TERMS STARTING WITH
Seneca: (4-65 A.D.) A Roman Stoic and instructor of Nero, who ernphasised the distinction between the soul and body and developed the ethical elements of Stoicism. -- R.B.W.
Seneca in his Quaestiones Naturalis (2:41) states that there is a more sublime Council of Divinities, superior even to Jupiter and the twelve dii consentes, whose combined will and intelligence govern even the deliberations of Jupiter and the twelve great consenting gods. See also SATYAS
Seneca {Oberon-V}
senecas ::: n. pl. --> A tribe of Indians who formerly inhabited a part of Western New York. This tribe was the most numerous and most warlike of the Five Nations.
TERMS ANYWHERE
Seneca: (4-65 A.D.) A Roman Stoic and instructor of Nero, who ernphasised the distinction between the soul and body and developed the ethical elements of Stoicism. -- R.B.W.
Seneca in his Quaestiones Naturalis (2:41) states that there is a more sublime Council of Divinities, superior even to Jupiter and the twelve dii consentes, whose combined will and intelligence govern even the deliberations of Jupiter and the twelve great consenting gods. See also SATYAS
Seneca {Oberon-V}
Oberon "language" A {strongly typed} {procedural} programming language and an operating environment evolved from {Modula-2} by {Nicklaus Wirth} in 1988. Oberon adds type extension ({inheritance}), extensible record types, multidimensional open arrays, and {garbage collection}. It eliminates {variant records}, {enumeration types}, {subranges}, lower array indices and {for loops}. A successor called Oberon-2 by H. Moessenboeck features a handful of extensions to Oberon including type-bound procedures ({methods}). Seneca is a variant of Oberon focussing on numerical programming under development by R. Griesemer in April 1993 (to be renamed). See also {Ceres workstation Oberon System}. {(http://oberon.ethz.ch)}. {(http://math.tau.ac.il/~laden/Oberon.html)}. {Free ETH Oberon (ftp://ftp.inf.ethz.ch/pub/Oberon)}. {MS-DOS (ftp://ftp.wustl.edu/mirrors/msdos/pgmutl/)}. {Amiga (ftp://ftp.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/amiga/fish/ff380)}. ["The Programming Language Oberon", N. Wirth, Soft Prac & Exp 18(7):671-690 July 1988]. ["Programming in Oberon: Steps Beyond Pascal and Modula", M. Reiser & N. Wirth, A-W 1992]. ["Project Oberon: the design of an operating system and compiler", N. Wirth & J. Gutknecht, ACM Press 1992]. ["The Oberon Companion: A Guide to Using and Programming Oberon System 3", André Fischer, Hannes Marais, vdf Verlag der Fachhochschulen, Zurich, 1997, ISBN 3-7281-2493-1. Includes CD-ROM for Windows, Linux, Macintosh and PC Native]. (1998-03-14)
Oberon ::: (language) A strongly typed procedural programming language and an operating environment evolved from Modula-2 by Nicklaus Wirth in 1988. Oberon open arrays, and garbage collection. It eliminates variant records, enumeration types, subranges, lower array indices and for loops.A successor called Oberon-2 by H. Moessenboeck features a handful of extensions to Oberon including type-bound procedures (methods).Seneca is a variant of Oberon focussing on numerical programming under development by R. Griesemer in April 1993 (to be renamed).See also Ceres workstation Oberon System. . . .[The Programming Language Oberon, N. Wirth, Soft Prac & Exp 18(7):671-690 July 1988].[Programming in Oberon: Steps Beyond Pascal and Modula, M. Reiser & N. Wirth, A-W 1992].[Project Oberon: the design of an operating system and compiler, N. Wirth & J. Gutknecht, ACM Press 1992].[The Oberon Companion: A Guide to Using and Programming Oberon System 3, Andr� Fischer, Hannes Marais, vdf Verlag der Fachhochschulen, Zurich, 1997, ISBN 3-7281-2493-1. Includes CD-ROM for Windows, Linux, Macintosh and PC Native]. (1998-03-14)
Oberon-V (Formerly Seneca). R. Griesemer, 1990. Descendant of Oberon designed for numerical applications on supercomputers, especially vector or pipelined architectures. Includes array constructors and an ALL statement. "Seneca - A Language for Numerical Applications on Vectorcomputers", Proc CONPAR 90 - VAPP IV Conf. R. Griesemer, Diss Nr. 10277, ETH Zurich.
Oberon-V ::: (Formerly Seneca). R. Griesemer, 1990. Descendant of Oberon designed for numerical applications on supercomputers, especially vector or pipelined Language for Numerical Applications on Vectorcomputers, Proc CONPAR 90 - VAPP IV Conf. R. Griesemer, Diss Nr. 10277, ETH Zurich.
polygala ::: n. --> A genus of bitter herbs or shrubs having eight stamens and a two-celled ovary (as the Seneca snakeroot, the flowering wintergreen, etc.); milkwort.
senecas ::: n. pl. --> A tribe of Indians who formerly inhabited a part of Western New York. This tribe was the most numerous and most warlike of the Five Nations.
senega ::: n. --> Seneca root.
senegin ::: n. --> A substance extracted from the rootstock of the Polygala Senega (Seneca root), and probably identical with polygalic acid.
tribe ::: n. --> A family, race, or series of generations, descending from the same progenitor, and kept distinct, as in the case of the twelve tribes of Israel, descended from the twelve sons of Jacob.
A number of species or genera having certain structural characteristics in common; as, a tribe of plants; a tribe of animals.
A nation of savages or uncivilized people; a body of rude people united under one leader or government; as, the tribes of the Six Nations; the Seneca tribe.
KEYS (10k)
47 Seneca
5 Lucius Annaeus Seneca
1 Seneca: Epistles
1 Seneca: De Providentia
NEW FULL DB (2.4M)
793 Seneca the Younger
630 Seneca
40 Seneca the Elder
7 Ryan Holiday
5 Timothy Ferriss
4 Lucius Annaeus Seneca
2 Suzanne Collins
1:One should count each day a separate life. ~ Seneca, #KEYS
2:If you wished to be loved, love.
~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca,#KEYS
3:It is the power of the mind to be unconquerable." ~ Seneca, #KEYS
4:Love in its essence is spiritual fire. ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca, #KEYS
5:Sometimes even to live is an act of courage ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca, #KEYS
6:If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favourable.
~ Seneca,#KEYS
7:Begin at once to live, and count each separate day as a separate life.
~ Seneca, [T5],#KEYS
8:Thyself vindicate thyself. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
9:No man is crushed by misfortune unless he has first been deceived by prosperity ~ Seneca, #KEYS
10:It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor." ~ Seneca, #KEYS
11:Wisdom is a thing vast and grand. She demands all the time that one can consecrate to her. ~ Seneca, #KEYS
12:Our true glory and true riches are within. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
13:For what is God? He is the soul of the universe. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
14:Let us think that we are born for the common good. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
15:Life is like a play: it's not the length, but the excellence of the acting that matters. ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca, #KEYS
16:For many men, the acquisition of wealth does not end their troubles, it only changes them. ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca, #KEYS
17:Fortune fears the brave soul; she crushes the coward. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
18:All the accidents of life can be turned to our profit. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
19:Would you call Him Destiny? You will not be wrong. Providence? You will say well. Nature? That too you may. ~ Seneca, #KEYS
20:Let us lend ear to the sages who point out to us the way. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
21:He is the happy man whose soul is superior to all happenings. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
22:Hold tight to your own time, hour after hour; you will not depend on the future if you grasp the present in hand. ~ Seneca, #KEYS
23: Deliver thyself from the inconstancy of human things. ~ Seneca: De Providentia, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
24:I call him a man who recognises no possessions save those he finds in himself. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
25:It is extravagance to ask of others what can be procured by oneself. ~ Seneca: Epistles, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
26:A happy life is the fruit of wisdom achieved; life bearable, of wisdom commenced. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
27:How can the soul which misunderstands itself, have a sure idea of other creatures? ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
28:Wisdom is a thing vast and grand. She demands all the time that one can consecrate to her. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
29:Your greatness is within and only in yourselves can you find a spectacle worthy of your regard. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
30:et the soul be submitted within to an upright judge whose authority extends over our most secret actions. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
31:Would you call Him Destiny? You will not be wrong. Providence? You will say well. Nature? That too you may. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
32:Take care that the reading of numerous writers and books of all kinds does not confuse and trouble thy reason. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
33:The perfection of virtue consists in a certain equality of soul and of conduct which should remain un-alterable. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
34:e should follow the law which Nature has engraved in our hearts. Wisdom lies in the perfect observation of her law. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
35:The least indigent mortal is the one who desires the least. We have everything we wish when we wish only for what is sufficient. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
36:Life is not short if it is filled. The way to fill it is to compel the soul to enjoy its own wealth and to become its own master. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
37:All this universe, and in that word are comprised things divine and human, all is only one great body of which we are the members. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
38:Let us attach ourselves to a solid good, to a good that shines within and not externally. Let us devote all our efforts to its discovery. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
39:If man thinks only of himself and seeks everywhere his own profit, he cannot be happy. If thou wouldst really live for thyself, live for others. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
40:If the soul would give itself leisure to take breath and return into itself, it would be easy for it to draw from its own depths the seeds of the true. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
41:Many things are wanting to indigence, but everything is wanting to greed. A covetous man is useful to none and still less is he of any good to himself. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
42:The sage should be figured in the image of a robust athlete whom long exercise has hardened, one who can baffle the efforts of the most obstinate enemy. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
43:he sovereign good has its abode in the soul; when that is upright, attentive to its duties, shut in upon itself, it has nothing to desire, it enjoys a perfect happiness. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
44:The soul will enjoy veritable felicity when, separating itself from the darkness which surrounds it, it is able to contemplate with a sure gaze the divine light at its source. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
45:Let us take care above all not to walk like a flock of sheep each in the other's traces; let us inform ourselves rather of the place where we ought to go than of that where others are going. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
46:Let us have always in our hearts this thought: I am a man and nothing that interests humanity is foreign to me. We have a common birth; our society resembles the stones of a road that sustain each other. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
47:The sage here surpasses God. God fears nothing by the benefit of his nature; the sage fears nothing, but by the sole strength of his spirit. This indeed is great, to have the weakness of a mortal and yet the fearlessness of a god. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
48:There is no peace for the man who is troubled with thought for the future, makes himself unhappy before even unhappiness comes to him and claims to assure till the end of his life his possession of the objects to which he is attached. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
49:Any truth, I maintain, is my own property. And I shall continue to heap quotations from Epicurus upon you, so that all persons who swear by the words of another, and put a value upon the speaker and not upon the thing spoken, may understand that the best ideas are common property. Farewell. ~ Seneca, #KEYS
50:Nothing is so dangerous as the habit we have of referring to a common opinion. So long as one trusts other people without taking the trouble to judge for oneself, one lives by the faith of others, error is passed on from hand to hand and example destroys us. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
51:Nature has given us strengths in sufficiency, if only we choose to avail ourselves of them and if we collect and employ them all to our profit instead of turning them against ourselves. Our ill will is the cause of what we attri bute to a pretended impossibility. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
52:Who is worthy of the name of Man and of Roman who does not want to be tested and does not look for a dangerous task? For the strong man inaction is torture. There is only one sight able to command the attention even of a god, and it is that of a strong man battling with bad luck, especially if he has himself challenged it. ~ Seneca, #KEYS
53:We shall labour to our last sigh, we shall never cease from contri buting to the common good, serving every individual, helping even our enemies, exercising our talents and our industry. We know not an age destined to repose and, like the heroes of whom Virgil tells, our hair grows white under the helmet. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
54:The duty of man is to be useful to men: to a great number if he can, if not, to a small number, otherwise to his neighbours, otherwise to himself : in making himself useful to himself, he works for others. As the vicious man injures not only himself but also those to whom he might have been useful if he had been virtuous, likewise in labouring for oneself one labours also for others, since there is formed a man who can be of use to them. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom #KEYS
*** WISDOM TROVE ***
1:Seneca devoted much of his time to writing essays in praise of poverty, and in lending money at usurious rates. ~ josh-billings, @wisdomtrove 2:Make your own Bible. Select and collect all the words and sentences that in all your reading have been to you like the blast of triumph out of Shakespeare, Seneca, Moses, John and Paul. ~ ralph-waldo-emerson, @wisdomtrove *** NEWFULLDB 2.4M ***
1:Men learn as they teach. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
2:O tempo revela a verdade. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
3:Paucis natura contenta est ~ Seneca, #NFDB
4:Thyself vindicate thyself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
5:Time flies on fickle wings ~ Seneca, #NFDB
6:Timendi causa est nescire. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
7:fallaces sunt rerum species ~ Seneca, #NFDB
8:Life is short, art is long. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
9:Omnes feriunt, ultima necat ~ Seneca, #NFDB
10:Beyond all things is the sea ~ Seneca, #NFDB
11:If you are wise, ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
12:longa est vita si plena est. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
13:Omnes feriunt, ultima necat. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
14:Injustice never rules forever ~ Seneca, #NFDB
15:Nothing is ours, except time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
16:Res severa est verum gaudium. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
17:vita nec bonum nec malum est. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
18:If you wish to be loved, love. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
19:No man was ever wise by chance ~ Seneca, #NFDB
20:One day is equal to every day. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
21:Time heals what reason cannot. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
22:Ignorance is the cause of fear. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
23:Když lidé vyučují, sami se učí. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
24:La vera gioia è una cosa seria. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
25:Love of bustle is not industry. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
26:Maximum remedium est irae mora. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
27:Non scholae sed vitae discimus. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
28:Non vitae, sed scholae discimus. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
29:To be everywhere; is to nowhere. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
30:Ungoverned anger begets madness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
31:Praise thyself never. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
32:Time discovers truth. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
33:to be everywhere is to be nowhere ~ Seneca, #NFDB
34:Truth never perishes. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
35:You are your choices. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
36:All cruelty springs from weakness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
37:Everything may happen. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
38:Imperare sibi maximum imperium est ~ Seneca, #NFDB
39:Learn how to feel joy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
40:The best ideas are common property ~ Seneca, #NFDB
41:The sun also shines on the wicked. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
42:To be everywhere is to be nowhere. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
43:To be everywhere; is to be nowhere ~ Seneca, #NFDB
44:Ignorance is no cure for suffering. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
45:Man is a social animal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
46:Qui mori didicit servire dedidicit. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
47:To be everywhere; is to be nowhere. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
48:While we wait for life, life passes ~ Seneca, #NFDB
49:Find a path or make one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
50:He who is brave is free. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
51:Homo sit naturaliter animal socialis ~ Seneca, #NFDB
52:Quam bene vivas refert, non quam diu ~ Seneca, #NFDB
53:Sva surovost proizilazi iz slabosti. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
54:Tanrı'ya yakın olmak sarsılmamaktır. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
55:A great mind becomes a great fortune. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
56:Every journey has an end. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
57:If you gain from a crime, you did it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
58:Non est ad astra mollis e terris via. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
59:Nothing is our except time. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
60:One must steer, not talk. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
61:reading of many books is distraction. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
62:The miserable are sacred. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
63:We pardon familiar vices. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
64:While we teach, we learn. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
65:If you judge, investigate. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
66:Love in its essence is spiritual fire. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
67:Mad men work for their own destruction ~ Seneca, #NFDB
68:Man is a reasoning Animal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
69:One hand washes the other. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
70:Only time can heal what reason cannot. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
71:True love can fear no one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
72:Ducunt volentem fata, nolentem trahunt. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
73:Kingdoms which act unjustly never last. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
74:Learning how to live takes a whole life ~ Seneca, #NFDB
75:Life is long if it is full. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
76:Life is long if you know how to use it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
77:Luck never made a man wise. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
78:Men learn while they teach. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
79:Mercy often inflicts death. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
80:mors quid est? aut finis aut transitus. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
81:Revenge is an inhuman word. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
82:Whatever begins, also ends. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
83:What is true belongs to me! ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
84:While we are postponing, life speeds by ~ Seneca, #NFDB
85:While you teach, you learn. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
86:Excellence withers without an adversary. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
87:If you want to be loved, love. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
88:Life is long, if you know how to use it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
89:Nothing is ours except time. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
90:Real joy, believe me, is a stern matter. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
91:To the believers it is true. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
92:We learn not in the school, but in life. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
93:What else is nature but God? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
94:While we are postponing, life speeds by. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
95:After death there is nothing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
96:As the world leads we follow. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
97:Restless people often pretend to be calm. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
98:Teach the art of living well. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
99:Truth often harms the one who digs it up. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
100:Unblest is he who thinks himself unblest. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
101:Who scorns his own life is lord of yours. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
102:Chi è dappertutto, non è da nessuna parte. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
103:Golden roofs break men's rest. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
104:He who spares the wicked injures the good. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
105:He worships God who knows him. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
106:If you wish to be loved, love. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
107:Injustice never rules forever. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
108:Life is short and art is long. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
109:Nobody becomes guilty by fate. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
110:No man was ever wise by chance” “Associate ~ Seneca, #NFDB
111:Our true glory and true riches are within. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
112:To be everywhere, is to be no where at all ~ Seneca, #NFDB
113:Withdraw into yourself, as far as you can. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
114:A man’s past is forever set in stone. There ~ Seneca, #NFDB
115:An unpopular rule is never long maintained. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
116:Bohatství chytrému slouží, hloupému vládne. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
117:Cui prodest scelus, is fecit ...
