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The comic and the tragic lie inseparably close, like light and shadow.
Socrates
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Socrates
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More quotes by Socrates
Aren't you ashamed to be concerned so much about making all the money you can and advancing your reputation and prestige, while for truth and wisdom and the improvement of your souls you have no thought or car?
Socrates
Are not all things which have opposites generated out of their opposites?
Socrates
Philebus was saying that enjoyment and pleasure and delight, and the class of feelings akin to them, are a good to every living being, whereas I contend, that not these, but wisdom and intelligence and memory, and their kindred, right opinion and true reasoning, are better and more desirable than pleasure
Socrates
An honest man is always a child.
Socrates
One should never do wrong in return, nor mistreat any man, no matter how one has been mistreated by him.
Socrates
In childhood be modest, in youth temperate, in adulthood just, and in old age prudent.
Socrates
No one does wrong voluntarily.
Socrates
The warm love has the coldest end.
Socrates
This sense of wonder is the mark of the philosopher. Philosophy indeed has no other origin.
Socrates
YOU ARE NOT ONLY GOOD TO YOURSELF, BUT THE CAUSE OF GOODNESS IN OTHERS
Socrates
I call that man idle who might be better employed.
Socrates
True wisdom comes to each of us when we realize how little we understand about life, ourselves, and the world around us.
Socrates
I love to go and see all the things I am happy without.
Socrates
When you want wisdom and insight as badly as you want to breathe, it is then you shall have it.
Socrates
I am wiser than this man, for neither of us appears to know anything great and good but he fancies he knows something, although he knows nothing whereas I, as I do not know anything, so I do not fancy I do. In this trifling particular, then, I appear to be wiser than he, because I do not fancy I know what I do not know.
Socrates
The soul is cured of its maladies by certain incantations these incantations are beautiful reasons, from which temperance is generated in souls.
Socrates
The real artist, who knew what he was imitating, would be interested in realities and not in imitations and would desire to leave as memorials of himself works many and fair and, instead of being the author of encomiums, he would prefer to be the theme of them.
Socrates
If I can assign names as well as pictures to objects, the right assignment of them we may call truth, and the wrong assignment of them falsehood.
Socrates
Laws are not made for the good.
Socrates
People learn more on their own rather than being force fed.
Socrates