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Death offers mankind a full view of truth.
Socrates
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Socrates
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Sokrates
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More quotes by Socrates
Do not go through life like leaf blown from here to there believing whatever you are told.
Socrates
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.
Socrates
Living or dead, to a good man there can come no evil.
Socrates
Give me beauty in the inward soul and may the outward and inward may be one.
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
Wisest is he who knows he knows not.
Socrates
Flattery is like friendship in show, but not in fruit.
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
All that I know is nothing - I'm not even sure of that.
Socrates
There is no learning without remembering.
Socrates
In all of us, even in good men, there is a lawless wild-beast nature, which peers out in sleep.
Socrates
YOU ARE NOT ONLY GOOD TO YOURSELF, BUT THE CAUSE OF GOODNESS IN OTHERS
Socrates
Nothing is so well learned as that which is discovered.
Socrates
Flattery is like a painted armor only for show.
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
I was really too honest a man to be a politician and live.
Socrates
Whoever would have his body supple, easy and healthful should learn to dance.
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
To Believe without evidence and demonstration is an act of ignorance and folly
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