The Philosophers speak.. IZUNWAONU |
The unexamined life is not
worth living” – Socrates
- “Whereof one cannot speak,
thereof one must be silent” – Ludwig
Wittgenstein
- “Entities should not be
multiplied unnecessarily” – William of
Ockham
- “The life of man (in a state of
nature) is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” – Thomas
Hobbes
- “I think therefore I am”
(“Cogito, ergo sum”) – René
Descartes
- “He who thinks great thoughts,
often makes great errors” – Martin
Heidegger
- “We live in the best of all
possible worlds” – Gottfried
Wilhelm Leibniz
- “What is rational is actual and
what is actual is rational” – G. W. F.
Hegel
- “God is dead! He remains dead!
And we have killed him.” – Friedrich
Nietzsche
- “There is but one truly serious
philosophical problem, and that is suicide” – Albert Camus
- “One cannot step twice in the
same river” – Heraclitus
- “The greatest happiness of the
greatest number is the foundation of morals and legislation” – Jeremy
Bentham
- “To be is to be perceived”
(“Esse est percipi”)– Bishop
George Berkeley
- “Happiness is not an ideal of
reason but of imagination” – Immanuel
Kant
- “No man's knowledge here can go
beyond his experience” – John Locke
- “God is not willing to do
everything, and thus take away our free will and that share of glory which
belongs to us” – Niccolo
Machiavelli
- “Liberty consists in doing what
one desires” – John Stuart
Mill
- “It is undesirable to believe a
proposition when there is no ground whatever for supposing it true” – Bertrand
Russell
- “Even while they teach, men
learn” – Seneca the Younger
- “There is only one good,
knowledge, and one evil, ignorance” – Socrates
- “If God did not exist, it would
be necessary to invent Him” – Voltaire
- “This is patently absurd; but
whoever wishes to become a philosopher must learn not to be frightened by
absurdities” – Bertrand
Russell
- “One cannot conceive anything
so strange and so implausible that it has not already been said by one
philosopher or another” – René
Descartes
- “Leisure is the mother of
philosophy” – Thomas
Hobbes
- “Philosophy is a battle against
the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of language” – Ludwig
Wittgenstein
- “There is only one thing a
philosopher can be relied upon to do, and that is to contradict other
philosophers” – William
James
- “We are what we repeatedly do.
Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit” – Aristotle
- “Only one man ever understood
me, and he didn’t understand me” – G. W. F.
Hegel
- “The mind is furnished with
ideas by experience alone” – John Locke
- “Life must be understood
backward. But it must be lived forward ” – Søren
Kierkegaard
- “Science is what you know.
Philosophy is what you don't know” – Bertrand
Russell
- “Metaphysics is a dark ocean
without shores or lighthouse, strewn with many a philosophic wreck” – Immanuel
Kant
- “Philosophy is at once the most
sublime and the most trivial of human pursuits” – William
James
- “History is Philosophy teaching
by examples” – Thucydides
- “He who is unable to live in
society, or who has no need because he is sufficient for himself, must be
either a beast or a god” – Aristotle
- “You can discover more about a
person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation” – Plato
- “Things alter for the worse
spontaneously, if they be not altered for the better designedly” – Francis
Bacon
- “All that is necessary for the
triumph of evil is that good men do nothing” – mistakenly attributed to Edmund
Burke
- “Is man merely a mistake of
God's? Or God merely a mistake of man's?” – Friedrich
Nietzsche
- “I would never die for my
beliefs because I might be wrong” – Bertrand
Russell
- “Religion is the sign of the
oppressed ... it is the opium of the people” – Karl Marx
- “Happiness is the highest good”
– Aristotle
- “If men were born free, they
would, so long as they remained free, form no conception of good and evil”
– Baruch
Spinoza
- “The greater the difficulty,
the more glory in surmounting it” – Epicurus
- “Whatever is reasonable is
true, and whatever is true is reasonable” – G. W. F.
Hegel
- “Morality is not the doctrine
of how we may make ourselves happy, but of how we may make ourselves
worthy of happiness” – Immanuel
Kant
- “Man is condemned to be free” –
Jean-Paul
Sartre
- “It is one thing to show a man
that he is in error, and another to put him in possession of truth” – John Locke
- “I don’t know why we are here,
but I’m pretty sure it is not in order to enjoy ourselves” – Ludwig
Wittgenstein
- “That man is wisest who, like
Socrates, realizes that his wisdom is worthless” – Plato
- “The only thing I know is that
I know nothing” – Socrates
- “All is for the best in the
best of all possible worlds” – Voltaire
(in parody of Leibniz)
- “The function of prayer is not
to influence God, but rather to change the nature of the one who prays” – Søren
Kierkegaard
- “Man is born free, but is
everywhere in chains” – Jean-Jacques
Rousseau
- “Man will never be free until
the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest” – Denis
Diderot
- “If you would be a real seeker
after truth, it is necessary that at least once in your life you doubt, as
far as possible, all things” – René
Descartes
- “Happiness lies in virtuous
activity, and perfect happiness lies in the best activity, which is
contemplative” – Aristotle
- “I can control my passions and
emotions if I can understand their nature” – Spinoza
- “Philosophers have hitherto
only interpreted the world in various ways; the point, however, is to
change it” – Karl Marx
- “It is wrong always, everywhere
and for everyone, to believe anything upon insufficient evidence” – W. K.
Clifford
- “Virtue is nothing else than
right reason” – Seneca the Younger
- “Freedom is secured not by the
fulfilling of one's desires, but by the removal of desire” – Epictetus
- “In everything, there is a
share of everything” – Anaxagoras
- “A little philosophy inclineth
man's mind to atheism; but depth in philosophy bringeth men’s minds about
to religion” – Sir
Francis Bacon
- “The brave man is he who
overcomes not only his enemies but his pleasures” – Democritus
- “Good and evil, reward and
punishment, are the only motives to a rational creature” – John Locke
- “To do as one would be done by,
and to love one's neighbour as oneself, constitute the ideal perfection of
utilitarian morality” – John Stuart
Mill
- “Everything that exists is born
for no reason, carries on living through weakness, and dies by accident” –
Jean-Paul
Sartre
- “Man is the measure of all
things” – Protagoras
- “We are too weak to discover
the truth by reason alone” – St.
Augustine
- “The mind is furnished with
ideas by experience alone” – John Locke
- 'I
think I am what people think I am"- Izunwaonu
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