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Every action has its pleasures and its price.
Socrates
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Socrates
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Sokrates
Socratic
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More quotes by Socrates
The soul, like the body, accepts by practice whatever habit one wishes it to contact.
Socrates
Only the extremely ignorant or the extremely intelligent can resist change.
Socrates
The envious person grows lean with the fatness of their neighbor.
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Who knows if to live is to be dead, and to be dead, to live? And we really, it may be, are dead in fact I once heard sages say that we are now dead, and the body is our tomb.
Socrates
All wars are fought for the acquisition of wealth
Socrates
To them, I said, the truth would be literally nothing but the shadows of the images.
Socrates
There is no learning without remembering.
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Man's life is like a drop of dew on a leaf.
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It is never right to do wrong or to requite wrong with wrong, or when we suffer evil to defend ourselves by doing evil in return.
Socrates
Wealth does not bring about excellence (aka areté), but excellence (aka areté) brings about wealth and all other public and private blessings for men.
Socrates
Be of good cheer about death and know this as a truth, that no evil can happen to a good man, either in life or after death
Socrates
There are a great many of these accusers, and they have been accusing me now for a great many years, and what is more, they approached you at the most impressionable age, when some of you were children or adolescents and literally won their case by default, because there was no one to defend me.
Socrates
To find yourself, think for yourself.
Socrates
Musical training is a more potent instrument than any other, because rhythm and harmony find their way into the inward places of the soul, on which they mightily fasten, imparting grace, and making the soul of him who is rightly educated graceful, or of him who is ill-educated ungraceful.
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
Since all of us desire to be happy, and since we evidently become so on account of our use—that is our good use—of other things, and since knowledge is what provides this goodness of use and also good fortune, every man must, as seems plausible, prepare himself by every means for this: to be as wise as possible. Right?
Socrates
To use words and phrases in an easygoing manner without scrutinizing them too curiously is not in general a mark of ill-breeding. On the contrary, there is something low-bred in being too precise. But sometimes there is no help for it
Socrates
If the whole world depends on today's youth, I can't see the world lasting another 100 years.
Socrates
I only wish that ordinary people had an unlimited capacity for doing harm then they might have an unlimited power for doing good.
Socrates
I believe that we cannot live better than in seeking to become better, nor more agreeably than having a clear conscience.
Socrates