(Medea) ~ Seneca,#NFDB
118:Fire tests gold, suffering tests brave men. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
119:Full of men, vacant of friends. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
120:If you would judge, understand. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
121:Ignorance is the cause of fear. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
122:Love of action is not industry. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
123:Nemo tam divos habuit faventes, ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
124:No man was ever wise by chance. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
125:No one can have all he desires. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
126:No one can keep a mask on long. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
127:philosophy teaches us to act, not to speak; ~ Seneca, #NFDB
128:Self-denial is the best riches. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
129:That which is enough is ready to our hands. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
130:The greatest wealth is a poverty of desires ~ Seneca, #NFDB
131:The one who knows no hope knows no despair. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
132:The present alone can make no man wretched. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
133:There's thunder even on the loftiest peaks. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
134:While we are postponing,
life speeds by. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
135:A good mind possesses a kingdom. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
136:All art is an imitation of nature. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
137:Be harsh with yourself at times. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
138:Drunkenness is nothing but voluntary madness ~ Seneca, #NFDB
139:He who is everywhere is nowhere. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
140:Home joys are blessed of heaven. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
141:Men practice war; beasts do not. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
142:Necessity is stronger than duty. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
143:Non impariamo per la scuola, ma per la vita. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
144:Simple is the language of truth. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
145:Sometimes even to live is an act of courage. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
146:Speech is the index of the mind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
147:The sun also shines on the wicked. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
148:What fortune has made yours is not your own. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
149:Where fear is, happiness is not. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
150:As many servants so many enemies. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
151:Calamity is virtue's opportunity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
152:Forgive that you may be forgiven. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
153:If you want to keep a secret, never share it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
154:I would rather be sick than idle. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
155:Life is long, if only you knew how to use it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
156:Men's language is as their lives. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
157:Sometimes, even to live is an act of courage. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
158:Speech is the mirror of the mind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
159:The best cure for anger is delay. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
160:the more a mind takes in the more it expands. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
161:Unblest is he who thinks himself unblest.[15] ~ Seneca, #NFDB
162:Who has more leisure than a worm? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
163:Wisdom comes to no one by chance. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
164:All cruelty springs from weakness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
165:Expediency often silences justice. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
166:Fear drives the wretched to prayer ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
167:Fire tests gold and adversity tests the brave. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
168:He who needs riches least, enjoys riches most. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
169:I will storm the gods, and shake the universe. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
170:Money has yet to make anyone rich. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
171:No man ever became wise by chance. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
172:The boon that could be given can be withdrawn. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
173:The Germans, a race eager for war. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
174:There is no genius without a touch of madness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
175:The sun shines even on the wicked. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
176:To be everywhere is to be nowhere. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
177:to obey God cheerfully, but Fortune defiantly; ~ Seneca, #NFDB
178:To the stars through difficulties. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
179:To wish to be well is a part of becoming well. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
180:Unjust dominion cannot be eternal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
181:Unjust rule does not last forever. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
182:We always feel anger longer than we feel hurt. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
183:A good mind is a lord of a kingdom. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
184:A great fortune is a great slavery. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
185:All art is but imitation of nature. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
186:As long as you live, keep learning how to live. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
187:Everything hangs on one's thinking. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
188:Fine conduct is always spontaneous. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
189:In every good man a God doth dwell. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
190:No time is too short for criminals to do wrong. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
191:Nullus accusator caret culpa; omnes peccaviums. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
192:So long as you live, keep learning how to live. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
193:The best ideas are common property. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
194:vices have to be crushed rather than picked at. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
195:What Chance has made yours is not really yours. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
196:While we wait for life, life passes ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
197:You talk one way, you live another. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
198:As was his language so was his life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
199:For greed, all nature is too little. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
200:For what is God? He is the soul of the universe. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
201:... frugality makes a poor man rich. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
202:It is quality rather than quantity that matters. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
203:It is the power of the mind to be unconquerable. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
204:Kings hate to hear the things they order spoken. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
205:Life is slavery if the courage to die is absent. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
206:Love of bustle is not industry. —SENECA ~ Timothy Ferriss, #NFDB
207:No evil is without its compensation. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
208:Nothing is more honorable than a grateful heart. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
209:Persevera ut coepisti, et quantum potes propera. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
210:Successful villany is called virtue. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
211:That which takes effect by chance is not an art. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
212:The mind when distracted absorbs nothing deeply. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
213:The voice is nothing but beaten air. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
214:To govern was to serve, not to rule. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
215:Abstinence is easier than temperance. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
216:A great mind becomes a great fortune. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
217:Do what you should, not what you may. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
218:Fidelity purchased with money, money can destroy. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
219:He lives badly who does not know how to die well. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
220:He who begs timidly courts a refusal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
221:Money has never yet made anyone rich. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
222:Most powerful is he who has himself in his power. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
223:No one can wear a mask for very long. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
224:One hand washes the other.
(Manus Manum Lavat) ~ Seneca,#NFDB
225:Philosophy is the health of the mind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
226:See what daily exercise does for one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
227:The abundance of books is distraction ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
228:The difficulty comes from our lack of confidence. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
229:There is no easy way from the earth to the stars. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
230:Whatever can happen at any time can happen today. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
231:Whatever years be behind us are in death's hands. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
232:What once were vices are manners now. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
233:Who timidly requests invites refusal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
234:You learn to know a pilot in a storm. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
235:All cruelty springs from weakness.” -Seneca ~ Clarissa Wild, #NFDB
236:Consider an enemy may become a friend. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
237:He who is penitent is almost innocent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
238:He who needs riches least, enjoys riches most."[8] ~ Seneca, #NFDB
239:He will live ill who does not know how to die well ~ Seneca, #NFDB
240:If you wished to be loved, love.
~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca,#NFDB
241:I was shipwrecked before I got aboard. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
242:Lack of desire is the greatest riches. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
243:Let us think that we are born for the common good. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
244:Love sometimes injures. Friendship always benefits ~ Seneca, #NFDB
245:Modesty forbids what the law does not. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
246:No crime has been without a precedent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
247:The expression of truth is simplicity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
248:The fortune of war is always doubtful. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
249:Time is the greatest remedy for anger. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
250:To rule yourself is the ultimate power ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
251:Whom they have injured they also hate. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
252:As long as you live, learn how to live. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
253:Do everything as in the eye of another. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
254:Every guilty person is his own hangman. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
255:Fire is the test of gold; adversity, of strong men. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
256:Fire proves gold, adversity proves men. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
257:For what can be above the man who is above fortune? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
258:Greed's worst point is its ingratitude. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
259:In war there is no prize for runner-up. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
260:is natural to touch more often the part that hurts. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
261:It is opportunity that makes the thief. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
262:Know thyself; this is the great object. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
263:Let us be brave in the face of adversity. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
264:Life is long if you know how to use it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
265:Life without literary studies is death. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
266:Malice drinks one-half of its own poison. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
267:No man’s good by accident. Virtue has to be learnt. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
268:Non qui parum habet, sed qui plus cupit pauper est. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
269:Poverty needs much, avarice everything. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
270:The great soul surrenders itself to fate. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
271:The most happy ought to wish for death. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
272:To meditate an injury is to commit one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
273:We suffer more often in imagination than in reality ~ Seneca, #NFDB
274:You roll my log, and I will roll yours. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
275:A man's as miserable as he thinks he is. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
276:Associate with people who are likely to improve you. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
277:A thousand approaches lie open to death. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
278:Courage leads starward, fear toward death. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
279:Crime when it succeeds is called virtue. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
280:Death takes us piecemeal, not at a gulp. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
281:Don't stumble over something behind you. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
282:Every change of place becomes a delight. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
283:Fire tries gold, misery tries brave men. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
284:He is most powerful who governs himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
285:He who has made a fair compact with poverty is rich. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
286:Light griefs are loquacious, but the great are dumb. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
287:longing for the future and weariness of the present. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
288:Lo, to-day is the last; if not, it is near the last. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
289:Real improvement is of slow growth only. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
290:This life is only a prelude to eternity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
291:True love hates and will not bear delay. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
292:Virtue is nothing else than right reason ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
293:We learn not in the school, but in life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
294:we suffer more often in imagination than in reality. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
295:While we are postponing, life speeds by. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
296:A hated government does not long survive. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
297:Apples taste sweetest when they're going. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
298:Chance makes a plaything of a man's life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
299:Crime oft recoils upon the author's head. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
300:Drunkenness is simply voluntary insanity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
301:Every new beginning comes from other beginning’s end. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
302:Everyone prefers belief to the exercise of judgement. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
303:Fate leads the willing and drags along the reluctant. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
304:For manliness gains much strength by being challenged ~ Seneca, #NFDB
305:Fortune attacks us as often as we attack Fortune. It ~ Seneca, #NFDB
306:Fortune fears the brave soul; she crushes the coward. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
307:Gold tests with fire, woman with gold, man with woman ~ Seneca, #NFDB
308:His head was turned by too great success. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
309:it is better to conquer our grief than to deceive it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
310:It's easier to get philosophers to agree than clocks. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
311:long association brings love of evil as well as good. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
312:Most powerful is he who has himself in his own power. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
313:No man has escaped paying the penalty for being born. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
314:No one becomes a laughingstock who laughs at himself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
315:No untroubled day has ever dawned for me. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
316:One crime has to be concealed by another. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
317:People do not die - they kill themselves. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
318:Read good books many times,
rather than many books ~ Seneca,#NFDB
319:Sometimes even to live is an act of courage.” Anger ~ Seneca, #NFDB
320:The fear of war is worse than war itself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
321:There is no great genius without tincture of madness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
322:Unblest is he who thinks himself unblest. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
323:While crime is punished it yet increases. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
324:A family formed by crime must be broken by more crime. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
325:All the accidents of life can be turned to our profit. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
326:A man is as unhappy as he has convinced himself he is. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
327:A troubled countenance oft discloses much. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
328:Elegance is not an ornament worthy of man. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
329:Everything in art is but a copy of nature. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
330:He sins not, who is not wilfully a sinner. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
331:La soledad no es estar solo, la soledad es estar vacío ~ Seneca, #NFDB
332:Nature does not reveal her mysteries once and for all. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
333:No one is laughable who laughs at himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
334:Of war men ask the outcome, not the cause. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
335:O how many noble deeds of women are lost in obscurity! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
336:Otium sine litteris mors est et hominis vivi sepultura ~ Seneca, #NFDB
337:Our fears vanish as the danger approaches. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
338:Resistance to oppression is second nature. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
339:Small sorrows speak great ones are silent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
340:There is no evil without its compensation. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
341:The way to good conduct is never too late. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
342:Those alone are wise who know how to love. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
343:Vice may be learnt, even without a teacher ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
344:we cease to be so angry once we cease to be so hopeful ~ Seneca, #NFDB
345:Whatever is well said by another, is mine. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
346:An unpopular rule is never long maintained. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
347:Crime requires further crime to conceal it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
348:Every reign must submit to a greater reign. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
349:Fire tests gold, suffering tests brave men. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
350:For Fate/ The willing leads, the unwilling drags along. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
351:How late it is to begin living only when one must stop! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
352:It is part of the cure to wish to be cured. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
353:It is pleasant at times to play the madman. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
354:Let the weary at length possess quiet rest. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
355:Life without the courage to die is slavery. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
356:Misfortune is the test of a person's merit. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
357:No man is free who is a slave to the flesh. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
358:One cannot sincerely weep over getting what one wanted. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
359:That grief is light which can take counsel. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
360:That which Fortune has not given, she cannot take away. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
361:There is no great genius without a tincture of madness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
362:There is no great genius without some touch of madness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
363:The shortest route to wealth is the contempt of wealth. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
364:The whole future lies in uncertainty: live immediately. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
365:The worse a person is the less he feels it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
366:To what lengths would so precocious an ambition not go? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
367:To win true freeedom you must be a slave to philosophy. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
368:Wealth is the slave of a wise man. The master of a fool ~ Seneca, #NFDB
369:When things are at their worst,
there are no tears. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
370:A person's fears are lighter when the danger is at hand. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
371:Beware of doing that again – and this time I pardon you. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
372:Death's the discharge of our debt of sorrow. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
373:Disease is not of the body but of the place. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
374:Divine seeds are scattered throughout our mortal bodies; ~ Seneca, #NFDB
375:Familiarity reduces the greatness of things. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
376:God is near you, is with you, is inside you. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
377:He who asks with timidity invites a refusal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
378:Indolence is stagnation; employment is life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
379:It is not manly to turn one's back on fortune. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
380:Laugh at your problems; everybody else does. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
381:Light is that grief which counsel can allay. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
382:Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
383:Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
384:Many things have fallen only to rise higher. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
385:Nature ever provides for her own exigencies. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
386:Our plans miscarry because they have no aim. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
387:Regard [a friend] as loyal, and you will make him loyal. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
388:The arts are the servant; wisdom its master. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
389:The ascent from earth to heaven is not easy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
390:the fates lead those who will those who won't they drag. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
391:The greatest wealth is a poverty of desires. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
392:The language of truth is unvarnished enough. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
393:the preoccupied become aware of it only when it is over. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
394:Those griefs burn most which gall in secret. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
395:To know how many are jealous of you, count your admirers ~ Seneca, #NFDB
396:To live is not a blessing, but to live well. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
397:We do not need many words, but, rather, effective words. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
398:Courage leads to heaven; fear leads to death. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
399:Democracy is more cruel than wars or tyrants. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
