Plato on Foundations and Education
"The beginning is the most important part of the work." — Plato, Republic, Book II, sets the stakes for education, not just politics.

Unknown — "Bronze hydria (water jar)" (ca. 375–350 BCE), public domain
Plato on the Crucial First Steps
"The beginning is the most important part of the work," writes Plato in Republic, Book II (377a). He’s not talking about just any project, but the education of children—a matter he sees as the foundation of both personal virtue and the health of the whole city.
Why Plato Fought Over Nursery Rhymes
Plato argued that early lessons—stories, games, even lullabies—imprint values for life. He pushed for careful censorship and design of these childhood influences, convinced that anything less would warp a citizen forever. For him, education wasn’t just a private concern. It was the destiny of the entire polis.
Plato knew that shaping young minds shapes the entire city. The opening of a child's education, he argued, determines the fate of the whole society.