Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
The soul is like a pair of winged horses and a charioteer joined in natural union.
Plato
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Plato
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Ancient Athens
Platon
Aristocles
Union
Unions
Horse
Natural
Winged
Soul
Joined
Like
Pair
Horses
Pairs
More quotes by Plato
Discordance is evil. Harmony is virtue.
Plato
A man who really fights for justice must lead a private, not a public, life if he is to survive for even a short time.
Plato
He who is learning and learning and doesn't apply what he knows is like the one who is plowing and plowing and doesn't seed.
Plato
In order to seek one's own direction, one must simplify the mechanics of ordinary, everyday life.
Plato
When a person meets the half that is his very own, whatever his orientation, whether it's to young men or not, then something wonderful happens: the two are struck from their senses by love, by a sense of belonging to one another, and by desire, and they don't want to be separated from one another, not even for a moment.
Plato
Poets utter great and wise things which they do not themselves understand.
Plato
In order for man to succeed in life, God provided him with two means, education and physical activity. Not separately, one for the soul and the other for the body, but for the two together. With these means, man can attain perfection.
Plato
Apply yourself both now and in the next life. Without effort, you cannot be prosperous. Though the land be good, you cannot have an abundant crop without cultivation.
Plato
A wise man speaks because he has something to say a fool because he has to say something.
Plato
For it is obvious to everybody, I think, that this study [of astronomy] compels the soul to look upward and leads it away from things here to higher things.
Plato
You are mistaken, my friend, if you think that a man who is worth anything ought to spend his time weighing up the prospects of life and death. He has only one thing to consider in performing any action - that is, whether he is acting rightly or wrongly, like a good man or a bad one.
Plato
When I hear a man discoursing of virtue, or of any sort of wisdom, who is a true man and worthy of his theme, I am delighted beyond measure: and I compare the man and his words, and note the harmony and correspondence of them. And such an one I deem to be the true musician, having in himself a fairer harmony than that of the lyre.
Plato
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
Plato
You cannot conceive the many without the one.
Plato
So the well educated man can learn to sing and dance well.
Plato
Thus does the Muse herself move men divinely inspired, and through them thus inspired a Chain hangs together of others inspired divinely likewise.
Plato
There is no necessity for the man who means to be an orator to understand what is really just but only what would appear so to the majority of those who will give judgment and not what is really good or beautiful but whatever will appear so because persuasion comes from that and not from the truth.
Plato
He, O men, is the wisest, who, like Socrates, knows that his wisdom is in truth worth nothing.
Plato
Adultery is the injury of nature.
Plato
Our object in the construction of the state is the greatest happiness of the whole, and not that of any one class.
Plato