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I call that man idle who might be better employed.
Socrates
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Socrates
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Sokrates
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More quotes by Socrates
It is best and easiest not to discredit others but to prepare oneself to be as good as possible.
Socrates
The envious person grows lean with the fatness of their neighbor.
Socrates
There is no learning without remembering.
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If you would seek health, look first to the spine.
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When desire, having rejected reason and overpowered judgment which leads to right, is set in the direction of the pleasure which beauty can inspire, and when again under the influence of its kindred desires it is moved with violent motion towards the beauty of corporeal forms, it acquires a surname from this very violent motion, and is called love.
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In all of us, even in good men, there is a lawless wild-beast nature, which peers out in sleep.
Socrates
I am wiser than this man, for neither of us appears to know anything great and good but he fancies he knows something, although he knows nothing whereas I, as I do not know anything, so I do not fancy I do. In this trifling particular, then, I appear to be wiser than he, because I do not fancy I know what I do not know.
Socrates
A man can no more make a safe use of wealth without reason than he can of a horse without a bridle.
Socrates
Are not all things which have opposites generated out of their opposites?
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
What a lot of things there are a man can do without.
Socrates
All things in moderation, including moderation.
Socrates
By means of beauty all beautiful things become beautiful.
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The warm love has the coldest end.
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A painter will paint a cobbler, carpenter, or any other artist, though he knows nothing of their arts and, if he is a good artist, he may deceive children or simple persons, when he shows them his picture of a carpenter from a distance, and they will fancy that they are looking at a real carpenter.
Socrates
Follow the argument wherever it leads.
Socrates
I am that gadfly which God has attached to the state, and all day long and in all places am always fastening upon you, arousing and persuading and reproaching you.
Socrates
It is not the purpose of a juryman's office to give justice as a favor to whoever seems good to him, but to judge according to law, and this he has sworn to do.
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
No one does wrong voluntarily.
Socrates