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A collection of famous quotes from philosophers

1. Time is the greatest friend of truth, prejudice is the greatest enemy of truth, and humility is the eternal companion of truth. (Cha, Li Yundun)

2. People are not cute because they are beautiful, but they are beautiful because they are cute.

3. The beauty of the outside can only please you for a while, but the beauty of the heart can last forever. (Goethe)

4. The greatest boredom is to work hard for boredom. (Shakespeare)

5. There are no bystanders in life. (Goethe)

6. If a smart person does a stupid thing, it will not be a small stupid thing. (Goethe)

7. Understand life and love life. (Romain, Roland)

8. The crown of honor is woven with thorns. (Carlisle)

9. What is the secret to success: hard work, correct methods, and less empty words. (Einstein)

10. Only by facing your own ignorance can you expand your knowledge.

11. I don’t want to have a mind full of things, but rather a mind that is open-minded. (Montaigne)

12. Carve your name on the heart, not on marble. (Edison)

13. The amount of life is calculated by time, and the value of life is calculated by contribution. (Petofi)

14. Get up, lazy fool! Stop wasting your life, there will be enough time for you to sleep in the grave. (Franklin)

15. If a person can no longer live with honor, he should die with honor. (Nietzsche)

16. The best way to deal with evil is to fight evil. (Tagore)

17. Life is short, but reputation is eternal. (Homer)

18. It is better to read ten books on one question than to read one hundred books on one hundred questions. (Brance)

19. Knowledge is the root of the tree, the bud of the flower, the light of life, and the source of progress.

20. Science has no national boundaries, because it is a wealth that belongs to all mankind and a torch that illuminates the world, but scholars belong to the motherland. Hugo

21. The question mark is the key to opening the door to any science. (Balzac)

22. Truth is not created by applause, and right and wrong are not decided by voting. (Carlisle)

23. A person’s value should depend on what he contributes, not what he obtains. (Einstein)

24. A person who is uneducated and full of fantasy has wings but no feet. (Jouber)

25. Discouragement breeds disappointment, disappointment breeds vacillation, and vacillation breeds failure. (Bacon)

26. On the clock of time, there are only two words? Now. (Shakespeare)

27. The length of time depends entirely on the content people assign to it. (Mark)

28. A vain person looks at his own name. (José, Marti)

29. Saving? The wealth of the poor, the wisdom of the rich. (Alexander Dumas)

30. What is your most cherished quality? Simplicity. (Marx)

31. Flattery is worse than a murderous knife. (Augustine)

32. Being silent about the truth is equivalent to shouting for error.

33. The greatest virtue in the world is love for the motherland. (He, Botev)

34. A clear conscience is a gentle pillow. (Andersen)

35. Whoever sows morality will reap honor. (Da Vinci)

36. Human life is short, but if it is lived despicably, this short life will be too long. (Shakespeare)

37. No matter how long the night is, day will always come.

38. Living among wishes without hope is the greatest sorrow in life. (Dante)

39. Time is the most just, giving twenty-four hours to anyone; time is also the most selfish, giving no one twenty-four hours. (Huxley)

40. If you want to enjoy art, you must be an artistically accomplished person. (Marx)

41. Beauty is everywhere. For our eyes, it is not a lack of beauty, but a lack of discovery. (Rodin)

42. Everyone hopes that the truth is on their side, but not everyone hopes that they are on the side of the truth. (Watley)

43. The most valuable knowledge is the knowledge of methods. (Descartes)

44. Diligence comes from lofty goals; diligence comes from firm determination.

45. Faith is the oasis in the heart.

46. The cornerstone, willing and unknown, will always bear the weight, highlighting the majesty and nobility.

47. One-tenth of genius is inspiration, and nine-tenths is blood and sweat. (Edison)

48. The greatest misfortune that people suffer does not lie in the violence of evil people, but in the weakness of outstanding people. (Romain, Roland)

49. Fear of mistakes is to destroy progress.

(Whiteread)

50. Don’t be afraid of losing every battle, but be afraid of being discouraged.

51. There is no other pain more painful than recalling the happy past in suffering. (Dante)

52. The loneliness of human beings lies in this: he was secretly sent to an isolated island while he was sleeping, but when he woke up, he didn’t know where he was! ? Bacon

< p> 53. Everyone is imprisoned in his own consciousness. So when a person is alone, all he can feel is himself! What one person can do to another person is: extremely limited!

54. A person’s reality is Measured by the scope of his consciousness! So if we do not expand our consciousness through experience, practice, introspection, and contemplation of nature, we will live in a rigid and limited world!

< p> 55. When alone, a poor person will only feel all his own pity; while a rich-thinking person will feel his own rich thoughts!

56. Alone The less social the person is, the more likely he is to be an extraordinary person. Because a thoughtful person doesn't care about those snobby people at all. His self is his kingdom, and he is the monarch of this country!

