Depends on your definition of God.
Plato's beliefs about God are complex and open to interpretation. In his writings, he often refers to a divine being or higher power, but his concept of God is not the same as the monotheistic God of religions like Christianity or Islam. Plato's idea of God is more abstract and tied to his philosophical views on the nature of reality and the ultimate source of truth and goodness.
No.
Plato was a philosopher, not a Greek god.
In Plato's dialogues, "Mars" is not mentioned specifically. However, he did believe in a cosmology that included celestial bodies as divine, eternal and representative of perfection. Mars' identification by the Romans with the Greek god Ares may have aligned with this cosmic order and harmony Plato envisioned.
No, Plato did not believe in the heliocentric theory. Plato believed in a geocentric view of the universe, where the Earth was at the center and all celestial bodies orbited around it.
Plato
socrates didn't believe in god Plato believed in god or gods something like that they certainly didnt believe soley in science like the last answerer um answered. in fact scorates came from a period when Athens was in great decline and came to question everything that was believed.
In Plato's philosophy, the concept of the divine is complex and not directly equated with the characteristics typically associated with omnipotence. Plato's God is often portrayed as a benevolent and rational entity, but the notion of omnipotence in the traditional sense may not align perfectly with Plato's understanding of the divine.
Plato was not a Greek god, but a Classical Greek philosopher and founder of the Academy of Athens. Socrates was his teacher and Aristotle his student.
A philosopher.
Plato called the planet Areos aster, or "star of Ares" after the Greek god of war. Mars would eventually be named for the Roman god of war, Mars.
they were thinkers and they believed in moderation