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Platonically

[pluh-ton-ik-lee, pley-]

adverb

  1. in a way that relates to or is influenced by the doctrines of Plato, especially his elevation of the spiritual or ideal over the physical and particular.

    These reminders of Jesus’ physical sufferings were necessary for certain Platonically inclined Christian philosophers who had no doubts about Jesus’ full divinity but were loath to admit his full humanity.

  2. Usually platonically in a nonromantic way that is free from sexual desire.

    There was a woman he saw platonically; they went to movies or dinner together, and that was all.



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Other Word Forms

  • anti-Platonically adverb
  • pro-Platonically adjective
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Word History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Guston must have noticed, concluded Ware, that his images of Nixon and Agnew “simply didn’t have as much staying power as his Platonically powerful paintings of heads, bottles, legs, shoes, and lightbulbs.”

Read more on Washington Post

This isn’t to insist that journalism is Platonically objective: Even the most dispassionate reporters make choices about what to leave in and what to leave out of their articles.

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His intelligence on the court is palpable—everything he does, shot or pass or steal, feels in tune with the energies of his team, and of the game itself, played Platonically.

Read more on The New Yorker

“You can have a Platonically perfect model and still get the number wrong.”

Read more on New York Times

Muzzle looked Platonically the incarnate idea of the Christian Parson.

Read more on Project Gutenberg

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PlatonicPlatonic love