400:Difficulties strengthen the mind, as labor does the body. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
401:Dignity increases more easily than it begins. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
402:Drunkenness is nothing but voluntary madness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
403:Errare humanum est, sed in errore perseverare diabolicum. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
404:He has committed the crime who profits by it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
405:He who has great power should use it lightly. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
406:If virtue precede us every step will be safe. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
407:It is not death we fear, but the thought of it. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
408:It is rash to condemn where you are ignorant. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
409:It takes you more time to solve a problem than to set it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
410:Let us lend ear to the sages who point out to us the way. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
411:Nullum ad nocendum tempus angustum est malis. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
412:The fearful face usually betrays great guilt. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
413:We have not to talk, but to steer the vessel. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
414:What was hard to suffer is sweet to remember. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
415:When in fear, it is safest to force the attack. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
416:Even after a bad harvest there must be sowing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
417:Every new beginning comes from some other beginning's end. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
418:Every pleasure is most valued when it is coming to an end. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
419:Every pleasure is most valued when it is coming to an end? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
420:Fortune can take away riches, but not courage. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
421:Gold is tried by fire, brave men by adversity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
422:I am telling you to be a slow-speaking person. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
423:I don't trust liberals, I trust conservatives. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
424:It is a rough road that leads to the heights of greatness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
425:It is the sign of a weak mind to be unable to bear wealth. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
426:It is well to be born either a king or a fool. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
427:J'ai tant désiré le jour et voici qu'il me brûle les yeux! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
428:Leisure without books is death, and burial of a man alive. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
429:Life is most delightful on the downward slope. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
430:Life without the courage for death is slavery. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
431:Luck is preparation multiplied by opportunity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
432:„Odmítáme ty co nás milují, a milujeme ty co nás odmítají. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
433:Persistent kindness conquers the ill-disposed. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
434:Shame may restrain what law does not prohibit. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
435:Sovereignty over any foreign land is insecure. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
436:Success consecrates the most offensive crimes. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
437:That comes too late that comes for the asking. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
438:The mind that is anxious about future events is miserable. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
439:There is no power greater than true affection. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
440:Tis a human trait to hate one you have wronged ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
441:Tota vita nihil aliud quam ad mortem iter est. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
442:To wish to be well is a part of becoming well. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
443:We must make it our aim already to have lived long enough. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
444:We suffer more in imagination than in reality. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
445:What you think is the summit is only a step up ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
446:A great destiny, Seneca reminds us, is great slavery. ~ Ryan Holiday, #NFDB
447:An age builds up cities: an hour destroys them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
448:Economy is in itself a great source of revenue. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
449:For he alone is in kinship with God who has scorned wealth. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
450:He who boasts of his descent, praises the deeds of another. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
451:He who forbids not sin when he may, commands it ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
452:It is not goodness to be better than the worst. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
453:Loyalty is the holiest good in the human heart. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
454:...nothing happens to the wise man against his expectation. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
455:Servitude seizes on few, but many seize on her. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
456:Sine philosophia nemo intrepide potest vivere, nemo secure. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
457:Sometimes even to live is an act of courage ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca, #NFDB
458:the mind is never right but when it is at peace with itself ~ Seneca, #NFDB
459:The mind is slow to unlearn what it learnt early. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
460:The part of life which we really live is short. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
461:The profit on a good action is to have done it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
462:There exists no more difficult art than living. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
463:There is nothing the wise man does reluctantly. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
464:There's no delight in owning anything unshared. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
465:The world itself is too small for the covetous. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
466:To forgive all is as inhuman as to forgive none ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
467:Wealth is the slave of the wise man and master of the fool. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
468:We are taught for the schoolroom, not for life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
469:Where reason fails, time oft has worked a cure. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
470:A dwarf can stand on a mountain, he's no taller. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
471:Courage is a scorner of things which inspire fear. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
472:Death is a release from and an end of all pains. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
473:Fidelity bought with money is overcome by money. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
474:He who fears from near at hand often fears less. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
475:I do not sacrifice, but lend myself to business. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
476:If I only have the will to be grateful, I am so. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
477:It is quality rather than quantity that matters. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
478:It is the power of the mind to be unconquerable. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
479:Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
480:No possession is gratifying without a companion. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
481:Nothing is more honorable than a grateful heart. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
482:Nothing satisfies greed, but even a little satisfies nature. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
483:Oh, what darkness does great prosperity cast over our minds! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
484:Our words should aim not to please, but to help. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
485:O, what blindness does great prosperity cast upon our minds! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
486:That which takes effect by chance is not an art. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
487:There is no genius without a mixture of madness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
488:To make a commencement requires a mental effort. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
489:Voyage, travel, and change of place impart vigor ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
490:We learn not for life but for the debating-room. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
491:What were once vices are the fashion of the day. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
492:Whenever the speech is corrupted so is the mind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
493:A coward calls himself cautious, a miser thrifty. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
494:As long as we are among humans, let us be humane. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
495:A thing seriously pursued affords true enjoyment. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
496:Fidelity purchased with money, money can destroy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
497:He is the happy man whose soul is superior to all happenings. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
498:It is the superfluous things for which men sweat. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
499:Let ease and rest at times be given to the weary. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
500:Make haste to live, and consider each day a life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
501:Quaedam iura non scripta, sed omnibus scriptis certiora sunt. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
502:The more violent the storm the sooner it is over. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
503:There is no easy way from the earth to the stars. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
504:To err is human. To repeat error is of the Devil. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
505:To keep oneself safe does not mean to bury oneself. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
506:What you do for an ungrateful man is thrown away. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
507:A young man respects and looks up to his teachers. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
508:Brother, the Great Spirit has made us all. . . . . ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
509:Do not ask for what you will wish you had not got. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
510:for that love is greater which wins less through equal danger. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
511:He who dreads hostility too much is unfit to rule. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
512:I am ashamed of my master and not of my servitude. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
513:...it is more civilized to make fun of life than to bewail it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
514:It is not what you endure that matters, but how you endure it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
515:La solitudine è per lo spirito ciò che il cibo è per il corpo. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
516:Leave in concealment what has long been concealed. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
517:Light troubles speak; the weighty are struck dumb. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
518:Living is the least important activity of the preoccupied man; ~ Seneca, #NFDB
519:Modesty once extinguished knows not how to return. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
520:Prosperity asks for fidelity; adversity exacts it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
521:Some cures are worse than the dangers they combat. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
522:The anger of those in authority is always weighty. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
523:The man who can be compelled knows not how to die. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
524:The rust of the mind is the destruction of genius. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
525:The wretched hasten to hear of their own miseries. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
526:The young man must store up, the old man must use. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
527:A foolishness is inflicted with a hatred of itself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
528:All fools suffer the burden of dissatisfaction with themselves. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
529:Ask nature: she will tell you that she made both day and night. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
530:A sword never kills anybody; it is a tool in the killer's hand. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
531:A well-governed appetite is a great part of liberty ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
532:…because it is natural to touch more often the parts that hurt. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
533:But it is a pretty thing to see what money will do! ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
534:Elämä avautuu suurena sille, joka osaa järjestää sen viisaasti. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
535:Everyone goes out of life just as if he had but lately entered. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
536:Friendship always benefits; love sometimes injures. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
537:He who repents of having sinned is almost innocent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
538:He will live ill who does not know how to die well. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
539:It is sometimes pleasant even to act like a madman. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
540:Light cares cry out; the great ones still are dumb. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
541:nimic nu e mai odios înţelepciunii decât o subtilitate excesivă ~ Seneca, #NFDB
542:No emotion falls into dislike so readily as sorrow. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
543:No matter how many men you kill, you can't kill your successor. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
544:Nothing costs so much as what is bought by prayers. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
545:No wind blows in favor of a ship without direction. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
546:The fates lead the willing, and drag the unwilling. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
547:The friends of the unfortunate live a long way off. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
548:the grief that has been conquered by reason is calmed for ever. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
549:The way to wickedness is always through wickedness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
550:Timendi causa est nescire -
Ignorance is the cause of fear. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
551:Whom the dawn sees proud, evening sees prostrate. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
552:All things are cause for either laughter or weeping. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
553:As often as I have been amongst men, I have returned less a man. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
554:Associate with people who are likely to improve you. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
555:Drunkenness is nothing else but a voluntary madness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
556:Failure changes for the better, success for the worse. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
557:Great grief does not of itself put an end to itself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
558:He who has made a fair compact with poverty is rich. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
559:I am not born for one corner; the whole world is my native land. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
560:If a man knows not to which port he sails, no wind is favorable. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
561:Leisure without study is death; it is a tomb for the living man. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
562:Life, if thou knowest how to use it, is long enough. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
563:Light griefs are plaintive , but great ones are dumb ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
564:Men love their vices and hate them at the same time. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
565:Nature does not bestow virtue; to be good is an art. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
566:No man will swim ashore and take his baggage with him. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
567:Nothing hinders a cure so much as frequent changes of treatment. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
568:Nothing is so bitter that a calm mind cannot find comfort in it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
569:Our fears are always more numerous than our dangers. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
570:Poor woman, do you want to know where hatred ends? Look to love. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
571:Seneca: “Fate guides the willing but drags the unwilling. ~ Eric Greitens, #NFDB
572:Shall I tell you what philosophy holds out to humanity? Counsel. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
573:The approach of liberty makes even an old man brave. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
574:The foundation of the true joy is in the conscience. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
575:The happy life is a life that is in harmony with its own nature. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
576:The hour which gives us life begins to take it away. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
577:The wish for healing has always been half of health. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
578:Things that were hard to bear are sweet to remember. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
579:Time discovers truth. Time heals what reason cannot. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
580:Virtue with some is nothing but successful temerity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
581:You can end love more easily than you can moderate it. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
582:All those who call you to themselves draw you away from yourself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
583:Every man prefers belief to the exercise of judgment. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
584:For the wise man regards wealth as a slave, the fool as a master. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
585:Fortune may rob us of our wealth, not of our courage. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
586:Fortune reveres the brave, and overwhelms the cowardly. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
587:God never repents of what He has first resolved upon. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
588:He who fears death will never do anything worthy of a living man. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
589:I don’t mind citing a bad author if the line is good. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
590:It is easier to grow in dignity than to make a start. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
591:Leisure without literature is death and burial alive. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
592:Most powerful is he who has himself in his own power. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
593:Night brings our troubles to the light rather than banishes them. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
594:The day which we fear as our last is but the birthday of eternity ~ Seneca, #NFDB
595:The deferring of anger is the best antidote to anger. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
596:The mind, unless it is pure and holy, cannot see God. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
597:The most onerous slavery is to be a slave to oneself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
598:there has never been a great mind without some degree of madness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
599:There is no genius free from some tincture of madness ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
600:The whole discord of this world consists in discords. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
601:Those whom true love has held, it will go on holding. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
602:Virtue is according to nature; vice is opposed to it and hostile. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
603:We cease to be so angry once we cease to be so hopeful.” “Nothing ~ Seneca, #NFDB
604:We do not receive a life that is short, but rather we make it so. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
605:Whatever we give to the wretched, we lend to fortune. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
606:When modesty has once perished, it will never revive. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
607:Who can hope for nothing, should despair for nothing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
608:A man is as unhappy as he has convinced himself he is. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
609:Even in the longest life real living is the least portion thereof. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
610:Everyone goes out of life just as if he had but lately entered it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
611:Fate leads the willing, and drags along the reluctant. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
612:It is a proof of nobility of mind to despise injuries. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
613:It is for the superfluous things of life that men sweat. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
614:Light griefs do speak, while sorrow's tongue is bound. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
615:No good thing is pleasant to possess, without friends to share it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
616:No good thing is pleasant without friends to share it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
617:¿Qué mayor necedad que alabar en el hombre lo que no le pertenece? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
618:That which achieves its effect by accident is not art. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
619:The day which we fear is out last is buth the birthday of eternity ~ Seneca, #NFDB
620:You have all the fears of mortals and all the desires of immortals ~ Seneca, #NFDB
621:Enjoy present pleasures in such a way as not to injure future ones. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
622:Extreme remedies are never the first to be resorted to. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
623:fate has decreed that nothing maintains the same condition forever. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
624:Good sides to adversity are best admired at a distance. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
625:Haste trips up its own heels, fetters and stops itself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
626:He praised his own achievements, not without cause but without end. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
627:He suffers more than necessary, who suffers before it is necessary. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
628:He that does good to another does good also to himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
629:I shall expose and reopen all the wounds which have already healed. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
630:It is of course better to know useless things than to know nothing. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
631:It is sweet to draw the world down with you when you are perishing. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
632:Live for thy neighbor if thou wouldst live for thyself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
633:Nothing is more hateful to wisdom than to much cunning. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
634:Philosophy did not find Plato already a nobleman ; it made him one. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
635:Remove severe restraint and what will become of virtue? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
636:That which Fortune has not given, she cannot take away. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
637:The greater part of progress is the desire to progress. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
638:The great pilot can sail even when his canvass is rent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
639:We never reflect how pleasant it is to ask for nothing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
640:When I think over what I have said, I envy dumb people. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
641:Where silence is not allowed, what then is permissible? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
642:You can put up with a change of place if only the place is changed. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
643:You have all the fears of mortals and all the desires of immortals. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
644:All outdoors may be bedlam, provided there is no disturbance within. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
645:A person's fears are lighter when the danger is at hand. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
646:He is not guilty who is not guilty of his own free will. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
647:How many are quite unworthy to see the light, and yet the day dawns. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
648:In the ashes all men are levelled. We're born unequal, we die equal. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
649:I shall never be ashamed of citing a bad author if the line is good. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
