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If you are wise, all men will be your friends and kindred, for you will be useful.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Wise
Wisdom
Friends
Men
Kindred
Useful
More quotes by Plato
Train children not by compulsion but as if they were playing.
Plato
All I really know is the extent of my own ignorance
Plato
It is vain for the sober man to knock at poesy's door.
Plato
No law or ordinance is mightier than understanding.
Plato
He who is gracious to his lover under the impression that he is rich, and is disappointed of his gains because he turns out to be poor, is disgraced all the same: for he has done his best to show that he would give himself up to any one's uses base for the sake of money but this is not honourable.
Plato
The god of love lives in a state of need. It is a need. It is an urge. It is a homeostatic imbalance. Like hunger and thirst, it's almost impossible to stamp out.
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Our object in the construction of the state is the greatest happiness of the whole, and not that of any one class.
Plato
There is in every one of us, even those who seem to be most moderate, a type of desire that is terrible, wild, and lawless.
Plato
Whenever a person strives, by the help of dialectic, to start in pursuit of every reality by a simple process of reason, independent of all sensuous information - never flinching, until by an act of the pure intelligence he has grasped the real nature of good - he arrives at the very end of the intellectual world.
Plato
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.
Plato
The gods created certain kinds of beings to replenish our bodies... they are the trees and the plants and the seeds.
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.
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I must yield to you, for you are irresistible.
Plato
One trait in the philosopher's character we can assume is his love of the knowledge that reveals eternal reality, the realm unaffected by change and decay. He is in love with the whole of that reality, and will not willingly be deprived even of the most insignificant fragment of it - just like the lovers and men of ambition we described earlier on.
Plato
Love is the pursuit of the whole.
Plato
for a poet is a light and winged thing, and holy, and never able to compose until he has become inspired, and is beside himself, and reason is no longer in him.
Plato
The contemplation of beauty causes the soul to grow wings.
Plato
In things which we know, everyone will trust us ... and we may do as we please, and no one will like to interfere with us and we are free, and masters of others and these things will be really ours, for we shall turn them to our good.
Plato
If someone separated the art of counting and measuring and weighing from all the other arts, what was left of each (of the others) would be, so to speak, insignificant.
Plato
No one knows whether death may not be the greatest good that can happen to man.
Plato