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The rest of the world lives to eat, while I eat to live.
Socrates
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More quotes by Socrates
The uninitiated are those who believe in nothing except what they can grasp in their hands, and who deny the existence of all that is invisible.
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
Wind buffs up empty bladders opinion, fools.
Socrates
The hardest task needs the lightest hand or else its completion will not lead to freedom but to a tyranny much worse than the one it replaces.
Socrates
Those who want the fewest things are nearest to the gods.
Socrates
The partisan when he is engaged in a dispute, cares nothing about the rights of the question, but is anxious only to convince his hearers of his own assertions.
Socrates
How many things are there which I do not want.
Socrates
Only the knowledge that comes from inside is the real Knowledge
Socrates
I know you won't believe me, but the highest form of Human Excellence is to question oneself and others.
Socrates
Every action has its pleasures and its price.
Socrates
Whoever would have his body supple, easy and healthful should learn to dance.
Socrates
Knowledge is our ultimate good.
Socrates
Are not all things which have opposites generated out of their opposites?
Socrates
To know, is to know that you know nothing. That is the meaning of true knowledge. For a man who claims to have knowledge, while actually knowing nothing, is less smarter than you, who claim to know nothing.
Socrates
Let us reflect in this way, too, that there is good hope that death is a blessing, for it is one of two things: either the dead are nothing and have no perception of anything, or it is, as we are told, a change and a relocation for the soul from here to another place.
Socrates
Nobody knows what death is, nor whether to man it is perchance the greatest of blessings, yet people fear it as if they surely knew it to be the worse of evils.
Socrates
It seems that God took away the minds of poets that they might better express His.
Socrates
The beginning of wisdom is a definition of terms.
Socrates
An honest man is always a child. [Lat., Semper bonus homo tiro est.]
Socrates
No man undertakes a trade he has not learned, even the meanest yet everyone thinks himself sufficiently qualified for the hardest of all trades, that of government.
Socrates