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Faith & Spirit Quote by Plato

"Astronomy compels the soul to look upwards and leads us from this world to another"

About this Quote

Astronomy, for Plato, is less about stars than about moral posture. The line flatters the reader into an athletic movement of the mind: to study the heavens is to practice turning away from the messy seductions of the everyday and toward something cleaner, higher, more ordered. “Compels” matters. This isn’t stargazing as leisure; it’s a disciplinary force, the kind of education that drags the soul out of its bad habits.

The subtext is a familiar Platonic wager: reality isn’t what we bump into. The visible sky becomes a tutorial in invisible truth. When the planets keep time with such indifference and precision, they model a cosmos governed by intelligible structure rather than appetite or accident. That’s why the phrase “from this world to another” lands with quiet provocation. Plato isn’t promising sci-fi transport; he’s selling metaphysics. Astronomy becomes a gateway drug to the Theory of Forms, training the mind to prefer eternal patterns over temporary clutter.

Context sharpens the point. In dialogues like the Republic, Plato treats mathematical study as a ladder: arithmetic and geometry prepare the soul for dialectic, the highest form of inquiry. Astronomy belongs on that ladder, but not because it improves navigation or farming. He’s skeptical of practical utility as the aim of education; he wants conversion, not competence.

There’s also a political edge. A city run by people who never look up, Plato implies, will stay trapped in the cave of appearances - reactive, easily manipulated, hungry for spectacle. The upward gaze is a civic corrective: a reminder that the good life starts by refusing to let the immediate world be the final authority.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
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Astronomy compels the soul to look upwards and leads us from this world to another
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Plato

Plato (427 BC - 347 BC) was a Philosopher from Greece.

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