57. Whether a person likes to be alone or is afraid of being alone reflects the clarity of his consciousness!

58. A wise person likes to be with himself! A genius loves to be alone.

59. Because of space, the universe encompasses me and engulfs me. Because of my thoughts, I encompass the universe. ?Pascal

60. As a moment, it is of course short-lived. However, it is decisive and full of eternity. ?Kierkegaard

64. At every moment of existence, people are passive tools in the grasp of necessity. ?Holbach

62. People are born free, but they are always in chains. Thinking you are the master of everything else, you are more of a slave than anything else. ?Rousseau

63. Habit is the greatest guide in life. ?Hume

64. To exist is to be perceived. ?Berkeley

65. Water is the origin of all things, and all things ultimately end in water. ? Thales

66. The thing from which all things arise, to which all things return after their destruction. ?Anaximander

67. Man is the measure of all things, the measure of how existents exist, and the measure of non-beings. ?Protagoras

68 , Recognizing mistakes is the first step to save yourself. ?Epicurus

69. People who cannot control themselves cannot be called free people - Pythagoras

70. People cannot step into the same world twice. A river, because both the river and the man are different. Heraclitus

71. The essence of life lies in movement, and tranquility is death. ?Pascal

72. People have free will, and it is up to them to become an adult or an animal. ?Lucretius

73. The end always justifies the means. ?Machiavelli

74. If we admit failure too readily, we may not realize that we are very close to being right. ?Karl Popper

75. Knowledge is for foresight, and foresight is for power. ?Comte

76. There are no two identical leaves in the world. ?Leibniz

77. Man follows the earth, earth follows the sky, heaven follows the Tao, and Tao follows nature. ?Lao Tzu

78. People who have no faith do not know what they can do. ?Confucius

79. Those who love others will always be loved by others; those who respect others will always be respected by others. ?Mencius

80. Good words to others are warmer than cloth; words that hurt others are deeper than spears and halberds. ? . ?Zhuangzi

82. Those who are not strong in ambition are not wise, and those who do not believe in their words will not achieve results. ?Mozi

83. The only thing I know is that I know nothing. ?Socrates

84. Surprise is the feeling of philosophers, and philosophy begins with surprise. ?Plato

85. Indulging one's 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. ?Aristotle

86. Give me matter, and I will use it to create a universe. ?Kant

87. Others are hell? Sartre

88. Make all irrational things subject to yourself, and freely control all irrational things according to your own inherent laws. , this is the ultimate goal of man. ?Fichte

89. Whatever is realistic is reasonable, and whatever is reasonable is realistic. ?Hegel

90. The peace of all things lies in the balance of order. Order is the arrangement of equal and unequal things in their appropriate positions. ?Augustine

91. Anyone who is alive should live.

?Feuerbach

92. The objective world is just a poem with primitive spirituality and no consciousness? Schelling

93. Ordinary people only care about how to kill time, but those with a little talent people think about how to use their time. ?Schopenhauer

94. We like the respect of others not because of the respect itself, but because of the benefits that people's respect brings to us. ?Helvetius

95. Human life cannot be measured by the length of time. When the heart is full of love, an instant is eternity. ?Nietzsche

96. Truth is the product of time, not the product of authority. ?Bacon

97. I think, therefore I am. ?Descartes

98. The mutual transfer of rights is what people call a contract. ?Hobbes

99. Everything that is certain is denied. ?Spinoza

100. Knowledge ultimately comes from experience. ?Locke

101. There are no objects, only movement. ?Bergson

102. From the beginning, the problem is to bring pure and silent experience into the pure expression of its meaning. ?Husserl

103. Thinking is the thinking of being, ?Thinking is of being, because thinking occurs from being and belongs to being. At the same time, thinking is present, because thinking belongs to being and obeys being. ?Heidegger

104. The most lasting thing to think about is the road. ?Heidegger

105. Others are hell. ?Sartre

106. People are full of achievements, but they still live poetically on the earth. ?Holderlin

107. The world is the sum of facts, not the sum of things. ?Wittgenstein

108. Human consciousness succumbs to the materialized structure. ?Lukács

109. Philosophers just explain the world in different ways, and the problem is to change the world. ?Marx

110. Scientists give us order in thought; morality gives us order in action; art gives us order in the grasp of visible, touchable, and audible appearances. ?Cassir

111. The meaning of an object is determined by the direction in which it is seen by oneself. ?Merleau-Ponty

112. Why use "unmarried men" to define "bachelors". ?Quine

113. Although their properties depend on how we think, they do not depend on what we think they are. ?Peirce

114. I cannot provide myself or others with the ordinary happiness found in daily life. This kind of happiness meant nothing to me, and I couldn't organize my life around it. ?Foucault

115. The scientific language game hopes to make its statement the truth, but it is unable to legitimize the truth it proposes on its own. ? Lyotard

116. As long as any philosophical thought can justify itself, it has some real knowledge. ?Russell

117. In everything, the essential characteristics of beauty and goodness are consistent, because they are based on the same form, so goodness is praised as beauty by us. ?Thomas Aquinas

118. Justice is the primary value of social system, just like truth is the primary value of thought. ? Rawls

119. The hidden essence of the universe itself is not strong enough to resist the courage to seek knowledge. To the intrepid seeker, it can only reveal its secrets and reveal its riches and mysteries to him for his enjoyment. ?Hegel

120. The existence that can be understood is language. ?Gadamer

121. Apart from this article, there is nothing else. ?Derrida

122. Existence is control. ?Jaspers

123. There are two different types of ignorance. Shallow ignorance exists before knowledge, and learned ignorance exists after knowledge. ?Montaigne

124. Whoever owns the legal language will own the relevant resources and interests. ?Bourdieu

125. In this world, there is always a difference between treating people equally and trying to make them equal. The former is a prerequisite for a free society, while the latter means "a new way of slavery" as described by D. Tocqueville.

?Hayek