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Not by force shall the children learn, but through play
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
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Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Force
Play
Children
Shall
Learn
More quotes by Plato
My good friend, you are a citizen of Athens, a city which is very great and very famous for its wisdom and power - are you not ashamed of caring so much for the making of money and for fame and prestige, when you neither think nor care about wisdom and truth and the improvement of your soul?
Plato
Time on its back bears all things far away - Full many a challenge is wrought by many a day - Shape, fortune, name, and nature all decay
Plato
If you ask: What is the good of education? The answer is easy: Education makes good men and good men act nobly.
Plato
Better to be unborn than untaught, for ignorance is the root of all misfortune.
Plato
But he who has been earnest in the love of knowledge and of true wisdom, and has exercised his intellect more than any other part of him, must have thoughts immortal and divine. If he attain truth, and in so far as human nature is capable of sharing in immortality, he must altogether be immortal.
Plato
We should not exercise the body without the joint assistance of the mind nor exercise the mind without the joint assistance of the body.
Plato
Fields and trees are not willing to teach me anything but this can be effected by men residing in the city.
Plato
There will be no end to the troubles of states,Or of humanity itself,Till philosophers become kings in this world,Or till those we now call kings and rulers really And truly become philosophers
Plato
Renouncing the honors at which the world aims, I desire only to know the truth... and to the maximum of power, I exhort all other men to do the same.
Plato
Access to power must be confined to those who are not in love with it.
Plato
Time is the moving imago of the unmoving eternity.
Plato
For a man to conquer himself is the first and noblest of all victories.
Plato
The philosopher is in love with truth, that is, not with the changing world of sensation, which is the object of opinion, but with the unchanging reality which is the object of knowledge.
Plato
More will be accomplished, and better, and with more ease, if every man does what he is best fitted to do, and nothing else.
Plato
Numbers are the highest degree of knowledge. It is knowledge itself.
Plato
We ought to live sacrificing, and singing, and dancing.
Plato
... for this discovery of yours will create forgetfulness in the learners' souls, because they will not use their memories they will trust to the external written characters and not remember of themselves.
Plato
Such, Echecrates, was the end of our comrade, who was, we may fairly say, of all those whom we knew in our time, the bravest and also the wisest and most upright man.
Plato
The judge should not be young, he should have learned to know evil, not from his own soul, but from late and long observation of the nature of evil in others.
Plato
...that not life, but a good life, is to be chiefly valued.
Plato