650:I shall never be ashamed to go to a bad author for a good quotation. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
651:Life’s finest day for wretched mortals here Is always first to flee. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
652:Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
653:No he nacido para un sólo rincón; mi patria es todo el mundo visible ~ Seneca, #NFDB
654:Nothing deters a good man from doing what is honourable. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
655:Nothing is so contemptible as the sentiments of the mob. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
656:Pleasure dies at the very moment when it charms us most. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
657:Pobre não é aquele que tem pouco, mas antes aquele que muito deseja. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
658:Poverty wants some, luxury many, and avarice all things. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
659:Prudence will punish to prevent crime, not to avenge it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
660:Speak, and live, in this way; see to it that nothing keeps you down. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
661:The foremost art of Kings is the power to endure hatred. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
662:The largest part of goodness is the will to become good. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
663:The willing, Destiny guides them. The unwilling, Destiny drags them. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
664:Wealth is the slave of a wise man. The master of a fool. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
665:What is required is not a lot words, but effectual ones. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
666:Wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for crisis. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
667:Whoever has nothing to hope, let him despair of nothing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
668:Am I not to inquire into the identity of the artist of this universe? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
669:Authority founded on injustice is never of long duration. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
670:Difficulties strengthen the mind, as labor does the body. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
671:Eyes will not see when the heart wishes them to be blind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
672:Genius always gives its best at first; prudence, at last. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
673:He who suffers before it is necessary suffers more than is necessary. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
674:My joy in learning is partly that it enables me to teach. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
675:No es que dispongamos de poco tiempo, es más bien que perdemos mucho. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
676:No man is despised by another unless he is first despised by himself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
677:Non è vero che abbiamo poco tempo, la verità è che ne perdiamo molto. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
678:Non è vero che abbiamo poco tempo: la verità è che ne perdiamo molto. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
679:No one should feel pride in anything that is not his own. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
680:Not he who has little, but he whose wishes more, is poor. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
681:philosophy of Marcus Aurelius and some of the work of Seneca. ~ Robin S Sharma, #NFDB
682:Slavery takes hold of few, but many take hold of slavery. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
683:The bounty of nature is too little for the greedy person. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
684:There is no satisfaction in any good without a companion. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
685:To expect punishment is to suffer it; and to earn it is to expect it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
686:You cannot escape necessities, but you can overcome them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
687:You fear everything as mortals but desire to have everything as gods. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
688:A benefit is estimated according to the mind of the giver. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
689:Begin at once to live, and count each separate day as a separate life. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
690:Brave men rejoice in adversity, just as brave soldiers triumph in war. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
691:Constant exposure to dangers will breed contempt for them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
692:Delay not; swift the flight of fortune's greatest favours. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
693:El verdadero héroe en una obra literaria es el lector que la aguanta". ~ Seneca, #NFDB
694:Every new beginning comes from some other beginning's end. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
695:Fate rules the affairs of men, with no recognizable order. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
696:He who boasts of his descent, praises the deed of another. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
697:It is a rough road that leads to the heights of greatness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
698:It is often better not to see an insult than to avenge it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
699:It is the sign of a weak mind to be unable to bear wealth. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
700:Leisure without books is death, and burial of a man alive.” “Desultory ~ Seneca, #NFDB
701:Let us train our minds to desire what the situation demands. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
702:Often a very old man has no other proof of his long life than his age. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
703:[P]leasures, when they go beyond a certain limit, are but punishments. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
704:Pomozi onome koji nosi teret a ne onome
koji ga spušta pored tebe. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
705:Retirement without the love of letters is a living burial. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
706:The day which we fear as our last
is but the birthday of eternity. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
707:The mind that is anxious about future events is miserable. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
708:There is no favorable wind for the sailor who doesn’t know where to go ~ Seneca, #NFDB
709:There is no grace in a benefit that sticks to the fingers. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
710:There is nothing after death, and death itself is nothing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
711:We live not according to reason, but according to fashion. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
712:You need a change of soul rather than a change of climate. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
713:A crowd of fellow-sufferers is a miserable kind of comfort. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
714:All that remains of our existence is not actually life but merely time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
715:All things that are still to come lie in uncertainty; live straightway! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
716:. Deliver thyself from the inconstancy of human things. ~ Seneca: De Providentia, #NFDB
717:Auditur et altera pars. (The other side shall be heard as well.) ~ Seneca, #NFDB
718:If we let things terrify us, life will not be worth living. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
719:If you wish to fear nothing, consider that all things are to be feared. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
720:It is proof of a bad cause when it is applauded by the mob. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
721:It's a vice to trust all, and equally a vice to trust none. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
722:Saiba que um teto de palha abriga o homem
tão bem quanto o de ouro. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
723:Speech devoted to truth should be straightforward and plain ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
724:The courts of kings are full of people, but empty of friends. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
725:The guilt of enforced crimes lies on those who impose them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
726:The mind unlearns with difficulty what it has long learned. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
727:There is more heroism in self-denial than in deeds of arms. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
728:The shortest road to wealth lies in the contempt of wealth. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
729:We gain so much by quickness, and lose so much by slowness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
730:We have been born under a monarchy; to obey God is freedom. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
731:When one is friend on himself, also is friend of everybody. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
732:You must live for another if you wish to live for yourself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
733:A great step toward independence is a good-humoured stomach. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
734:All that lies betwixt the cradle and the grave is uncertain. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
735:A trifling debt makes a man your debtor; a large one makes him an enemy. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
736:Drunkenness is nothing but a self-induced state of insanity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
737:He who does not prevent a crime, when he can, encourages it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
738:How much better it is that you defeat anger than that it defeats itself! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
739:I am loath to call clemency what was, rather, the exhaustion of cruelty. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
740:I had rather never receive a kindness than never bestow one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
741:It is better to have useless knowledge than to know nothing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
742:It is equally a fault to believe all men or to believe none. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
743:Let me therefore live as if every moment were to be my last. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
744:No man can have a peaceful life who thinks too much about lengthening it ~ Seneca, #NFDB
745:Not how long, but how well you have lived is the main thing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
746:Poverty brought into conformity with the law of nature, is great wealth. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
747:The path of increase is slow, but the road to ruin is rapid. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
748:The point is, not how long you live, but how nobly you live. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
749:Time hath often cured the wound which reason failed to heal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
750:Tis not the belly's hunger that costs so much, but its pride ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
751:To make another person hold his tongue, be you first silent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
752:who as though inspired with divine utterance sings salutary verses: Life ~ Seneca, #NFDB
753:Adversity finds at last the man whom she has often passed by. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
754:A happy life is one which is in accordance with its own nature. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
755:A lesson that is never learned can never be too often taught. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
756:A man afraid of death will never play the part of a live man. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
757:And as long as nothing satisfies you, you yourself cannot satisfy others. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
758:An old man at school is a contemptible and ridiculous object. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
759:Begin at once to live, and count each day as a separate life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
760:Economy is too late when you are at the bottom of your purse. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
761:Fortune dreads the brave, and is only terrible to the coward. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
762:Hardly a man will you find who could live with his door open. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
763:He may as well not thank at all, who thanks when none are by. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
764:linger among a limited number of master thinkers, and digest their works, ~ Seneca, #NFDB
765:Obedience is yielded more readily to one who commands gently. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
766:The first step towards amendment is the recognition of error. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
767:the wise man regards the reason for all his actions, but not the results. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
768:To be enslaved to oneself is the heaviest of all servitudes.- ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
769:Wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for crisis.” “We ~ Seneca, #NFDB
770:Who needs forgiveness, should the same extend with readiness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
771:Za najmilszy rodzaj łaski uważał niewiedzę o tym, co każdy uczynił złego. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
772:Add each day something to fortify you against poverty and death. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
773:After friendship is formed you must trust, but before that you must judge. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
774:Harmony makes small things grow; lack of harmony makes great things decay. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
775:Hence the dictum of the greatest of doctors:† ‘Life is short, art is long. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
776:He who indulges empty fears earns himself real fears,” wrote Seneca, ~ Ryan Holiday, #NFDB
777:He who tenders doubtful safety to those in trouble refuses it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
778:How great would be our peril if our slaves began to number us! ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
779:If an evil has been pondered beforehand, the blow is gentle when it comes. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
780:If God adds another day to our life, let us receive it gladly. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
781:It is not that we have a short time to live but that we waste a lot of it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
782:It is uncertain where Death will await you;
there expect it everywhere. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
783:Leisure without study is death, and the grave of a living man. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
784:No man will ever be happy if tortured by the greater happiness of another. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
785:...nothing is so entirely admirable as a man bravely wretched. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
786:That loss is most discreditable which is caused by negligence. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
787:The man who thinks only of his own generation is born for few. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
788:The mind is never right but when it is at peace within itself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
789:The poor are not the people with less, which is less desirable ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
790:There is nothing more miserable and foolish than anticipation. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
791:Those who are busy with other things do not notice it until the end comes. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
792:Throw aside all hindrances and give up your time to attaining a sound mind ~ Seneca, #NFDB
793:Trifling trouble find utterance; deeply felt pangs are silent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
794:Truths open to everyone, and the claims aren't all staked yet. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
795:What-so-ever the mind has ordained for itself, it has achieved ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
796:When you see a man in distress, recognize him as a fellow man. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
797:You will die not because you're ill, but because you're alive. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
798:A friend always loves, but he who loves is not always a friend. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
799:He deserves praise who does not what he may, but what he ought. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
800:He, who will not pardon others, must not himself expect pardon. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
801:He who would do great things should not attempt them all alone. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
802:It is never too late to learn what is always necessary to know. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
803:It is our conscience, not our pride, that has put doorkeepers at our doors. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
804:Power exercised with violence has seldom been of long duration. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
805:Take my word for it: since the day you were born you are being led thither. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
806:The entire world would perish, if pity were not to limit anger. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
807:The person you are matters more than the place to which you go. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
808:There is but one chain holding us in fetters, and that is our love of life. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
809:The worst thing about getting old is evil men cease to fear you ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
810:What progress, you ask, have I made? I have begun to be a friend to myself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
811:Above all, my dear Lucilius, make this your business: learn how to feel joy. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
812:Auditur et altera pars. (The other side shall be heard as well.) ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
813:Drunkenness does not create vice; it merely brings it into view. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
814:Genius has never been accepted without a measure of condonement. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
815:If a man knows not to which port he sails, no wind is favorable. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
816:If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favourable.
~ Seneca,#NFDB
817:I think Seneca is right: life feels longer the more you engage with it. ~ Zadie Smith, #NFDB
818:It is a great thing to know the season for speech and the season for silence ~ Seneca, #NFDB
819:It is a youthful failing to be unable to control one's impulses. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
820:It should be our care not so much to live a long life as a satisfactory one. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
821:It's not that we have little time, but more that we waste a good deal of it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
822:Levity of behavior is the bane of all that is good and virtuous. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
823:Nihil tam acerbum est in quo non æquus animus solatium inveniat. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
824:Nothing is so bitter that a calm mind cannot find comfort in it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
825:One can expect an agreement between philosophers sooner than between clocks. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
826:Our (the Stoic) motto, as you know, is live according to nature. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
827:¿Preguntas cúal es el fundamento de la sabiduría? No gozarte en cosas vanas. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
828:Religion worships God, while superstition profanes that worship. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
829:Straightforwardness and simplicity are in keeping with goodness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
830:The great thing is to know when to speak and when to keep quiet. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
831:The man who fears death will never do anything worthy of a man who is alive. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
832:There is no fair wind for one who knows not whither he is bound. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
833:The thing that matters is not what you bear, but how you bear it ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
834:Wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for a kindness.” “A ~ Seneca, #NFDB
835:distringit librorum multitudo
(the abundance of books is distraction) ~ Seneca,#NFDB
836:Drunkenness doesn't create vices, but it brings them to the fore. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
837:He is a king who fears nothing, he is a king who desires nothing! ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
838:How much does great prosperity overspread the mind with darkness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
839:I am not born from a single place. My country is the whole world. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
840:I do not regard a man as poor, if the little which remains is enough for him. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
841:I feel, my dear Lucilius, that I am being not only reformed, but transformed. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
842:If you will fear nothing, think that all things are to be feared. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
843:I was not born for one corner. The whole world is my native land. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
844:Men love their country, not because it is great, but because it is their own. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
845:Nature has given us the seeds of knowledge, not knowledge itself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
846:Never to wrong others takes one a long way towards peace of mind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
847:Our posterity will wonder about our ignorance of things so plain. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
848:Reason shows us there is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
849:Shun no toil to make yourself remarkable by some talent or other. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
850:The first step in a person's salvation is knowledge of their sin. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
851:The path of precept is long, that of example short and effectual. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
852:The physician cannot prescribe by letter, he must feel the pulse. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
853:There has never been any great genius without a spice of madness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
854:They who have light in themselves will not revolve as satellites. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
855:Time is the one thing that is given to everyone in equal measure. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
856:Death is the wish of some, the relief of many, and the end of all. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
857:El verdadero héroe en una obra literaria es el lector que la aguanta". Séneca. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
858:I call him a man who recognises no possessions save those he finds in himself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
859:I shall never be ashamed of citing a bad author if the line is good. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
860:It is extravagance to ask of others what can be procured by oneself. ~ Seneca: Epistles, #NFDB
861:La mayor rémora de la vida es la espera del mañana y la pérdida del día de hoy ~ Seneca, #NFDB
862:Let us say what we feel, and feel what we say; let speech harmonize with life. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
863:Life's neither a good nor an evil: it's a field for good and evil. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
864:Night brings our troubles to the light, rather than banishes them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
865:No book can be so good, as to be profitable when negligently read. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
866:No one can hold absolute power for long, controlled power endures. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
867:No one's so old that he mayn't with decency hope for one more day. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
868:Our care should not be to have lived long as to have lived enough. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
869:Philosophy is good advice; and no one can give advice at the top of his lungs. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
870:Remember, not one penny can we take with us into the unknown land. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
871:Silently time sneaks up on you, each hour
gone is followed by a worse one. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
872:The articulate, trained voice is more distracting than mere noise. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
873:The day which we fear as our last is but the birthday of eternity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
874:The mind makes the nobleman, and uplifts the lowly to high degree. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
875:They lose the day in waiting for the night, and the night in fearing the dawn. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
876:Those who boast of their descent, brag on what they owe to others. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
877:Amintirea plăcerilor este mai de durată și mai de încredere decât prezența lor. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
878:Anger is like those ruins which smash themselves on what they fall. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
879:As Seneca says, “Light griefs are loquacious, but the great are dumb. ~ Mary Ann Shaffer, #NFDB
880:Begin at once to live, and count each separate day as a separate life.
