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To do wrong is the greatest of evils.
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Wrong
Evil
Evils
Greatest
More quotes by Plato
What if the man could see Beauty Itself, pure, unalloyed, stripped of mortality, and all its pollution, stains, and vanities, unchanging, divine,... the man becoming in that communion, the friend of God,... ?
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Every serious man in dealing with really serious subjects carefully avoids writing. ... There does not exist, nor will there ever exist, any writing of mine dealing with this subject.
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Haughtiness lives under the same roof with solitude.
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In a democracy only will the freeman of nature design to dwell.
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Don't ask a poet to explain himself. He cannot.
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The punishment which the wise suffer who refuse to take part in the government, is to live under the government of worse men.
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Better to be unborn than untaught, for ignorance is the root of all misfortune.
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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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The physician, to the extent he is a physician, considers only the good of the patient in what he prescribes, and his own not at all
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To be conquered by yourself is of all things most shameful and vile.
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A delightful form of government, anarchic and motley, assigning a kind of equality indiscriminately to equals and unequals alike!
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The community which has neither poverty nor riches will always have the noblest principles.
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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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Nothing in human affairs is worth any great anxiety.
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The more the pleasures of the body fade away, the greater to me is the pleasure and charm of conversation.
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The only real ill-doing is the deprivation of knowledge.
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The most virtuous are those who content themselves with being virtuous without seeking to appear so.
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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.
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Man was not made for himself alone
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So the state founded on natural principles is wise as a whole in virtue of the knowledge inherent in its smallest constituent class, which exercises authority over the rest. And the smallest class is the one which naturally possesses that form of knowledge which alone of all others deserves the title of wisdom.
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