1. Repentance for shameful behavior is life-saving.
From: [Ancient Greece] Democritus: "Fragments of Works"
Introduction: Democritus (Greek: Δημ?κρ?το?, about 460 BC ~ 370 BC), born in the commercial city of Abdera on the coast of Thrace, was a great materialist philosopher in ancient Greece and one of the founders of the doctrine of atomic materialism (the first to propose atomism (all things are composed of atoms)).
2. If I can have a second youth and a second old age, then I can correct my mistakes.
From: [Ancient Greece] Euripides: "The Supplicating Women"
Introduction: Euripides (480 BC - 406 BC) and Aescus Ross and Sophocles are both known as the three great tragedy masters in Greece. He created more than 90 works in his lifetime, and 18 of them have been preserved to this day.
3. Everyone makes mistakes. As long as those who make mistakes do not stick to their mistakes, repent and try to correct them, they will never be mediocre.
From: [Ancient Greece] Sophocles: "Antigone"
Introduction: One of the three great tragedians in Athens, he believed in both God and the inexorability of fate. It is powerful and requires people to have an independent spirit and be responsible for their own actions. This is a characteristic of the ideology of the prosperous period of Athenian democracy.
4. Being aware of the faults of others and forgetting your own mistakes is the unique quality of a fool.
From: [Ancient Rome] Cicero: "Tusculum Conversations"
Introduction: Marcus Tullius Cicero , January 3, 106 BC - December 7, 43 BC), a famous politician, orator, orator, jurist and philosopher in ancient Rome.
5. If you don’t want to make mistakes again, you must put the examples that prompt you to make mistakes far away.
From: [Ancient Rome] Seneca: "Letters to Lucius"
Introduction: Lucius Annaeus Seneca (approximately 4 BC - 65 BC) ), ancient Roman statesman, Stoic philosopher, tragedy writer, orator.