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To move the world we must move ourselves.
Socrates
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Socrates
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Sokrates
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More quotes by Socrates
Do not be angry with me if I tell you the truth
Socrates
To find yourself, think for yourself.
Socrates
Whenever a number of individuals have a common name, we assume them to have also a corresponding idea or form.
Socrates
The soul, like the body, accepts by practice whatever habit one wishes it to contact.
Socrates
A system of morality that is based on relative emotional values is a mere illusion, a thoroughly vulgar conception that has nothing sound in it and nothing true.
Socrates
If you want to be wrong then follow the masses.
Socrates
Just as you ought not to attempt to cure eyes without head or head without body, so you should not treat body without soul.
Socrates
Listen not to a tale-bearer or slanderer, for he tells thee nothing out of good-will but as he discovereth of the secrets of others, so he will of thine in turn.
Socrates
Nobody is qualified to become a statesman who is entirely ignorant of the problem of wheat.
Socrates
There is a doctrine whispered in secret that a man is a prisoner who has no right to open the door and run away this is a great mystery which I do not quite understand.
Socrates
God desired to be the real maker of a real bed, not a particular maker of a particular bed, and therefore He created a bed which is essentially and by nature one only.
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
A man should inure himself to voluntary labor, and not give up to indulgence and pleasure, as they beget no good constitution of body nor knowledge of mind.
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
Only the extremely ignorant or the extremely intelligent can resist change.
Socrates
No citizen has a right to be an amateur in the matter of physical training... what a disgrace it is for a man to grow old without ever seeing the beauty and strength of which his body is capable.
Socrates
If measure and symmetry are absent from any composition in any degree, ruin awaits both the ingredients and the composition... Measure and symmetry are beauty and virtue the world over.
Socrates
The duller eye may often see a thing sooner than the keener.
Socrates
Whenever, therefore, people are deceived and form opinions wide of the truth, it is clear that the error has slid into their minds through the medium of certain resemblances to that truth.
Socrates
The greatest blessing granted to mankind come by way of madness, which is a divine gift.
Socrates