~ Seneca, [T5],#NFDB
881:Enjoy present pleasures in such a way as not to injure future ones. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
882:If we could be satisfied with anything, we should have been satisfied long ago. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
883:If you wish another to keep your secret, first keep it to yourself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
884:it is while Fortune is kind that it should fortify itself against her violence. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
885:It's not years nor days, but the mind, that determines that we've lived enough. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
886:Let us bear with magnanimity whatever it is needful for us to bear. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
887:Life is a play.It's not its length,but its performance that counts. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
888:No man is crushed by misfortune unless he has first been deceived by prosperity ~ Seneca, #NFDB
889:Nothing is void of God, his work is everywhere his full of himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
890:Other men's sins are before our eyes; our own are behind our backs. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
891:Quanto potius, deorum opera celebrare quam Philippi aut Alexandri latrocinia... ~ Seneca, #NFDB
892:The mind does not easily unlearn what it has been long in learning. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
893:The road by precepts is tedious, by example, short and efficacious. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
894:The soul has this proof of divinity: that divine things delight it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
895:We most often go astray on a well trodden and much frequented road. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
896:What need is there to weep over parts of life? The whole of it calls for tears. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
897:And there’s no state of slavery more disgraceful than one which is self-imposed. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
898:«Come un racconto, così è la vita: non importa che sia lunga, ma che sia buona». ~ Seneca, #NFDB
899:Go on and increase in valor, O boy! this is the path to immortality. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
900:If you are surprised at the number of our maladies, count our cooks. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
901:If you wish to fear nothing, consider that everything is to be feared. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
902:In a moment the ashes are made, but a forest is a long time growing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
903:It is medicine, not scenery, for which a sick man must go searching. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
904:It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
905:No man is crushed by misfortune unless he has first been deceived by prosperity ~ Seneca, #NFDB
906:No work is of such merit as to instruct from a mere cursory perusal. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
907:Seneca put it, life does not pause to remind you that it is running out. ~ Sarah Bakewell, #NFDB
908:The Fates guide those who go willingly. Those who do not, they drag. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
909:The problem, Paulinus, is not that we have a short life, but that we waste time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
910:Theseus: What is the crime for which you must pay by death?
Phaedra: My life. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
911:The willing, destiny guides them; the unwilling, destiny drags them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
912:This body is not a home, but an inn; and that only for a short time. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
913:wealth however limited, if it is entrusted to a good guardian, increases by use, ~ Seneca, #NFDB
914:We think that death comes after, whereas in fact it comes both before and after. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
915:Whatsoever has exceeded its proper limit is in an unstable position. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
916:Your greatest difficulty is with yourself; for you are your own stumbling-block. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
917:A happy life is the fruit of wisdom achieved; life bearable, of wisdom commenced. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
918:Death is a punishment to some, to others a gift and to many a favour. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
919:El único bien, causa y soporte de la vida feliz, consiste en confiar en sí mismo. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
920:I am not born for any one corner of the universe; this whole world is my country. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
921:It is more fitting for a man to laugh at life than to lament over it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
922:It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
923:It is the fault of youth that it cannot restrain its own impetuosity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
924:Know this, that he that is a friend to himself, is a friend to all men. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
925:Let no man give advice to others that he has not first given himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
926:LETTERA 5 INVITO ALLA SEMPLICITA'
Nessuno è infelice solo per il presente. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
927:One who seeks friendship for favourable occasions, strips it of all its nobility. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
928:Our fears are always more numerous than our dangers.”—Seneca the Younger ~ Timothy Ferriss, #NFDB
929:Success gives the character of honesty to some classes of wickedness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
930:That which has been endured with difficulty is remedied with delight. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
931:The heart is great which shows moderation in the midst of prosperity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
932:There is an old adage about gladiators, - that they plan their fight in the ring. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
933:The tempest threatens before it comes; houses creak before they fall. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
934:The vices of idleness are only to be shaken off by active employment. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
935:They lose the day in expectation of the night, and the night in fear of the dawn. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
936:Those that are a friend to themselves are sure to be a friend to all. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
937:We Stoics are not subjects of a despot: each of us lays claim to his own freedom. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
938:When a man does not know what harbor he is making for, no wind is the right wind. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
939:As is a tale, so is life: not how long it is, but how good it is, is what matters. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
940:Bonis nocet, qui malis parcit.
He harms the good (people) who spares the evil. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
941:by overloading the body with food you strangle the soul and render it less active. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
942:For love of bustle is not industry, —it is only the restlessness of a hunted mind. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
943:Great men rejoice in adversity, just as brave soldiers triumph in war. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
944:How can the soul which misunderstands itself, have a sure idea of other creatures? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
945:If you don't know what port you are sailing to, no wind is favourable. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
946:Ninguém valoriza o tempo, faz-se uso dele muito largamente como se fosse gratuito. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
947:No man can be sane who searches for what will injure him in place of what is best. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
948:That is never too often repeated, which is never sufficiently learned. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
949:The bravest sight in the world is to see a great man struggling against adversity. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
950:The greatest power of ruling consists in the exercise of self-control. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
951:The wise man lives as long as he should, not just as long as he likes. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
952:They are pleased to deceive themselves, as if they deceived Fate at the same time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
953:Away with the world's opinion of you-it's always unsettled and divided. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
954:Bear in mind that you commit a crime by injuring even a wicked brother. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
955:For if we could be satisfied with anything, we should have been satisfied long ago. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
956:Greed is satisfied by nothing, but nature finds satisfaction even in scant measure. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
957:Il maggiore ostacolo al vivere è l’attesa, che dipende dal domani e consuma l’oggi. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
958:I shall never be ashamed to quote a bad author if what he says is good. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
959:It is the failing of youth not to be able to restrain its own violence. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
960:Nessun vento è favorevole per il marinaio che non sa a quale porto vuole approdare. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
961:No condition is so distressing that a balanced mind cannot find some comfort in it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
962:Slavery holds few men fast; the greater number hold fast their slavery. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
963:So live with an inferior as you would wish a superior to live with you. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
964:The Best sign of Wisdom is the consistency between the words and deeds. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
965:We are sure to get the better of fortune if we do but grapple with her. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
966:Accustom yourself to that which you bear ill, and you will bear it well. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
967:Anyone who likes may make things easier for himself by viewing them with equanimity. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
968:For men cease to possess all things the moment they desire all things for their own. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
969:He who boasts of his pedigree praises that which does not belong to him. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
970:He who seeks wisdom is a wise man; he who thinks he has found it is mad. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
971:If you would not have a man flinch when the crisis comes, train him before it comes. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
972:It is not the man who has little, but he who desires more, that is poor. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
973:It is not the man who has to little who is poor, but the one who hankers after more. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
974:There is no such thing as good or bad fortune for the individual; we live in common. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
975:We are born under circumstances that would be favourable if we did not abandon them. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
976:Wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for a kindness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
977:You act like mortals in all that you fear, and like immortals in all that you desire ~ Seneca, #NFDB
978:A large part of mankind is angry not with the sins, but with the sinners. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
979:He who looks for advantage out of friendship strips it all of its nobility. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
980:How can a thing possibly govern others when it cannot be governed itself? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
981:Humanity is fortunate, because no man is unhappy except by his own fault. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
982:If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favourable. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
983:It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor. What ~ Seneca, #NFDB
984:It is not the man who has too little who is poor, but the one who hankers after more. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
985:Kalau anda ingin orang lain merahasiakan rahasia anda, simpanlah sendiri rahasia itu. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
986:No choice maxims - we Stoics don't practice that kind of window dressing. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
987:No one can have a peaceful life who thinks too much about lengthening it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
988:Of this one thing make sure against your dying day—let your faults die before you die ~ Seneca, #NFDB
989:Seneca, the Roman philosopher. Sometimes, even to live is an act of courage. ~ Janet Evanovich, #NFDB
990:So live with men as if God saw you and speak to God, as if men heard you. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
991:The first and greatest punishment of the sinner is the conscience of sin. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
992:The kind of solace that arises from having company in misery is spiteful. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
993:True happiness is...to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
994:What narrow innocence it is for one to be good only according to the law. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
995:What really ruins our character is the fact that none of us looks back over his life. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
996:You act like mortals in all that you fear, and like immortals in all that you desire. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
997:A good character is the only guarantee of everlasting, carefree happiness. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
998:Be wary of the man who urges an action in which he himself incurs no risk. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
999:If you would escape your troubles, you need not another place but another personality. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1000:It does not matter how many books you have, but how good the books are which you have. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1001:it is better to understand the balance-sheet of one’s own life than of the corn trade. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1002:It is indeed foolish to be unhappy now because you may be unhappy at some future time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1003:It is not the man who has too little that is poor, but the one who hankers after more. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1004:Its harder for people to seek retirement from themselves than from the law ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1005:It's not that we have a short time to live, but that we waste a lot of it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1006:Lay hold of today's task, and you will not depend so much upon tomorrow's. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1007:Life’s like a play. It’s not the length but the excellence of the acting that matters. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1008:No man can live a happy life, or even a supportable life, without the study of wisdom. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1009:No one can be despised by another until he has learned to despise himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1010:Not to feel one's misfortunes is not human, not to bear them is not manly. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1011:Retirement without literary amusements is death itself, and a living tomb. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1012:See how many are better off than you are, but consider how many are worse. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1013:Take away ambition and vanity, and where will be your heroes and patriots? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1014:The road to learning by precept is long, but by example short and effective. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1015:The worst evil of all is to leave the ranks of the living before one dies. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1016:Whatever one of us blames in another, each one will find in his own heart. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1017:You should keep on learning as long as there is something you do not know. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1018:Death is sometimes a punishment, often a gift; to many it has been a favor. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1019:Es ist nicht wenig Zeit, die wir haben, sondern es ist viel Zeit, die wir nicht nutzen. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1020:It is a great thing to know the season for speech and the season for silence. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1021:It is extreme evil to depart from the company of the living before you die. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1022:Philosophy's power to blunt all the blows of circumstance is beyond belief. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1023:Prudence and love cannot be mixed; you can end love, but never moderate it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1024:Sorrowers tend to avoid what they are most fond of and try to give vent to their grief. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1025:The acquisition of riches has been for many men, not an end, but a change, of troubles. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1026:The fool, with all his other faults, has this also, he is always getting ready to live. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1027:The real compensation of a right action is inherent in having performed it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1028:There is nothing wrong with changing a plan when the situation has changed. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1029:True praise comes often even to the lowly; false praise only to the strong. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1030:Whenever you hold a fellow creature in distress, remember that he is a man. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1031:A gift consists not in what is done or given, but in the intention of the giver or doer. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1032:And first of all, we should have no cravings like theirs; for rivalry results in strife. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1033:A sword by itself does not slay; it is merely the weapon used by the slayer. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1034:Everything that exceeds the bounds of moderation has an unstable foundation. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1035:For that is the people’s verdict, but wise men on the whole reject the people’s decrees. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1036:He who blushes at riding in a rattletrap, will boast when he rides in style. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1037:If you wish to have leisure for your mind, either be a poor man, or resemble a poor man. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1038:In every good person, there lives a god. Which god? We cannot be sure - but it is a god. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1039:I require myself not to be equal to the best, but to be better then the bad. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1040:It is the characteristic of a weak and diseased mind to fear the unfamiliar. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1041:It should be our care not so much to live a long life as a satisfactory one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1042:Let him who has given a favor be silent; let he who has received it tell it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1043:Life is like a play: it's not the length, but the excellence of the acting that matters. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1044:No one loves his country for its size or eminence, but because it's his own. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1045:Of this one thing make sure against your dying day - that your faults die before you do. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1046:So enjoy the pleasures of the hour as not to spoil those that are to follow. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1047:to make Pythocles rich, do not add to his store of money, but subtract from his desires. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1048:Whatever has overstepped its due bounds is always in a state of instability. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1049:When once ambition has passed its natural limits, its progress is boundless. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1050:You can tell the character of every man when you see how he receives praise. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1051:A guilty person sometimes has the luck to escape detection, but never to feel sure of it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1052:And what is more wretched than a man who forgets his benefits and clings to his injuries? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1053:A wise man never asks what another man serves, for only his actions will speak the truth. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1054:But the man who is not puffed up in good times does not collapse either when they change. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1055:For many men, the acquisition of wealth does not end their troubles, it only changes them ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1056:He, who holds out but a doubtful hope of succour to the afflicted, denies it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1057:He who receives a benefit with gratitude, repays the first installment of it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1058:I do not know any person with whom I should prefer you to associate rather than yourself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1059:I hold that one is braver at the very moment of death than when one is approaching death. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1060:It is impossible to imagine anything which better becomes a ruler than mercy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1061:It is wrong to live under constraint; but no man is constrained to live under constraint. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1062:Lay hold of today's task, and you will not need to depend so much upon to-morrow's. While ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1063:Men love their country, not because it is great, but because it is their own. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1064:Non est ad astra mollis e terris via" - "There is no easy way from the earth to the stars ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1065:No one is the object of another man's contempt, unless he is first the object of his own. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1066:Not single is the death which comes; the death Which takes us off is but the last of all. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1067:The best ideas are common property. ~ Seneca the Younger, "On Old Age", Moral Letters to Lucilius., #NFDB
1068:The gladiator is formulating his plan in the arena or essentially Too late. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1069:The greatest man is he who chooses right with the most invincible resolution. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1070:The greatest obstacle to living is expectancy, which hangs upon tomorrow and loses today. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1071:Vice is contagious, and there is no trusting the sound and the sick together. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1072:We are wrong in looking forward to death: in great measure it's past already. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1073:Whatever fortune has raised to a height, she has raised only to cast it down. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1074:When arrogant hands once seize power, the ruler thinks authority resides in stubbornness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1075:You can only acquire it successfully if you cease to feel any sense of shame. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1076:You can tell the character of every man when you see how he receives praise.” Difficult ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1077:You must lay aside the burdens of the mind; until you do this, no place will satisfy you. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1078:Associate with people who are likely to improve you. —SENECA, Letters from a Stoic ~ Gretchen Rubin, #NFDB
