotes by Plato
'That is the story. Do you think there is any way of making them believe it?' ' Not in the first generation', he said, 'but you might succeed with the second and later generations.'
Plato
Excess generally causes reaction, and produces a change in the opposite direction, whether it be in the seasons, or in individuals, or in governments.
Plato
Remember how in that communion only, beholding beauty with the eye of the mind, he will be enabled to bring forth, not images of beauty, but realities (for he has hold not of an image but of a reality), and bringing forth and nourishing true virtue to become the friend of God and be immortal, if mortal man may.
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No one knows whether death is really the greatest blessing a man can have, but they fear it is the greatest curse, as if they knew well.
Plato
When a person supposes that he knows, and does not know this appears to be the great source of all the errors of the intellect.
Plato
One cannot make a slave of a free person, for a free person is free even in a prison.
Plato
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.
Plato
The greatest penalty of evil-doing is to grow into the likeness of a bad man.
Plato
...for the object of education is to teach us to love beauty.
Plato
Just as things in a picture, when viewed from a distance, appear to be all in one and the same condition and alike.
Plato
Love consists in feeling the Sacred One beating inside the loved one.
Plato
Arrogance is ever accompanied by folly.
Plato
For though a man should be a complete unbeliever in the being of gods if he also has a native uprightness of temper, such persons will detest evil in men their repugnance to wrong disinclines them to commit wrongful acts they shun the unrighteous and are drawn to the upright.
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You may be sure, dear Crito, that inaccurate language is not only in itself a mistake: it implants evil in men's souls.
Plato
The good is the beautiful.
Plato
No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth.
Plato
Courage is a kind of salvation.
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It was Plato, according to Sosigenes, who set this as a problem for those concerned with these things, through what suppositions of uniform and ordered movements the appearances concerning the movements of the wandering heavenly bodies could be preserved.
Plato
Those who have knowledge are more confident than those who have no knowledge, and they are more confident after they have learned than before.
Plato
Virtue is voluntary, vice involuntary.
Plato