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Plato

  • saveticahas quotedlast year
    they almost made me forget who I was—so persuasively did they speak; and yet they have hardly uttered a word of truth.
  • pendeltonward101has quoted8 months ago
    May I succeed, if to succeed be for my good and yours, or likely to avail me in my cause!
  • pendeltonward101has quoted8 months ago
    Evenus the Parian
  • pendeltonward101has quoted8 months ago
    yet I corrupt him, and intentionally, too—so you say, although neither I nor any other human being is ever likely to be convinced by you. But either I do not corrupt them, or I corrupt them unintentionally; and on either view of the case you lie. If my offence is unintentional, the law has no cognizance of unintentional offences: you ought to have taken me privately, and warned and admonished me; for if I had been better advised, I should have left off doing what I only did unintentionally—no doubt I should; but you would have nothing to say to me and refused to teach me. And now you bring me up in this court, which is a place not of instruction, but of punishment.
  • pendeltonward101has quoted8 months ago
    Anaxagoras the Clazomenian, which are full of them
  • Arick Vigashas quotedlast year
    conclusion of the whole
  • Nerrick 9has quotedlast year
    Vice in abundance is easy to get.

    The road is smooth and begins beside you,

    But the gods have put sweat between us and virtue,

    and a tedious and uphill road.
  • Alexa Gracehas quotedlast year
    We are thus led on to the conception of a higher State, in which "no man calls anything his own," and in which there is neither "marrying nor giving in marriage," and "kings are philosophers" and "philosophers are kings;" and there is another and higher education, intellectual as well as moral and religious, of science as well as of art, and not of youth only but of the whole of life.
  • carmelabanta881has quoted2 years ago
    "no man calls anything his own,"
  • carmelabanta881has quoted2 years ago
    The Republic of Plato is also the first treatise upon education, of which the writings of Milton and Locke, Rousseau, Jean Paul, and Goethe are the legitimate descendants.
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