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Wealth & Money Quote by Plato

"The greatest wealth is to live content with little"

About this Quote

A culture that treats desire like a gas pedal isn’t going to love Plato’s punchline: real wealth looks suspiciously like restraint. “The greatest wealth is to live content with little” smuggles an argument about power under the guise of a moral aphorism. It’s not praising poverty; it’s demoting possessions from the role of life’s scorecard. Plato’s move is rhetorical judo: he redefines “wealth” away from what can be hoarded and toward what can’t be easily taken - an internal steadiness that makes you harder to govern through bribery, fear, or envy.

The intent is philosophical but also political. In Plato’s Athens, money and public opinion could buy influence, and the city’s democracy often rewarded performance over wisdom. Contentment with little becomes a kind of civic armor: if you don’t need much, you’re less corruptible, less distractible, less likely to confuse appetite with purpose. Subtext: endless acquisition isn’t ambition, it’s dependency. A person who can’t stop wanting is, in Plato’s terms, already impoverished.

The line also echoes his broader suspicion of the body’s cravings and the marketplace’s seductions. Plato doesn’t trust desire because desire doesn’t settle; it escalates. By making “content” the metric, he shifts the battleground from external status to internal order - the same logic behind his ideal of a well-governed soul. The sting is modern: if your happiness requires “more,” you’ve outsourced your freedom to the next purchase.

Quote Details

TopicContentment
Source
Later attribution: Sex, Money, Happiness, and Death (Manfred F.R. Kets de Vries, 2016) modern compilationISBN: 9780230240360 · ID: q7dsCwAAQBAJ
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... The greatest wealth is to live content with little , " ( Plato ) ; " Wealth consists not in having great possessions but in having few wants , " ( Epicurus ) . Apparently , we are wealthiest when our minds are satisfied . Can it ...
Other candidates (1)
To live sparingly with a placid mind is great riches for a man. divitiae grandes homini sunt vivere parce aequo animo...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Plato. (2026, February 9). The greatest wealth is to live content with little. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greatest-wealth-is-to-live-content-with-little-29311/

Chicago Style
Plato. "The greatest wealth is to live content with little." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greatest-wealth-is-to-live-content-with-little-29311/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The greatest wealth is to live content with little." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greatest-wealth-is-to-live-content-with-little-29311/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Plato

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

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