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The greater the power that deigns to serve you, the more honor it demands of you.
Socrates
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Socrates
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Sokrates
Power
Demands
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Honor
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More quotes by Socrates
Prefer knowledge to wealth, for the one is transitory, the other perpetual.
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Admitting one's ignorance is the first step in acquiring knowledge.
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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.
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The rest of the world lives to eat, while I eat to live.
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To move the world we must move ourselves.
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An honest man is always a child. [Lat., Semper bonus homo tiro est.]
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A man can no more make a safe use of wealth without reason than he can of a horse without a bridle.
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Wisest is he who knows he knows not.
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I have lived long enough to learn how much there is I can really do without.... He is nearest to God who needs the fewest things.
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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.
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Contentment is natural wealth.
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The greatest blessing granted to mankind come by way of madness, which is a divine gift.
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By far the greatest and most admirable form of wisdom is that needed to plan and beautify cities and human communities.
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All that we know is nothing can be known.
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Fear of women love more than hate the man.
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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?
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Not I, but the city teaches.
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Not life, but good life, is to be chiefly valued. It is not living that matters, but living rightly. The unexamined life is not worth living.
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The poets are only the interpreters of the Gods.
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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.
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