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Music is to the mind as air is to the body.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Music
Mind
Air
Body
More quotes by Plato
It gives me great pleasure to converse with the aged. They have been over the road that all of us must travel, and know where it is rough and difficult and where it is level and easy.
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Everything that deceives does so by casting a spell.
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Don't quarrel with your parents even if you are on the right.
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Knowledge is true opinion.
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Come then, and let us pass a leisure hour in storytelling, and our story shall be the education of our heroes.
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False words are not only evil in themselves, but they infect the soul with evil.
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We ought to fly away from earth to heaven as quickly as we can and to fly away is to become like God, as far as this is possible and to become like him is to become holy, just, and wise.
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Until philosophers hold power, neither states nor individuals will have rest from trouble.
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I can show you that the art of calculation has to do with odd and even numbers in their numerical relations to themselves and to each other.
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When there is crime in society, there is no justice.
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Romantic Art: The Hearts Awakening - Bouguereau At the touch of love, everyone becomes a poet.
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The good man is the only excellent musician, because he gives forth a perfect harmony not with a lyre or other instrument but with the whole of his life.
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And tell him it's quite true that the best of the philosophers are of no use to their fellows but that he should blame, not the philosophers, but those who fail to make use of them.
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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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To do injustice is more disgraceful than to suffer it.
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Let him know how to choose the mean and avoid the extremes on either side, as far as possible. . . . For this is the way of happiness.
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People are like dirt. They can either nourish you and help you grow as a person or they can stunt your growth and make you wilt and die.
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We will be better men, braver and less idle, if we believe that one must search for the things one does not know, rather than if we believe that it is not possible to find out what we do not know and that we must not look for it.
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Serious things cannot be understood without laughable things, nor opposites at all without opposites.
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