1. Only by paying equal attention to both gymnastics and music can one become a complete personality. Because gymnastics can exercise the body and music can cultivate the spirit. ——Plato
Plato (Plato, Πλατ?ν, 427 BC - 347 BC) was a great philosopher in ancient Greece and one of the greatest philosophers and thinkers in the entire Western culture. .
Plato, his teacher Socrates, and his student Aristotle are known as the Three Sages of Greece. The concepts he created or developed include: Platonic thought, Platonism, Platonic love, etc. Plato's major works are dialogues, most of which feature Socrates. However, academic circles generally believe that the image of Socrates in it is not entirely the real Socrates in history.
In addition to Homer, Plato was also influenced by many writers and thinkers before him, including Pythagoras's concept of "harmony" and Anaxagoras's conception of the mind. Or reason as the basis for judging the correctness of anything; Parmenides' theory of connecting all things may also have influenced Plato's concept of the soul.
2. Life lies in movement. ——Voltaire
Fran?ois-Marie Arouet (French: Fran?ois-Marie Arouet, November 21, 1694 - May 30, 1778), pen name Voltaire Voltaire (French: Voltaire), a French Enlightenment thinker, writer, and philosopher in the 18th century.
Voltaire was a leading figure in the French bourgeois Enlightenment in the 18th century. He was known as the "King of French Thought", "France's best poet" and "the conscience of Europe". Advocates enlightened monarchy and emphasizes freedom and equality. His representative works include "Philosophical Correspondence", "The Age of Louis XIV", "Candide Man", etc. Died on May 30, 1778, at the age of 83.
3. Life is wonderful and physical exercise is endless fun. ——Pushkin
Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin (Александр Сергеевич Пушкин; 1799~1837) was a famous Russian writer, poet, novelist, and the founder of modern Russian literature in the 19th century. The main representative of Russian romantic literature, the founder of realist literature, and the founder of modern standard Russian. He is known as the "Father of Russian Literature", "The Sun of Russian Poetry" and "The Bronze Horseman". His representative works include "Ode to Freedom" and "The Bronze Horseman". "To Chadayev", "To the Sea", etc.
4. Life lies in contradiction and movement. Once the contradiction is eliminated and movement stops, life will end. ——Goethe
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (August 28, 1749 - March 22, 1832) was born in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Thinker, writer, scientist, he is the most famous representative of Weimar classicism. As a creator of poetry, drama and prose, he is one of the greatest German writers and an outstanding figure in world literature.
He wrote a drama "Getz von Berlichingen" in 1773, which has since become famous in the German literary world. In 1774, he published "The Sorrows of Young Werther", which made him famous. Started service to the Duchy of Weimar in 1776. He completed "Faust" in 1831 and died in Weimar the following year.
5. Too much exercise and too little exercise will damage physical strength in the same way; eating too much and too little will damage health in the same way; only moderation can produce, enhance, and maintain physical strength and health. ——Aristotle
Aristotle (384 BC to 322 BC), an ancient sage, an ancient Greek, and one of the great philosophers, scientists and educators in the ancient history of the world , can be called the master of Greek philosophy. He was a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander.
In 335 BC, he founded a school called Lyceum in Athens, which was called the Peripatetic School.
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. Aristotle's writings formed the first extensive system of Western philosophy, encompassing ethics, aesthetics, logic and science, politics and metaphysics.