FROM THE WISDOM OF THE ANCIENT GREEKS

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Alibangbang
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FROM THE WISDOM OF THE ANCIENT GREEKS

Unread post by Alibangbang »

In life @#$! happens . . .

And when it does, what a better way to seek timeless advice on the senses, society, and the soul from The Wisdom of the Ancient Greeks:


On Arrogance

“Whoever thinks that he alone has speech, or possesses speech or mind above others, when unfolded such men are seen to be empty” --- Sophocles, Antigone

On Compassion

“If we always helped one another, no one would need luck” --- Menander

On Deception

"I have learned to hate all traitors, and there is no disease that I spit on more than treachery” --- Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound

On Garrulity

“Misery is the end of those with unbridled mouths” --- Euripides, Bacchants

“Nature has given us one tongue and two ears so that we would listen twice as much as we speak” --- Zeno of Elea

"Always when you are about to say anything, first weigh it in your mind; for with many the tongue outruns the thought. Let there be but two occasions for speech --- when the subject is one which you thoroughly know and when it is one on which you are compelled to speak. On these occasions alone is speech better than silence; on all others, it is better to be silent than to speak” --- Isocrates, letter to Demonicus


On Self-knowledge

“Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom” --- Aristotle

“Getting to know yourself is extremely difficult” ---Thales of Miletus, fragment

"Don’t attempt to heal others when you yourself are full of wounds” --- Euripides

“Generally, we’re all wise when advising others but we fail to see that we also err”. --- Socrates

“You will become a teacher of yourself when for the same things that you blame others, you also blame yourself” --- Diogene of Sinope, fragment

“Don’t try to cover your mistakes with false words. Rather, correct your mistakes with examination” ---Phythagoras, fragment



On Self-Restraint

“I have often repented speaking, but never of holding my tongue” --- Xenocrates, fragment

“Self-control is the chief element in self-respect and self-respect is the chief element in courage”. --- Thucydides, The History of the Peloponnesean War


On Slander

“Guard yourself against accusations, even if they are false; for the multitude are ignorant of the truth and look only to reputation” --- Isocrates, letter to Demonicus

“He who readily accepts slanders as truth has either an evil character or a child’s ability to judge” --- Menander, fragment

“Don’t you know that silence supports the accuser’s charge?” --- Sophocles, The Women of Trachis


On Truth and Lying

“Throughout your life choose truth and your words will be more believable than other people’s oaths”. --- Isocrates, letter to Nicocles

“Plato is dear to me, yet dearer is truth” --- Aristotle

“False words are not only evil in themselves, but they infect the soul with evil” --- Socrates



On Virtue


“All of earth’s gold is not worth virtue” --- Plato

“The most unholy and savage animal is a human being without virtue” --- Aristotle, fragment


On Friendship

“What is a friend? A single soul dwelling in two bodies.” --- Aristotle

“Regard as your most faithful friends, not those who praise everything you say or do, but those who criticize your mistakes” --- Isocrates, speech to Nicocles

Friendship exists only between good men, whereas the bad man never achieves true friendship with either a good or a bad man” --- Socrates, as quoted in Plato’s Lysis


On Gossip

“An evil tongue is sharper than the sharpest sword edge” --- Strabo, fragment

“A wound by a sword is easier to bear than a wound by gossip” --- Pythagoras, fragment


AND

On Revenge

“Bitter people are hard to reconcile, and keep up their anger for a long time, because they suppress their animosity. Relief comes only with retaliation; for revenge provides release from anger by substituting pleasure for pain. In default of this they still labor under the weight of resentment; because owing to its concealment nobody helps to persuade the sufferer out of it, and it takes him time to digest his anger internally. People of this kind cause a great deal of trouble to themselves and their closest friends” --- Aristotle, Ethics

Ahhhh....brilliant Greeks!!! What would the world be without their thoughts and philosophy? Certainly help soothe the soul of the down and trodden.... :-D
"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those that matter... don't mind and those that mind... don't matter." Dr. Suess

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kampanaryo_spy
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Unread post by kampanaryo_spy »

abb,

you can say all those again! :roll
"Most claims of originality are testimony to ignorance and most claims of magic are testimony to hubris." -James March-

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