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Is it not, then, better to be ridiculous and friendly than clever and hostile?
Socrates
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Socrates
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Sokrates
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More quotes by Socrates
You never know a line is crooked unless you have a straight one to put next to it.
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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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Such as thy words are, such will thy affections be esteemed and such will thy deeds be as thy affections and such thy life as thy deeds.
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Just as you ought not to attempt to cure eyes without head or head without body, so you should not treat body without soul.
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Get married, in any case. If you happen to get a good mate, you will be happy if a bad one, you will become philosophical, which is a fine thing in itself.
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It is the greatest good for an individual to discuss virtue (aka areté) every day...for the unexamined life is not worth living.
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Beloved Pan and all ye other gods who haunt this place, give me beauty in the inward soul and may the outward and the inward man be one.
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Creation is man's immortality and brings him nearest to the gods.
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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.
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May I consider the wise man rich, and may I have such wealth as only the self-restrained man can bear or endure.
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It is better to make a mistake with full force of your being than to carefully avoid mistakes with a trembling spirit.
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Those who want the fewest things are nearest to the gods.
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No one does wrong voluntarily.
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Has a philosopher like you failed to discover that our country is more to be valued and higher and holier far than mother or father or any ancestor, and more to be regarded in the eyes of the gods and of men of understanding?
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Aren't you ashamed to be concerned so much about making all the money you can and advancing your reputation and prestige, while for truth and wisdom and the improvement of your souls you have no thought or car?
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In childhood be modest, in youth temperate, in adulthood just, and in old age prudent.
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The comic and the tragic lie inseparably close, like light and shadow.
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For this fear of death is indeed the pretense of wisdom, and not real wisdom, being the appearance of knowing the unknown since no one knows whether death, which they in their fear apprehend to be the greatest evil, may not be the greatest good.
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This is...self-knowled ge-for a man to know what he knows, and what he does not know.
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An honest man is always a child.
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