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Is virtue something that can be taught?
Plato
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Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
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Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Taught
Virtue
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More quotes by Plato
Until philosophers hold power, neither states nor individuals will have rest from trouble.
Plato
For just as poets love their own works, and fathers their own children, in the same way those who have created a fortune value their money, not merely for its uses, like other persons, but because it is their own production. This makes them moreover disagreeable companions, because they will praise nothing but riches.
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Man...is a tame or civilized animal never the less, he requires proper instruction and a fortunate nature, and then of all animals he becomes the most divine and most civilized but if he be insufficiently or ill- educated he is the most savage of earthly creatures.
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The purpose of education is to give to the body and to the soul all the beauty and all the perfection of which they are capable.
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... 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.
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Education and admonition commence in the first years of childhood, and last to the very end of life.
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As there are misanthropists or haters of men, so also are there misologists, or haters of ideas.
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Excess of liberty, whether it lies in state or individuals, seems only to pass into excess of slavery.
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The choice of souls was in most cases based on their own experience of a previous life... Knowledge easily acquired is that which the enduing self had in an earlier life, so that it flows back easily.
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True friendship can exist only between equals.
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Then not only custom, but also nature affirms that to do is more disgraceful than to suffer injustice, and that justice is equality.
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For the man who makes everything that leads to happiness, or near to it, to depend upon himself, and not upon other men, on whose good or evil actions his own doings are compelled to hinge,--such a one, I say, has adopted the very best plan for living happily. This is the man of moderation this is the man of manly character and of wisdom.
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The gods created certain kinds of beings to replenish our bodies... they are the trees and the plants and the seeds.
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Arithmetic has a very great and elevating effect, compelling the soul to reason about abstract number, and rebelling against the introduction of visible or tngible objects into the argument.
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If we are to have any hope for the future, those who have lanterns must pass them on to others.
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Every unjust man is unjust against his will.
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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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Virtue is a kind of health, beauty and good habit of the soul.
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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
They (the poets) are to us in a manner the fathers and authors of the wisdom.
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