The Socrates Express Quotes

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The Socrates Express Quotes
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“Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“The person attuned to beauty will find it in a garbage dump while “the fault-finder will find fault even in paradise.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Set clear goals and channel all your energies into reaching them, the self-help books advise. This approach assumes we’ve identified our destination before beginning our journey. Life doesn’t work that way. Sometimes you don’t know where you’re going until you start moving. So move. Start where you are. Make a single brushstroke and see where it leads.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Happiness is a by-product, never an objective. It’s an unexpected windfall from a life lived well.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Consider the parable of the Chinese farmer. One day, the farmer’s horse ran away. That evening, the neighbors stopped by to offer their sympathies. “So sorry to hear your horse ran away,” they said. “That’s too bad.” “Maybe,” the farmer said. “Maybe not.” The next day the horse returned, bringing seven wild horses with it. “Oh, isn’t that lucky,” said the neighbors. “Now you have eight horses. What a great turn of events.” “Maybe,” said the farmer. “Maybe not.” The next day the farmer’s son was training one of these horses when he was thrown and broke his leg. “Oh dear, that’s too bad,” said the neighbors. “Maybe,” said the farmer. “Maybe not.” The following day, conscription officers came to the village to recruit young men for the army, but they rejected the farmer’s son because he had a broken leg. And all the neighbors said, “Isn’t that great!” “Maybe,” said the farmer. “Maybe not.” We lead telephoto lives in a wide-angle world. We never see the big picture. The only sane response is, like the Chinese farmer, to adopt a philosophy of maybe-ism.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“For Socrates, philosophy and conversation were virtually synonymous.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Respond to adversity, real or imagined, not with self-pity or hand-wringing, but simply by starting over. Viewed this way, life no longer feels like a narrative gone awry, or a botched ending. None of that is real. There are no endings. Only an infinite chain of beginnings.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“No wonder so many philosophers walked. Socrates, of course, liked nothing more than strolling in the agora. Nietzsche regularly embarked on spirited two-hour jaunts in the Swiss Alps, convinced “all truly great thoughts are conceived by walking.” Thomas Hobbes had a walking stick custom made with a portable inkwell attached so he could record his thoughts as he ambled. Thoreau regularly took four-hour treks across the Concord countryside, his capacious pockets overflowing with nuts, seeds, flowers, Indian arrowheads, and other treasures. Immanuel Kant, naturally, maintained a highly regimented walking routine. Every day, he’d eat lunch at 12:45 p.m., then depart for a one-hour constitutional — never more, never less — on the same boulevard in Königsberg, Prussia (now Russia). So unwavering was Kant’s routine that the people of Königsberg set their watches by his perambulations.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“The Porcupine’s Dilemma, as it’s now known, is our dilemma, too. We need others to survive, but others can hurt us. Relationships demand constant course corrections, and even the most skilled navigators get pricked now and then.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Good walkers, all of them. None, though, compares with Rousseau. He’d regularly walk twenty miles in a single day.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Arriving at answers of the heart demands not only patience but a willingness to sit with your ignorance. Staying with the doubt, the mystery, rather than rushing to solve the problem, to check off another item on your endless to-do list.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Bertrand Russell, who lived until the age of ninety-seven, suggests expanding the circle of your interests, making them “wider and more impersonal, until bit by bit the walls of the ego recede, and your life becomes increasingly merged in the universal life.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Like the Japanese, the Stoics know “all things everywhere are perishable.” They see this fact as cause for neither sadness, like many of us, nor celebration, like the Japanese, but merely a fact of life. Rationally there is nothing we can do about it, so best not to worry. Marcus reminds us that all we cherish will one day disappear like leaves on a tree so we must “beware lest delight in them leads you to cherish them so dearly that their loss would destroy your peace of mind.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“He was articulating the Stoic notion of “the View from Above.” Imagine yourself hovering high above the earth, looking down at your puny world: the inconsequential traffic and dirty dishes and petty arguments and lost notebooks. Indifferents, all of them. You are nothing. You are everything.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“No wonder Nietzsche calls Eternal Recurrence “the heaviest burden.” Nothing is weightier than eternity. If everything recurs infinitely, then there are no light moments, no trivial ones. Every moment, no matter how inconsequential, possesses the same weight and mass as others. “All actions are equally great and small.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Don’t pay attention to be more productive, a better worker or parent. Pay attention because it is the morally correct course of action, the right thing to do.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Take heart, says Epicurus. Nature has you covered. She has made the necessary desires easy to obtain and the unnecessary ones difficult”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“It is the absence of anxiety rather than the presence of anything that leads to contentment.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Schopenhauer was an Idealist. In the philosophical sense, an Idealist is not someone with high ideals. It is someone who believes that everything we experience is a mental representation of the world, not the world itself. Physical objects only exist when we perceive them. The world is my idea.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Read the journals. Leslie Wilson’s words lodge in my brain like a bad Top 40 song you can’t shake. Thoreau kept a journal most of his adult life, some two million words spanning fourteen volumes.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Corollary Number Two: The unexamined life may not be worth living, but neither is the overexamined one.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Every institution and social form we have is devoted either to solving problems or providing pleasure,” Needleman says.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Fighting, done properly, is productive. Both sides can arrive not only at a win-win solution but something more: a solution that neither would have found had they not fought in the first place.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“If you do not annoy anyone, you are not a philosopher,” says Peter Kreeft.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Duty comes from inside, obligation from outside. When we act out of a sense of duty, we do so voluntarily to lift ourselves, and others, higher. When we act out of obligation, we do so to shield ourselves, and only ourselves, from repercussions.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“As the British musician Miles Kington said: “Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.” Knowledge knows. Wisdom sees.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Joyful Stoic” is not an oxymoron, says William Irvine, a professor of philosophy at Wright State University and a practicing Stoic. He explains: “Our practice of Stoicism has made us susceptible to little outbursts of joy. We will, out of the blue, feel delighted to be the person we are, living the life we are living, in the universe we happen to inhabit.” I confess: that sounds appealing.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“When you wake in the morning, tell yourself: the people you deal with today will be meddling, ungrateful, arrogant, jealous, and surly.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Sometimes you don’t know where you’re going until you start moving. So move. Start where you are. Make a single brushstroke and see where it leads.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
“Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.” Knowledge knows. Wisdom sees.”
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers
― The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers