Inspiration is the memory of the soul. After death, the soul leaves the body and ascends to the divine realm. Those who practice deeply can reach the highest realm and see the real ontological world, the world of gods and ideas. When he is reborn in the physical body again, things in this world remind him of the scenes he observed in the divine world, causing him to feel ecstatic and joyful at seeing true beauty. Inspiration is a powerful magnet that comes from the God of Poetry. The God of Poetry is like a magnet. She first transmits inspiration to people, and people who get inspiration pass it on to others, allowing others to pick them up. On a chain. Inspiration not only does not rely on knowledge and reason, but also requires losing ordinary reason and falling into a state of ecstasy. In "Phaedrus" and "Symposium", Plato also combined the ecstatic state of inspiration with the theory of soul reincarnation he got from Egypt, believing that inspiration comes from what the immortal soul saw in heaven in its previous life. Memories of a happy state. He also repeatedly pointed out that both literary and artistic creation and love must present a state of ecstasy in inspiration, so there is consistency between literary and artistic creation and love. The artist, in Plato's eyes, is just a craftsman, and a poor craftsman at that. The author is never free. His expression is controlled by gods, recipients and society.