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Pure truth no man has seen, nor ever shall know.
Xenophanes
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Xenophanes
Elegist
Epigrammatist
Philosopher
Poet
Xenophanes of Colophon
Pure
Shall
Seen
Truth
Ever
Men
More quotes by Xenophanes
If God had not made brown honey, men would think figs much sweeter than they do.
Xenophanes
If cows and horses had hands and could draw, cows would draw gods that look like cows and horses would draw gods that look like horses.
Xenophanes
...for our wisdom is better than the strength of men or of horses. ... nor is it right to prefer strength to excellent wisdom. For if there should be in the city [any athlete whose skill] is honoured more than strength ... the city would not on that account be any better governed.
Xenophanes
Ethiopians imagine their gods as black and snub-nosed Thracians blue-eyed and red-haired. But if horses or lions had hands, or could draw and fashion works as men do, horses would draw the gods shaped like horses and lions like lions, making the gods resemble themselves.
Xenophanes
This upper limit, of earth at our feet is visible and touches the air, but below it reaches to infinity
Xenophanes
If horses had Gods, they would look like horses.
Xenophanes
If oxen and horses and lions could draw and paint, they would delineate the gods in their own image.
Xenophanes
If cattle and horses, or lions, had hands...
Xenophanes
Homer and Hesiod attributed to the gods all things which are disreputable and worthy of blame when done by men and they told of them many lawless deeds, stealing, adultery, and deception of each other.
Xenophanes
No man knows distinctly anything, and no man ever will.
Xenophanes
Men always makes gods in their own image.
Xenophanes
For we are all sprung from earth and water
Xenophanes
The sun comes into being each day from little pieces of fire that are collected.
Xenophanes
The sea is the source of water and the source of wind for neither would blasts of wind arise in the clouds and blow out from within them, except for the great sea, nor would the streams of rivers nor the rain-water in the sky exist but for the sea but the great sea is the begetter of clouds and winds and rivers.
Xenophanes
It isn't right to judge strength as better than good wisdom.
Xenophanes
For all things come from earth, and all things end by becoming earth.
Xenophanes
In the beginning the gods did not at all reveal all things clearly to mortals, but by searching men in the course of time find them out better.
Xenophanes
All men begin their learning with Homer.
Xenophanes
No human being will ever know the truth, for even if they happen to say it by chance, they would not even know they had done so.
Xenophanes
God is one, greatest of gods and men, not like mortals in body or thought.
Xenophanes