Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
The greatest blessing granted to mankind come by way of madness, which is a divine gift.
Socrates
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Socrates
Philosopher
Teacher
Sokrates
Science
Come
Madness
Way
Granted
Blessing
Gift
Mankind
Divine
Greatest
More quotes by Socrates
The universe really is motion & nothing else.
Socrates
The greater the power that deigns to serve you, the more honor it demands of you.
Socrates
My friend...care for your psyche...know thyself, for once we know ourselves, we may learn how to care for ourselves
Socrates
He is the richest who is content with the least.
Socrates
Athletics have become professionalized.
Socrates
Ordinary people seem not to realize that those who really apply themselves in the right way to philosophy are directly and of their own accord preparing themselves for dying and death.
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
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
Whoever would have his body supple, easy and healthful should learn to dance.
Socrates
The comic and the tragic lie inseparably close, like light and shadow.
Socrates
I know you won't believe me, but the highest form of Human Excellence is to question oneself and others.
Socrates
The noblest worship is to make yourself as good and as just as you can.
Socrates
Not I, but the city teaches.
Socrates
One should never do wrong in return, nor mistreat any man, no matter how one has been mistreated by him.
Socrates
If a man is proud of his wealth, he should not be praised until it is known how he employs it.
Socrates
By far the greatest and most admirable form of wisdom is that needed to plan and beautify cities and human communities.
Socrates
Some have courage in pleasures, and some in pains: some in desires, and some in fears, and some are cowards under the same conditions.
Socrates
Thou shouldst eat to live not live to eat.
Socrates
One ought not to return injustice, nor do evil to anybody in the world, no matter what one may have suffered from them.
Socrates
The greatest flood has the soonest ebb the sorest tempest the most sudden calm the hottest love the coldest end and from the deepest desire oftentimes ensues the deadliest hate.
Socrates