1079:Be deaf to those who love you most of all; they pray for bad things with good intentions. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1080:He robs present ills of their power who has perceived their coming beforehand. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1081:Just as with storytelling, so with life: it's important how well it is done, not how long. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1082:Let us say what we feel, and feel what we say; let speech harmonize with life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1083:Look at the stars lighting up the sky: no one of them stays in the same place. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1084:No man finds it difficult to return to nature, except the man who has deserted nature. We ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1085:So called pleasures, when they go beyond a certain limit, are but punishments. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1086:Something that can never be learnt too thoroughly can never be said too often. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1087:That day, which you fear as being the end of all things, is the birthday of your eternity. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1088:The best compromise between love and good sense is both to feel longing and to conquer it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1089:The chief bond of the soldier is his oath of allegiance and love for the flag. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1090:The way is long if one follows precepts, but short... if one follows patterns. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1091:What a vile and abject thing is man if he do not raise himself above humanity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1092:What then is good? The knowledge of things. What is evil? The lack of knowledge of things. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1093:When you die, it will not be because you are sick, but because you were alive. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1094:Wisdom is a thing vast and grand. She demands all the time that one can consecrate to her. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1095:A favor is to a grateful man delightful always; to an ungrateful man only once. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1096:Call it Nature, Fate, Fortune; all these are names of the one and selfsame God. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1097:If a man does not know what port he is steering for, no wind is favorable to him. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1098:It's the admirer and the watcher who provoke us to all the inanities we commit. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1099:Life is a gift of the immortal Gods, but living well is the gift of philosophy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1100:Long is the road to learning by precepts, but short and successful by examples. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1101:Silence is a lesson learned from the many sufferings of life.” —SENECA, THYESTES, 309 ~ Ryan Holiday, #NFDB
1102:Some lack the fickleness to live as they wish and just live as they have begun. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1103:Some laws, though unwritten, are more firmly established than all written laws. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1104:The evil which assails us is not in the localities we inhabit but in ourselves. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1105:The man who has anticipated the coming of troubles takes away their power when they arrive. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1106:The young character, which cannot hold fast to righteousness, must be rescued from the mob; ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1107:Virtue needs a director and guide. Vice can be learned even without a teacher. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1108:What need is there to weep over parts of life? The whole of it calls for tears. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1109:Wisdom is a thing vast and grand. She demands all the time that one can consecrate to her. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1110:You cease to be afraid when you cease to hope; for hope is accompanied by fear. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1111:Anger, if not restrained, is frequently more hurtful to us than the injury that provokes it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1112:Be not dazzled by beauty, but look for those inward qualities which are lasting. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1113:Corporeal punishment falls far more heavily than most weighty pecuniary penalty. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1114:Expecting is the greatest impediment to living. In anticipation of tomorrow, it loses today. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1115:God has given some gifts to the whole human race, from which no one is excluded. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1116:Hang on to your youthful enthusiasms -- you’ll be able to use them better when you’re older. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1117:If thou art a man, admire those who attempt great things, even though they fail. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1118:If you look on wealth as a thing to be valued your imaginary poverty will cause you torment. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1119:It is bad to live for necessity; but there is no necessity to live in necessity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1120:Let us withdraw ourselves in every way; for it is as harmful to be scorned as to be admired. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1121:Men are not made restless by activity but driven to madness by false impressions of reality. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1122:Only a mind that is deeply stirred can utter something noble and beyond the power of others. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1123:Philosophy is good advice, and no one gives good advice at the top of his lungs. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1124:Quo quis est doctor, eo est modestior. The English translation is inmy book THE BANYAN TREE. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1125:There is as much greatness of mind in acknowledging a good turn, as in doing it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1126:This is the reason we cannot complain of life: it keeps no one against his will. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1127:To the person who does not know where he wants to go there is no favorable wind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1128:We become wiser by adversity; prosperity destroys our appreciation of the right. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1129:Anger is like a ruin, which, in falling upon its victim, breaks itself to pieces. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1130:Behold a contest worthy of a god, a brave man matched in conflict with adversity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1131:det ille veniam facile, cui venia est opus - the one who needs pardon should readily grant it ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1132:Do you ask what is the foundation of a sound mind? It is, not to find joy in useless things. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1133:If you sit in judgment, investigate, if you sit in supreme power, sit in command. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1134:It is a small part of life we really live.’ Indeed, all the rest is not life but merely time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1135:It is difficult to bring people to goodness with lessons, but it is easy to do so by example. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1136:Live among others as if God beheld you; speak to God as if others were listening. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1137:No man enjoys the true taste of life, but he who is ready and willing to quit it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1138:offer new prayers; pray for a sound mind and for good health, first of soul and then of body. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1139:The comfort of having a friend may be taken away, but not that of having had one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1140:The highest good is a mind that scorns the happenings of chance, and rejoices only in virtue. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1141:The wise man will always reflect concerning the quality not the quantity of life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1142:They lose the day in expectation of the night, and the night in fear of the dawn. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1143:We are more often frightened than hurt; and we suffer more from imagination than from reality ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1144:We are not given a short life but we make it short... Life is long if you know how to use it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1145:What you think about yourself is much more important than what others think of you. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1146:Beauty is such a fleeting blossom, how can wisdom rely upon its momentary delight? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1147:Desultory reading is delightful, but to be beneficial, our reading must be carefully directed. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1148:How much longer are you going to be a pupil? From now on do some teaching as well. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1149:If you wish to have leisure for your mind, either be a poor man, or resemble a poor man. Study ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1150:I think the pinnacle of misfortune is to be forced by chance to want things one should loathe. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1151:No man has been shattered by the blows of Fortune unless he was first deceived by her favours. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1152:Non est ad astra mollis e terris via” - “There is no easy way from the earth to the stars” “To ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1153:Seneca’s line “Let the wickedness escape . . . for every guilty person is his own hangman. ~ Karen Mack, #NFDB
1154:The bravest sight in the world is to see a great man struggling against adversity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1155:there are a few men whom slavery holds fast, but there are many more who hold fast to slavery. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1156:There is no need to complain of particular grievances, for life in its entirety is lamentable. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1157:To live under constraint is a misfortune, but there is no constraint to live under constraint. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1158:[T]reat your inferiors in the way in which you would like to be treated by your own superiors. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1159:Whatever is well said by anyone is mine. ~ Seneca the Younger, Moral Letters, R. Gummere, trans. (1917), #NFDB
1160:Where you arrive does not matter as much as what sort of person you are when you arrive there. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1161:Anger will abate and become more controlled when it knows it must come before a judge each day. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1162:Anyone can stop a man's life, but no one his death; a thousand doors open on to it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1163:Be silent as to services you have rendered, but speak of favours you have received. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1164:Inwardly, we ought to be different in all respects, but our exterior should conform to society. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1165:It is not poverty that we praise, it is the man whom poverty cannot humble or bend. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1166:It is true greatness to have in one the frailty of a man and the security of a god. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1167:Nature gave us legs with which to do our own walking, and eyes with which to do our own seeing. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1168:Nije da se ne usuđujemo zato što su stvari teške; već su stvari teške zato što se ne usuđujemo. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1169:No past life has been lived to lend us glory, and that which has existed before us is not ours. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1170:Nothing is as certain as that the vices of leisure are gotten rid of by being busy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1171:Perhaps it will come, perhaps not; in the meantime it is not. So look forward to better things. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1172:That which is given with pride and ostentation is rather an ambition than a bounty. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1173:The key to getting everything you want is to never put all your begs in one ask-it! ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1174:there can be no place of exile within the world since nothing within the world is alien to men. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1175:There is a noble manner of being poor, and who does not know it will never be rich. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1176:Whoever said that smart men were bad in bed clearly hadn’t been banged by Seneca Seminole. ~ Avery Aster, #NFDB
1177:Your greatness is within and only in yourselves can you find a spectacle worthy of your regard. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1178:A grey-haired wrinkled man has not necessarily lived long. More accurately, he has existed long. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1179:A man who suffers or stresses before it is necessary, suffers more than is necessary ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1180:Do the best you can . . . enjoy the present . . . rest satisfied with what you have. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1181:However wretched a fellow-mortal may be, he is still a member of our common species. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1182:Human society is like an arch, kept from falling by the mutual pressure of its parts ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1183:Ignis aurum probat, miseria fortes viros.
Fire is the test of gold; adversity, of strong men. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1184:Leisure without study is death—a tomb for the living person.” —SENECA, MORAL LETTERS, 82.4 ~ Ryan Holiday, #NFDB
1185:LETTERA 2 LA LETTURA CHE GIOVA
È povero non chi possiede poco, ma chi brama avere di più. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1186:Religion is regarded by the ignorant as true, by the wise as false, and by the rulers as useful. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1187:The greatest hindrance to living is expectancy, which depends upon the morrow and wastes to-day. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1188:There is no enjoying the possession of anything valuable unless one has someone to share it with ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1189:To want simply what is enough nowadays suggests to people primitiveness and squalor. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1190:He grieves more than is necessary who grieves before any cause for sorrow has arisen. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1191:If i had not been admitted to these studies it would not have been worth while to have been born. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1192:It is by the benefit of letters that absent friends are in a manner brought together. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1193:Let no one rob me of a single day who is not going to make me an adequate return for such a loss. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1194:Light cares speak, great ones are speechless. -Curae leves loquuntur ingentes stupent ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1195:No man finds it difficult to return to nature except the man who has deserted nature. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1196:No man is so faint-hearted that he would rather hang in suspense for ever than drop once for all. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1197:No one can long hide behind a mask; the pretense soon lapses into the true character. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1198:Our universe is a sorry little affair unless it has in it something for every age to investigate. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1199:pleasure, unless it has been kept within bounds, tends to rush headlong into the abyss of sorrow. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1200:Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1201:Seneca may have put it best two thousand years ago: “To be everywhere is to be nowhere.”51 ~ Nicholas Carr, #NFDB
1202:Seneca observes that “chastity comes with time to spare, lechery has never a moment.”11 ~ William B Irvine, #NFDB
1203:The artist finds a greater pleasure in painting than in having completed the picture. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1204:The fool's life is empty of gratitude and full of fears; its course lies wholly toward the future ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1205:There's some end at last for the man who follows a path; mere rambling is interminable. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1206:The surest way for those who want to rule
is praising moderation, talking of peace and quiet. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1207:To reduce your worry, you must assume that what you fear may happen is certainly going to happen. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1208:True happiness is...to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1209:We often want one thing and pray for another, not telling the truth even to the gods. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1210:What shall we not go in fear of if we fear that which cowardice itself has chosen for its refuge? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1211:Where you arrive does not matter so much as what sort of person you are when you arrive there. We ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1212:Certain laws have not been written, but they are more fixed than all the written laws. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1213:Demand not that I am the equal of the greatest, only that I am better than the wicked. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1214:Each man has a character of his own choosing; it is chance or fate that decides his choice of job. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1215:Gegen die Leidenschaften muss man in kräftigem Ansturm kämpfen, nich tmit bedächtiger Behutsamkeit ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1216:He is greedy of life who is not willing to die when the world is perishing around him. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1217:It does not matter how many books you have, but how good the books are which you have. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1218:It is the evil mind that gets first hold on all of us. Learning virtue means unlearning vice. We ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1219:It’s not that we have a short time to live, but that we waste a lot of it.” -Lucius Annaeus Seneca ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1220:Nero: "Am I forbidden to do what all may do?"
Seneca: "From high rank high example is expected. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1221:No man is more unhappy than he who never faces adversity. For he is not permitted to prove himself ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1222:One who's our friend is fond of us; one who's fond of us isn't necessarily our friend. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1223:People pay the doctor for his trouble; for his kindness they still remain in his debt. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1224:The fool's life is empty of gratitude and full of fears; its course lies wholly toward the future. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1225:The part of life we really live is small”. All the rest of existence is not life, but merely time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1226:Those vices [luxury and neglect of decent manners] are vices of men, not of the times. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1227:Those whom fortune has never favored are more joyful than those whom she has deserted. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1228:To preserve the life of citizens, is the greatest virtue in the father of his country. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1229:Undisturbed by fears and unspoiled by pleasures, we shall be afraid neither of death nor the gods. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1230:What difference does it make, after all, what your position in life is if you dislike it yourself? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1231:What progress have I made? I am beginning to be my own friend. That is progress indeed ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1232:A man who has taken your time recognises no debt; yet it is the one he can never repay. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1233:Believe me if you consult philosophy she will persuade you not to lit so long at your counting desk ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1234:For the great benefits of our being- our life, health, and reason-we look upon ourselves. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1235:f you wish to put off all worry, assume that what you fear may happen is certainly going to happen. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1236:Homines, dum docent, discunt. - Men learn while they teach. ~ Seneca the Younger, Epistolæ Ad Lucilium, VII., #NFDB
1237:Humanity is the quality which stops one being arrogant towards one's fellows, or being acrimonious. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1238:I do not distinguish by the eye, but by the mind, which is the proper judge of the man. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1239:Life's like a play; it's not the length, but the excellence of the acting that matters. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1240:No one has anything finished, because we have kept putting off into the future all our undertakings ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1241:On him does death lie heavily, who, but too well known to all, dies to himself unknown. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1242:The amount of life we truly live is small. For our existence on Earth is not Life, but merely Time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1243:The first proof of a well-ordered mind is to be able to pause and linger within itself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1244:There's one blessing only, the source and cornerstone of beatitude: confidence in self. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1245:To be able to endure odium is the first art to be learned by those who aspire to power. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1246:we are not given a short life but we make it short, and we are not ill-supplied but wasteful of it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1247:We must indulge the mind and from time to time allow it the leisure which is its food and strength. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1248:We shall be rich with all the more comfort, if we once learn how far poverty is from being a burden ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1249:What is harder than rock? What is softer than water? Yet hard rocks are hollowed out by soft water? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1250:why should I demand of Fortune that she give rather than demand of myself that I should not crave? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1251:Afasta-te da companhia dos perniciosos, eles fazem nascer em ti um licenciosidade que lhe é natutal. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1252:If we desire to judge justly, we must persuade ourselves that none of us is without sin. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1253:I guess this is a bad time to mention I hung a dummy and painted Seneca Crane's name on it. ~ Suzanne Collins, #NFDB
1254:Let him that hath done the good office conceal it; let him that received it disclose it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1255:Let tears flow of their own accord: their flowing is not inconsistent with inward peace and harmony. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1256:Many shed tears merely for show, and have dry eyes when no one's around to observe them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1257:Most people fancy themselves innocent of those crimes of which they cannot be convicted. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1258:No delicate breeze brings comfort with icy breath of wind
to the hearts which pant on the flames. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1259:No good thing renders its possessor happy, unless his mind is reconciled to the possibility of loss. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1260:Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by the rulers as useful ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1261:That day which you fear as being the end of all things is the birthday of your eternity. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1262:The fool, with all his other faults, has this also, he is always getting ready to live."[3] Reflect, ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1263:To strive with an equal is dangerous; with a superior, mad; with an inferior, degrading. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1264:What is more insane than to vent on senseless things the anger that is felt towards men? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1265:Why do I not seek some real good; one which I could feel, not one which I could display? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1266:A hungry people listens not to reason, not cares for justice, nor is bent by any prayers. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1267:It is wrong not to give a hand to the fallen. This right is common to the whole human race. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1268:It’s not that we have a short time to live, but that we waste a lot of it.”
