1. The most precious thing in the world is not "cannot get" or "lost", but the happiness that can be grasped now.
2. Those who want to control the world must first be able to control themselves.
3. When many people hesitate on a road, they have to give way to a main road and let those who cherish time rush in front of them.
4. Knowing your own ignorance is the greatest wisdom.
5. Adversity is the highest school for training.
Plato (ancient Greece):
Plato (approximately 427 BC - 347 BC) was the greatest philosopher in ancient Greece, as well as all Western philosophy and even the entire Western culture. One of the greatest philosophers and thinkers. He went to Egypt, Asia Minor and southern Italy to engage in political activities in an attempt to realize his aristocratic political ideals. Plato is the founder of Western objective idealism. His philosophical system is extensive and profound, and has a particularly great influence on his teaching thoughts.
6. The most regretful thing in life is to give up easily what should not be given up, and to stubbornly persist in what should not be persisted.
7. Wise men speak because they have something to say; fools speak because they want to say something.
8. No matter when you start, the important thing is not to stop once you start. No matter when you end it, the important thing is not to regret it after it is over.
9. It is understandable that children are afraid of the dark; the real tragedy in life is that adults are afraid of the light.
10. Turn your face towards the sun and there will be no shadows.
Aristotle (ancient Greece)
Aristotle, an ancient Greek, is one of the great philosophers, scientists and educators in the ancient history of the world. The master of Greek philosophy. He was a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander. Marx once called Aristotle the most knowledgeable figure among ancient Greek philosophers, and Engels called him "the ancient Hegel." An encyclopedic scientist, he made contributions to nearly every discipline. He wrote on ethics, metaphysics, psychology, economics, theology, politics, rhetoric, natural science, education, poetry, customs, and Athenian law.
11. Happiness is placing the soul in the most appropriate position.
12. The ultimate value of life lies in the ability to wake up and think, not just in survival.
13. What we do repeatedly every day makes us who we are, and then you will find that excellence is not an act, but a habit.
14. Indulging one's own desires is the greatest harm; talking about other people's privacy is the greatest sin; not knowing one's own faults is the greatest illness.
15. There are many kinds of fallacies, but there is only one right. This is why it is easy to fail but hard to miss the target and hard to hit the target.
100 quotations from famous people in philosophy, which you must read at least once in your life!
Nietzsche (Germany):
Nietzsche (1844---1900), a German philosopher, his works have profound implications for religion, morality, modern culture, philosophy, and science. There has been extensive criticism and discussion in the field. Nietzsche had a great influence on the development of subsequent generations of philosophy, especially existentialism and postmodernism, which responded to Nietzsche's philosophical thoughts in their own forms. Nietzsche's philosophy was once regarded as an "action philosophy" at the time, a philosophy that claimed to maximize personal requirements and desires. His philosophy is disdainful and critical of everything. This is an important reason why his philosophy is appreciated by postmodernists.
16. Every day without dancing is a failure of life.
17. In fact, people are the same as trees. The more they yearn for the sunshine at high places, the more their roots will stretch into the dark underground.
18. I feel sad, not because you cheated on me, but because I can no longer trust you.
19. Never forget: the higher we fly, the smaller our image becomes in the eyes of those who cannot fly.
20. Whoever will shock the world with his voice will remain silent for a long time; whoever will ignite lightning will drift like a cloud for a long time.
Schopenhauer (Germany)
Arthur Schopenhauer (788-1860), a German philosopher, is usually regarded as a pessimist. He is best known for his book Will and the World of Representation. Schopenhauer subscribed to a pessimistic philosophy that viewed life as unfortunate, meaningless, and full of pain. However, upon closer examination, his philosophy echoes Eastern thought, particularly Hindu and Buddhist. He pinned the salvation of life's pain on the contemplation of beauty, sympathy for people, and the control of desires. His ideas have widely influenced the fields of philosophy, psychology, music and literature.
21. One of the most special weaknesses of human nature is: caring about how others see you.
22. It is impossible to have inner peace without a certain degree of loneliness.
23. The things themselves remain unchanged, only people’s feelings change.
24. No one lives in the past, and no one lives in the future. The present is the only form that life truly possesses.
25. Either vulgar or lonely
Hegel (Germany)
Hegel (1770-1831) was one of the greatest German philosophers. It is the pinnacle of the German classical philosophy movement started by Kant in German philosophy. He is the master of German classical philosophy. Although he often criticized Kant, if there was no Kant's theoretical system, his system would never have been produced. Although Hegel's influence is gradually declining now, it has always been great in the past, and it is not limited to Germany. Its ideological system is the main source of Marx's materialist dialectics. In the late nineteenth century, most of the leading academic philosophers in the United States and Britain were Hegelians.
26. Existence is reasonable.
27. There is a difference between a piece of philosophy spoken in the mouths of young people and that spoken in the mouths of old people. The young man was speaking only of the philosophy itself, although he might have understood it exactly right. The old man not only said this philosophy, but also included his entire life!
28. People often call willfulness freedom, but willfulness is only irrational freedom. Humanity’s choices and self-determination are not based on the rationality of the will, but on accidental motives and the influence of such motives on people. Dependence on the perceptual external world.
29. The only lesson that mankind has learned from history is that mankind has not learned any lessons from history.
30. The real tragedy does not occur between good and evil, but between dilemmas and the collision of two rationalities.