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Philosophy is true mother of the arts [of science].
Marcus Tullius Cicero
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
M. Tullii Ciceronis
Marcus Tullius -- Translations into French Cicero
Philosophy
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More quotes by Marcus Tullius Cicero
It is a common saying that many pecks of salt must be eaten before the duties of friendship can be discharged.
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Whatever is graceful is virtuous, and whatever is virtuous is graceful.
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What is thine is mine, and all mine is thine.
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Ill gotten gains will be ill spent.
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Reason is the mistress and queen of all things. [Lat., Domina omnium et regina ratio.]
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What greater gift can we offer the republic than to teach and instruct our youth?
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Were floods of tears to be unloosed In tribute to my grief, The doves of Noah ne'er had roost Nor found an olive-leaf.
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The life of the dead is placed on the memories of the living. The love you gave in life keeps people alive beyond their time. Anyone who was given love will always live on in another's heart.
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The popular breeze - Aura popularis
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Nothing is so unbelievable that oratory cannot make it acceptable.
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For what is there more hideous than avarice, more brutal than lust, more contemptible than cowardice, more base than stupidity and folly?
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The men who administer public affairs must first of all see that everyone holds onto what is his, and that private men are never deprived of their goods by public men.
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To know the laws is not to memorize their letter but to grasp their full force and meaning.
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No man can be brave who thinks pain the greatest evil nor temperate, who considers pleasure the highest god. [Lat., Fortis vero, dolorem summum malum judicans aut temperans, voluptatem summum bonum statuens, esse certe nullo modo potest.]
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Each part of life has its own pleasures. Each has its own abundant harvest, to be garnered in season. We may grow old in body, but we need never grow old in mind and spirit. No one is as old as to think he or she cannot live one more year.
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Fortune, not wisdom, rules lives.
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Our country is wherever we are well off. [Lat., Patria est, ubicunque est bene.]
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He who has a garden and a library wants for nothing.
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The magistrates are the ministers for the laws, the judges their interpreters, the rest of us are servants of the law, that we all may be free.
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Nothing is so strongly fortified that it cannot be taken by money.
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