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Nothing is too absurd to be said by some of the philosophers.
Marcus Tullius Cicero
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
Ancient Roman Military Personnel
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
M. Tullii Ciceronis
Marcus Tullius -- Translations into French Cicero
Philosophers
Absurd
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Nothing
More quotes by Marcus Tullius Cicero
Fortune is not only blind herself, but blinds the people she has embraced.
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Rightly defined philosophy is simply the love of wisdom.
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For one day spent well, and agreeably to your precepts, is preferable to an eternity of error.
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How great an evil do you see that may have been announced by you against the Republic? - Videtis quantum scelus contra rem publicam vobis nuntiatum sit?
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The first duty of man is the seeking after and the investigation of truth.
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The first law for the historian is that he shall never dare utter an untruth. The second is that he shall suppress nothing that is true. Moreover, there shall be no suspicion of partiality in his writing, or of malice.
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There is nothing more shocking than to see assertion and approval dashing ahead of cognition and perception.
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Thrift is a great revenue.
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It is certain that memory contains not only philosophy, but all the arts and all that appertain to the use of life.
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All the arts of refinement have mutual kinship.
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This excessive licence, which the anarchists think is the only true freedom, provides the stock, as it were, from which a tyrant grows.
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I have sworn with my tongue, but my mind is unsworn. [Lat., Juravi lingua, mentem injuratem gero.]
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The whole of virtue consists in its practice.
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Hours and days and months and years go by the past returns no more, and what is to be we cannot know but whatever the time gives us in which we live, we should therefore be content.
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In everything truth surpasses the imitation and copy.
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Exercise and temperance can preserve something of our early strength even in old age.
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So it may well be believed that when I found him taking a complete holiday, with a vast supply of books at command, he had the air of indulging in a literary debauch, if the term may be applied to so honorable an occupation.
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Hatred is inveterate anger.
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Since an intelligence common to us all makes things known to us and formulates them in our minds, honorable actions are ascribed by us to virtue, and dishonorable actions to vice and only a madman would conclude that these judgments are matters of opinion, and not fixed by nature.
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Men, in whatever anxiety they may be, if they are men, sometimes indulge in relaxation.
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