-Lucius Annaeus Seneca ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1269:The man who while he gives thinks of what he will get in return, deserves to be deceived. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1270:therefore whenever his last day comes, the wise man will not hesitate to meet death with a firm step. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1271:whenever I wish to enjoy the quips of a clown, I am not compelled to hunt far; I can laugh at myself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1272:You cannot, I repeat, successfully acquire it and preserve your modesty at the same time. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1273:A hungry people neither listens to reason nor is mollified by fair treatment or swayed by any appeals. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1274:Dum inter homines sumus, colamus humanitatem"
"As long as we are among humans, let us be humane ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1275:For many men, the acquisition of wealth does not end their troubles, it only changes them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1276:I guess this is a bad time to mention I hung a dummy and painted Seneca Crane's name on it... ~ Suzanne Collins, #NFDB
1277:La vida es como una pieza teatral; no importa cuánto haya durado sino cuán bien haya sido representada ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1278:Let the man, who would be grateful, think of repaying a kindness, even while receiving it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1279:The highest duty and the highest proof of wisdom - that deed and word should be in accord. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1280:The part of life we really live is small.' For all the rest of existence is not life, but merely time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1281:The swiftness of time is infinite, as is still more evident when we look back on the past. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1282:To give and to lose is nothing; but to lose and to give still is the part of a great mind. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1283:We are all sinful. Therefore whatever we blame in another we shall find in our own bosoms. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1284:...we are not given a short life but we make it short, and we are not ill-supplied but wasteful of it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1285:What difference does it make how much you have? What you do not have amounts to much more. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1286:What does reason demand of a man? A very easy thing-to live in accord with his own nature. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1287:A benefit consists not in what is done or given, but in the intention of the giver or doer. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1288:A man who makes a decision without listening to both sides is unjust, even if his ruling is a fair one. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1289:Besides, he who is feared, fears also; no one has been able to arouse terror and live in peace of mind. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1290:Countless things that happen every hour call for advice; and such advice is to be sought in philosophy. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1291:Dangerous is wrath concealed. Hatred proclaimed doth lose its chance of wreaking vengeance. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1292:It is the practice of the multitude to bark at eminent men, as little dogs do at strangers. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1293:Live in this belief: “I am not born for any one corner of the universe; this whole world is my country. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1294:Natural abilities do not respond well to compulsion; when Nature is in opposition, labour is fruitless. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1295:Nūllum magnum ingenium sine mixtūrā dēmentiae fuit
No great talent without an element of madness ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1296:Success is not greedy, as people think, but insignificant. That is why it satisfies nobody. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1297:There is only one relief for great sufferings, and that is to endure and surrender to their compulsion. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1298:The velocity with which time flies is infinite, as is most apparent to those who look back. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1299:Unhappy is the man, though he rule the world, who doesn't consider himself supremely blessed. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1300:Whereas a prolonged life is not necessarily better, a prolonged death is necessarily worse. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1301:Anger, if not restrained, is frequently more hurtful to us than the injury that provokes it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1302:Death falls heavily on that man who, known too well to others, dies in ignorance of himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1303:Ein kleiner Teil des Lebens nur ist wahres Leben, der ganze übrige Teil ist nicht Leben, ist blosse Zeit ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1304:Everything is the product of one universal creative effort. There is nothing dead in Nature. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1305:Expecting is the greatest impediment to living. In anticipation of tomorrow, it loses today. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1306:It is a tedious thing to be always beginning life; they live badly who always begin to live. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1307:Let him who has granted a favour speak not of it; let him who has received one, proclaim it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1308:Life is like a play: it's not the length, but the excellence of the acting that matters. ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca, #NFDB
1309:Life is long and there is enough of it for satisfying personal accomplishments if we use our hours well. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1310:Many person might have achieved wisdom had they not supposed that they already possessed it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1311:No evil propensity of the human heart is so powerful that it may not be subdued by discipline. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1312:pues para vivir mucho necesitas al destino, pero para vivir plenamente, la sola diligencia del espíritu. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1313:The greatest hindrance to living is expectancy, which depends upon tomorrow and wastes today ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1314:There is nothing the busy man is less busied with than living: there is nothing that is harder to learn. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1315:There is nothing which persevering effort and unceasing and diligent care cannot accomplish. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1316:«The Shortness of Life: Seneca on Busyness and the Art of Living Wide Rather Than Living Long.» ~ Timothy Ferriss, #NFDB
1317:To fight against an equal is risky; against a higher-up, insane; against someone beneath you, degrading. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1318:We are more often frightened than hurt; and we suffer more from imagination than from reality. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1319:a man's peace of mind does not depend upon Fortune; for, even when angry she grants enough for our needs. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1320:Believe me, that was a happy age, before the days of architects, before the days of builders. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1321:Can you no longer see a road to freedom? It's right in front of you. You need only turn over your wrists. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1322:Concealed anger is to be feared; but hatred openly manifested destroys its chance of revenge. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1323:For it is disheartening to inspire in a man the desire, and to take away from him the hope, of emulation. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1324:If thou wishest to get rid of thy evil propensities, thou must keep far from evil companions. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1325:If what you have seems insufficient to you, then though you possess the world, you will yet be miserable. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1326:It is difficult to bring people to goodness with lessons, but it is easy to do so by example. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1327:It means much not to be spoiled by intimacy with riches; and he is truly great who is poor amidst riches. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1328:One of the most beautiful qualities of true friendship is to understand and to be understood. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1329:Philosophy does not regard pedigree, she received Plato not as a noble, but she made him one. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1330:That which we are not permitted to have we delight in; that which we can have is disregarded. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1331:There are more things to alarm us than to harm us, and we suffer more often in apprehension than reality. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1332:There is nothing the busy man is less busied with than living: there is nothing that is harder to learn. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1333:There is no worse penalty for vice than the fact that it is dissatisfied with itself and all its fellows. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1334:A quarrel is quickly settled when deserted by one party; there is no battle unless there be two. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1335:Desultory reading is delightful, but to be beneficial, our reading must be carefully directed. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1336:Everyone hustles his life along, and is troubled by a longing for the future and weariness of the present. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1337:For many men, the acquisition of wealth does not end their troubles, it only changes them. ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca, #NFDB
1338:He invites the commission of a crime who does not forbid it, when it is in his power to do so. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1339:How much happier is the man who owes nothing to anybody except the one he can most easily refuse, himself! ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1340:Inwardly, we ought to be different in every respect, but our outward dress should blend in with the crowd. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1341:It is expedient for the victor to wish for peace restored; for the vanquished it is necessary. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1342:Let the soul be submitted within to an upright judge whose authority extends over our most secret actions. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1343:Light griefs can speak: deep sorrows are dumb." —Seneca, Hippolytus, act ii. scene 3.] A ~ Michel de Montaigne, #NFDB
1344:May be is very well, but Must is the master. It is my duty to show justice without recompense. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1345:Men are so thoughtless, nay, so mad, that some, through fear of death, force themselves to die." Whichever ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1346:Refuse to let the thought of death bother you: nothing is grim when we have escaped that fear. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1347:The liberal arts do not conduct the soul all the way to virtue, but merely set it going in that direction. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1348:The only really leisured people are those who devote time to acquiring true knowledge rather than trivia. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1349:There are a few men whom slavery holds fast, but there are many more who hold fast to slavery. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1350:The road is long if one proceeds by way of precepts but short and effectual if by way of personal example. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1351:Whatever is to make us better and happy God has placed either openly before us or close to us. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1352:What nature requires is obtainable, and within easy reach. It is for the superfluous we sweat. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1353:What's the good of dragging up sufferings which are over, of being unhappy now just because you were then? ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1354:When a person spends all his time in foreign travel, he ends by having many acquaintances, but no friends. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1355:All the greatest blessings create anxiety, and Fortune is never less to be trusted than when it is fairest. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1356:But life is very short and anxious for those who forget the past, neglect the present, and fear the future. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1357:Human greatness is not discovered until it is tested; we must be hardened against fortune by fortune itself ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1358:It's the great soul that surrenders itself to fate, but a puny degenerate thing that struggles. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1359:We let ourselves drift with every breeze; we are frightened at uncertainties, just as if they were certain. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1360:When thou hast profited so much that thou respectest even thyself, thou mayst let go thy tutor. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1361:Wisdom teaches us to do, as well as to talk; and to make our words and actions all of a colour. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1362:Would you call Him Destiny? You will not be wrong. Providence? You will say well. Nature? That too you may. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1363:You find in some a sort of graceless modesty, that makes them ashamed to requite an obligation. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1364:Death: There's nothing bad about it at all except the thing that comes before it-the fear of it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1365:El mayor impedimento al vivir es la espera, que, por estar pendiente al día de mañana, pierde el día de hoy. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1366:He shows a greater mind who does not restrain his laughter, than he who does not deny his tears. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1367:I shall never be ashamed to quote a bad author if what he says is good. ~ Seneca the Younger, On Tranquility of Mind., #NFDB
1368:It is sweet to mingle tears with tears; Griefs, where they wound in solitude, Wound more deeply. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1369:Oft hat ein hochbetagter Greis keinen anderen Beweis für die Länge seiner Lebens als die Summe seiner Jahre. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1370:Possession of a friend should be with the spirit: the spirit's never absent: it sees daily whoever it likes. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1371:Some men have shrunk so far into dark corners that objects in bright daylight seem quite blurred to them.’ A ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1372:There is nothing the busy man is less busied with than living; there is nothing harder to learn. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1373:There is nothing the busy man is less busied with than living: there is nothing that is harder to learn. Of ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1374:We do not receive a life that is short, but rather we make it so; we are not beggar in it, but spendthrifts. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1375:Would you call Him Destiny? You will not be wrong. Providence? You will say well. Nature? That too you may. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1376:A good person dyes events with his own color . . . and turns whatever happens to his own benefit. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1377:As it is with a play, so it is with life - what matters is not how long the acting lasts, but how good it is. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1378:if you wish Pythocles to have pleasure for ever, do not add to his pleasures, but subtract from his desires"; ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1379:In times of happiness, no point in shaking things up.
But in a time of crisis, the safest thing is change. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1380:it is only in the ideal or perfect state that the virtues of the good citizen and the good man are identical. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1381:It is the constant fault and inseparable evil quality of ambition, that it never looks behind it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1382:It makes a great deal of difference whether one wills not to sin or has not the knowledge to sin. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1383:No man can have a peaceful life who thinks too much about lengthening it.’ Seneca (c. 4 BCE to 65 AD) ~ Julian Baggini, #NFDB
1384:Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1385:So it is: we are not given a short life but we make it short, and we are not Ill-supplied but wasteful of it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1386:The proper amount of wealth is that which neither descends to poverty nor is far distant from it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1387:Whoever does not regard what he has as most ample wealth, is unhappy, though he be master of the whole world. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1388:A man can refrain from wanting what he has not and cheerfully make the best of a bird in the hand. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1389:Choose as a guide one whom you will admire more when you see him act than when you hear him speak. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1390:Democritus[3] says: "One man means as much to me as a multitude, and a multitude only as much as one man." 11. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1391:Mit dem Leben ist es wie mit einem Theaterstück; es kommt nicht darauf an, wie lange es ist, sondern wie bunt. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1392:no one can merely go wrong by himself, but he must become both the cause and adviser of another's wrong doing. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1393:Philosophy calls for simple living, not for doing penance, and the simple way of life need not be a crude one. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1394:Take care that the reading of numerous writers and books of all kinds does not confuse and trouble thy reason. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1395:The best way to do good to ourselves is to do it to others; the right way to gather is to scatter. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1396:There is no evil that does not offer inducements. Vices tempt you by the rewards which they offer. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1397:These individulas have riches just as we say that we 'have a fever,' when really the fever has us. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1398:What difference does it make, after all, what your position in life is if you dislike it yourself? ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1399:When we have done everything within our power, we shall possess a great deal: but we once possessed the world. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1400:Wisdom is the perfect good of the human mind; philosophy is the love of wisdom, and the endeavor to attain it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1401:Everlasting misfortune does have one blessing, that it ends up by toughening those whom it constantly afflicts. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1402:for only philosophy or honourable occupation can divert from its anguish a heart whose grief springs from love. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1403:No man is more unhappy than he who never faces adversity. For he is not permitted to prove himself. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1404:...speak ill of yourself when by yourself; then you will become accustomed both to speak and to hear the truth. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1405:Tranqility is a certain quality of mind, which no condition or fortune can either exalt or depress. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1406:We ought to take outdoor walks, to refresh and raise our spirits by deep breathing in the open air. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1407:what is freedom, you ask? It means not being a slave to any circumstance, to any constraint, to any chance; it ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1408:Wherever there is a human being, we have an opportunity for kindness.” —SENECA, ON THE HAPPY LIFE, 24.2–3 ~ Ryan Holiday, #NFDB
1409:a good man will not waste himself upon mean and discreditable work or be busy merely for the sake of being busy. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1410:All we see and admire today will burn in the universal fire that ushers in a new, just, happy world. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1411:Awake, my heart,
And do such deeds as in the time to come
No tongue shall praise, but none refuse to tell. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1412:Death lies heavy upon one who, known exceedingly well by all, dies unknown to himself.” —SENECA, THYESTES, ~ Ryan Holiday, #NFDB
1413:errare humanum est, sed perseverare diabolicum: 'to err is human, but to persist (in the mistake) is diabolical. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1414:Finally, it is generally agreed that no activity can be successfully pursued by an individual who is preoccupied ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1415:He who would arrive at the appointed end must follow a single road and not wander through many ways. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1416:Homines dum docent discunt.(Latin phrase translated “Men learn while they teach.”) —Seneca, Epistolae, VII, 7 ~ Anonymous, #NFDB
1417:If you don't know, ask. You will be a fool for the moment, but a wise man for the rest of your life. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1418:If you wish," said he, "to make Pythocles rich, do not add to his store of money, but subtract from his desires. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1419:It is a denial of justice not to stretch out a helping hand to the fallen; that is the common right of humanity. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1420:It is the sign of a great mind to dislike greatness, and prefer things in measure to things in excess. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1421:Let tears flow of their own accord; their flowing is not inconsistent with inward peace and harmony. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1422:Roman philosopher Seneca wrote: “All those who summon you to themselves, turn you away from your own self. ~ Rolf Dobelli, #NFDB
1423:The display of grief makes more demands than grief itself. How few men are sad in their own company. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1424:The perfection of virtue consists in a certain equality of soul and of conduct which should remain un-alterable. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1425:The pleasures of the palate deal with us like Egyptian thieves who strangle those whom they embrace. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1426:There is no greater punishment of wickedness that that it is dissatisfied with itself and its deeds. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1427:This, I say, is the highest duty and the highest proof of wisdom, – that deed and word should be in accord, that ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1428:We are always complaining that our days are few, and acting as though there would be no end to them. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1429:What a great blessing is a friend with a heart so trusty you may safely bury all your secrets in it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1430:You must know for which harbor you are headed, if you are to catch the right wind to take you there. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1431:Count your years, and you will be ashamed to desire and pursue the same things you desired in your boyhood days. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1432:Disasters, therefore, and losses, and wrongs, have only the same power over virtue that a cloud has over the sun. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1433:For you have no reason to suppose that we come to grief more through the flattery of others than through our own. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1434:Health is the soul that animates all the enjoyments of life, which fade and are tasteless without it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1435:If you are empty-handed, the highwayman passes you by: even along an infested road, the poor may travel in peace. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1436:It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare, it is because we do not dare that they are difficult. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1437:LETTERA 23 LA VERA GIOIA
Ma è difficile avere il senso della misura riguardo a ciò che si ritiene un bene. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1438:Many men would have arrived at wisdom had they not believed themselves to have arrived there already. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1439:No action will be considered blameless, unless the will was so, for by the will the act was dictated. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1440:no man, if he be ungrateful, will be unhappy in the future. I allow him no day of grace; he is unhappy forthwith. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1441:Only the wise man is content with what is his. All foolishness suffers the burden of dissatisfaction with itself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1442:We shall consider later whether these evils derive their power from their own strength, or from our own weakness. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1443:Ab honesto virum bonum nihil deterret. (Nothing deters a good man from doing what is honorable.)-A Wrinkle in Time ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1444:By the toil of others we are brought into the presence of things which have been brought from darkness into light. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1445:Freedom can't be bought for nothing. If you hold her precious, you must hold all else of little worth. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1446:He who has injured thee was either stronger or weaker than thee. If weaker, spare him; if stronger, spare thyself. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1447:If you live according to nature, you will never be poor; if you live according to opinion, you will never be rich. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1448:Nobody will keep the thing he hears to himself, and nobody will repeat just what he hears and no more. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1449:No man is brave and earnest if he avoids danger, if his spirit does not grow with the very difficulty of his task. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1450:Once we have driven away all that excites or affrights us, there ensues unbroken tranquility and enduring freedom. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1451:Refrain from following the example of those whose craving is for attention, not their own improvement. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1452:There are no greater wretches in the world than many of those whom people in general take to be happy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1453:There is never a time when new distraction will not show up; we sow them, so several will grow from the same seed. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1454:There is nothing in the world so much admired as a man who knows how to bear unhappiness with courage. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1455:We are members of one great body, planted by nature…. We must consider that we were born for the good of the whole ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1456:If education or warning were of any avail, how could Seneca's pupil be a Nero? ~ Arthur Schopenhauer, The Art of Controversy, #NFDB
1457:reflect how pleasant it is to demand nothing, how noble it is to be contented and not to be dependent upon Fortune. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1458:São econômicos na preservação de seu patrimônio, mas desperdiçam o tempo, a única coisa que justificaria a avareza. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1459:The mind should be allowed some relaxation, that it may return to its work all the better for the rest. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1460:There is nothing in the world so much admired as a man who knows how to bear unhappiness with courage."
