About Bacon's famous sayings are as follows:
1. People who like to show off are despised by wise people, envied by stupid people, and flattered by flatterers. They are also slaves to the words they boast about.
2. Some books can be tasted, some books can be swallowed, and a few books should be chewed and digested; that is to say, some books only need to be read part of them, Some books can be read in full, but they do not need to be read too carefully; there are also a few books that should be read in full, diligently, and attentively.
3. The river of truth flows through its ditch of error; like a sprout, another question arises under a truth, and truth and doubt nourish each other.
4. In the long river of human history, truth is as heavy as gold and always sinks to the bottom of the river and is difficult to be discovered. On the contrary, those falsehoods as light as cow dung float on the river bottom. It's flooded everywhere.
5. Paying too much attention to behavioral rules and formality often leads to missed opportunities in career. 24. If you are able to ask questions when you have doubts, you have gained half of the knowledge.
6. If money is the value measure of commodities, then time is the value measure of efficiency. Therefore, a person who is inefficient will pay a high price for it.
7. The experienced old deacons are reassuring, while the enthusiasm of young people is inspiring. If the experience of old people is valuable, then the innocence of young people is noble.
8. Habit is really a tenacious and huge force. It can dominate a person's life. Therefore, people should cultivate a good habit through education from an early age.
9. Since habits are the masters of life, people should strive to obtain good habits. If a habit starts at an early age, it is the most perfect habit. This is certain. We call this education. Education is actually a habit that starts at an early age.
10. History makes people wise, poetry makes people elegant, mathematics makes people noble, natural philosophy makes people deep, morality makes people steady, and ethics and rhetoric make people good at arguing.