— Seneca ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1461:A person teaching and a person learning,' he said, 'should have the same end in view: the improvement of the latter. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1462:Deve-se aprender a viver por toda a vida, e, por mais que tu talvez te espantes, a vida toda é um aprender a morrer. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1463:Hence, every day ought to be regulated as if it closed the series, as if it rounded out and completed our existence. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1464:It is never too late to turn from the errors of our ways: He who repents of his sins is almost innocent. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1465:Just where death is expecting you is something we cannot know; so, for your part, expect him everywhere. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1466:[M]aking noble resolutions is not as important as keeping the resolutions you have made already.
(Letter XVI) ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1467:No one willingly reverts to the past unless all his actions have passed his own censorship, which is never deceived. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1468:Shall I tell you what philosophy holds out to humanity? Counsel...You are called in to help the unhappy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1469:Such is the blindness, nay the insanity of mankind, that some men are driven to death by the fear of it. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1470:There is no person so severely punished, as those who subject themselves to the whip of their own remorse. ~ Seneca the Elder, #NFDB
1471:These individuals have riches just as we say that we ‘have a fever,’ when really the fever has us.” –Seneca ~ Timothy Ferriss, #NFDB
1472:We should follow the law which Nature has engraved in our hearts. Wisdom lies in the perfect observation of her law. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1473:You have to persevere and fortify your pertinacity until the will to good becomes a disposition to good. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1474:Diligentia maximum etiam mediocris ingeni subsidium - Diligence is a very great help even to a mediocre intelligence. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1475:For men in a state of freedom had thatch for their shelter, while slavery dwells beneath marble and gold. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1476:Fortune's not content with knocking a man down; she sends him spinning head over heels, crash upon crash. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1477:For what else is Nature but God and the Divine Reason that pervades the whole universe and all its parts. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1478:learning how to live takes a whole life, and, which may surprise you more, it takes a whole life to learn how to die. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1479:LETTERA 26 TI GIUDICHERÀ LA MORTE
Apparirà ciò che hai fatto nella vita solo quando esalerai l'ultimo respiro. ~ Seneca,#NFDB
1480:No nos da miedo hacer las cosas porque sean difíciles, sino que las cosas son difíciles porque nos da miedo hacerlas. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1481:No one can live happily who has regard for himself alone and transforms everything into a question of his own utility ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1482:Philosophy calls for plain living, but not for penance; and we may perfectly well be plain and neat at the same time. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1483:since the mind when distracted absorbs nothing deeply, but rejects everything which is, so to speak, crammed into it. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1484:The busy man is busy with everything except living; there is nothing that is more difficult to learn how to do right. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1485:The important thing about a problem is not its solution, but the strength we gain in finding the solution ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1486:There are more things to alarm us than to harm us, and we suffer more often in apprehension than reality. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1487:There is nothing that the busy man is less busy with than living; there is nothing harder to learn.” –Seneca ~ Timothy Ferriss, #NFDB
1488:All the greatest blessings are a source of anxiety, and at no time is fortune less wisely trusted than when it is best ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1489:I can show you a philtre, compounded without drugs, herbs, or any witch's incantation: 'If you want to be loved, love. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1490:I have never wished to cater to the crowd; for what I know, they do not approve, and what they approve, I do not know. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1491:Many are harmed by fear itself, and many may have come to their fate while dreading fate.” —SENECA, OEDIPUS, 992 ~ Ryan Holiday, #NFDB
1492:Prove - and an easy task it is - that so-called pleasures, when they go beyond a certain limit, are but punishments... ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1493:The man who does something under orders is not unhappy; he is unhappy who does something against his will. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1494:We are born subjects, and to obey God is perfect liberty. He that does this shall be free, safe and happy. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1495:What's the good of dragging up sufferings which are over, of being unhappy now just because you were then. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1496:A dwarf is small even if he stands on a mountain; a colossus keeps his height, even if he stands in a well. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1497:A great step towards independence is a good-humored stomach, one that is willing to endure rough treatment. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1498:Because thou writest me often, I thank thee ... Never do I receive a letter from thee, but immediately we are together. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
1499:He, who decides a case without hearing the other side, though he decides justly, cannot be considered just. ~ Seneca the Younger, #NFDB
1500:I shall use the old road, but if I find a shorter and easier one I shall open it up. [...] Truth lies open to everyone. ~ Seneca, #NFDB
8 Christianity
6 Philosophy
2 Integral Yoga
1 Poetry
1 Occultism
1 Alchemy
4 Saint Augustine of Hippo
4 Plotinus
2 Jorge Luis Borges
3 City of God
2 The Secret Doctrine
2 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 04
01.03 - Mystic Poetry, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
Among the ancients, strictly speaking, the later classical Lucretius was a remarkable phenomenon. By nature he was a poet, but his mental interest lay in metaphysical speculation, in philosophy, and unpoetical business. He turned away from arms and heroes, wrath and love and, like Seneca and Aurelius, gave himself up to moralising and philosophising, delving 'into the mystery, the why and the how and the whither of it all. He chose a dangerous subject for his poetic inspiration and yet it cannot be said that his attempt was a failure. Lucretius was not a religious or spiritual poet; he was rather Marxian,atheistic, materialistic. The dialectical materialism of today could find in him a lot of nourishment and support. But whatever the content, the manner has made a whole difference. There was an idealism, a clarity of vision and an intensity of perception, which however scientific apparently, gave his creation a note, an accent, an atmosphere high, tense, aloof, ascetic, at times bordering on the supra-sensual. It was a high light, a force of consciousness that at its highest pitch had the ring and vibration of something almost spiritual. For the basic principle of Lucretius' inspiration is a large thought-force, a tense perception, a taut nervous reactionit is not, of course, the identity in being with the inner realities which is the hallmark of a spiritual consciousness, yet it is something on the way towards that.
There have been other philosophical poets, a good number of them since thennot merely rationally philosophical, as was the vogue in the eighteenth century, but metaphysically philosophical, that is to say, inquiring not merely into the phenomenal but also into the labyrinths of the noumenal, investigating not only what meets the senses, but also things that are behind or beyond. Amidst the earlier efflorescence of this movement the most outstanding philosopher poet is of course Dante, the Dante of Paradiso, a philosopher in the mediaeval manner and to the extent a lesser poet, according to some. Goe the is another, almost in the grand modern manner. Wordsworth is full of metaphysics from the crown of his head to the tip of his toe although his poetry, perhaps the major portion of it, had to undergo some kind of martyrdom because of it. And Shelley, the supremely lyric singer, has had a very rich undertone of thought-content genuinely metaphysical. And Browning and Arnold and Hardyindeed, if we come to the more moderns, we have to cite the whole host of them, none can be excepted.
1.02 - The Three European Worlds, #The Ever-Present Origin, #Jean Gebser, #Integral
The significance of Philip's ascent cannot be compared to Petrarch's because Livy's emphasis is on the sea, while the land - not yet a landscape - is not mentioned at all. The reference to the sea can be understood as an indication that in antiquity man's experience of the soul was symbolized by the sea, and not by space (as we shall see further on in our discussion). The famous ascents undertaken by such Romans as Hadrian, Strabo, and Lucilius were primarily for administrative and practical, not for aesthetic purposes. As an administrative reformer, Hadrian had climbed MountAetna in order to survey the territory under his jurisdiction, while the fugitive Lucilius, the friend of Seneca, had been motivated by purely practical reasons.
Let us return to Petrarch's letter. Having mentioned the passage in Livy, he describes his wearisome trek as well as an encounter: "In the ravines we [Petrarch and his brother Gerardol] met an old shepherd who, in a torrent of words, tried to dissuade us from the ascent, saying he had never heard of anyone risking such a venture." Undaunted by the old man's lamentations, they pressed forward: "While still climbing, I urged myself forward by the thought that what I experienced today will surely benefit myself as well as many others who desire the blessed life . . . . "
1.04 - The First Circle, Limbo Virtuous Pagans and the Unbaptized. The Four Poets, Homer, Horace, Ovid, and Lucan. The Noble Castle of Philosophy., #The Divine Comedy, #Dante Alighieri, #Christianity
Tully and Livy, and moral Seneca,
Euclid, geometrician, and Ptolemy,
1.39 - The Ritual of Osiris, #The Golden Bough, #James George Frazer, #Occultism
ancient, for Seneca tells us that at a place called the Veins of the
Nile, not far from Philae, the priests used to cast money and
2.01 - On Books, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Integral Yoga
The Roman could fight and legislate, he could keep the states together, but he made the Greek think for him. Of course, the Greek also could fight but not always so well. The Roman thinkers, Cicero, Seneca, Horace, all owe their philosophy to the Greeks.
That, again, is another illustration of what I was speaking of as the inrush of forces. Consider a small race like the Greeks living on a small projecting tongue of land: this race was able to build up a culture that has given everything essential to your modern European culture and that in a span of 200 to 300 years only!
BOOK II. -- PART III. ADDENDA. SCIENCE AND THE SECRET DOCTRINE CONTRASTED, #The Secret Doctrine, #H P Blavatsky, #Theosophy
hardly comprehend now that which they read in their Scriptures. See what Seneca says in Epistle 9,
and Quaest. Nat. III., c., ult.: "The world being melted and having re-entered the bosom of Jupiter, this
BOOK I. -- PART III. SCIENCE AND THE SECRET DOCTRINE CONTRASTED, #The Secret Doctrine, #H P Blavatsky, #Theosophy
According to Seneca, Berosus taught prophecy of every future event and cataclysm by the Zodiac; and
the time fixed by him for the conflagration of the world (pralaya), and another for a deluge, is found
Book of Imaginary Beings (text), #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
In a passage from Seneca, we read that Thales of Miletus
taught that the earth floats in a surrounding sea, like a ship,
BOOK VI. - Of Varros threefold division of theology, and of the inability of the gods to contri bute anything to the happiness of the future life, #City of God, #Saint Augustine of Hippo, #Christianity
10. Concerning the liberty of Seneca, who more vehemently censured the civil theology than Varro did the fabulous.
That liberty, in truth, which this man wanted, so that he did not dare to censure that theology of the city, which is very similar to the theatrical, so openly as he did the theatrical itself, was, though not fully, yet in part possessed by Annus Seneca, whom we have some evidence to show to have flourished in the times of our apostles. It was in part possessed by him, I say, for he possessed it in writing, but not in living. For in that book which he wrote against superstition,[243] he more copiously and vehemently censured that civil and urban theology than Varro the theatrical and fabulous. For, when speaking concerning images, he says, "They dedicate images of the sacred and inviolable immortals in most worthless and motionless matter. They give them[Pg 253] the appearance of man, beasts, and fishes, and some make them of mixed sex, and heterogeneous bodies. They call them deities, when they are such that if they should get breath and should suddenly meet them, they would be held to be monsters." Then, a while afterwards, when extolling the natural theology, he had expounded the sentiments of certain philosophers, he opposes to himself a question, and says, "Here some one says, Shall I believe that the heavens and the earth are gods, and that some are above the moon and some below it? Shall I bring forward either Plato or the peripatetic Strato, one of whom made God to be without a body, the other without a mind?" In answer to which he says, "And, really, what truer do the dreams of Titus Tatius, or Romulus, or Tullus Hostilius appear to thee? Tatius declared the divinity of the goddess Cloacina; Romulus that of Picus and Tiberinus; Tullus Hostilius that of Pavor and Pallor, the most disagreeable affections of men, the one of which is the agitation of the mind under fright, the other that of the body, not a disease, indeed, but a change of colour." Wilt thou rather believe that these are deities, and receive them into heaven? But with what freedom he has written concerning the rites themselves, cruel and shameful! "One," he says, "castrates himself, another cuts his arms. Where will they find room for the fear of these gods when angry, who use such means of gaining their favour when propitious? But gods who wish to be worshipped in this fashion should be worshipped in none. So great is the frenzy of the mind when perturbed and driven from its seat, that the gods are propitiated by men in a manner in which not even men of the greatest ferocity and fable-renowned cruelty vent their rage. Tyrants have lacerated the limbs of some; they never ordered any one to lacerate his own. For the gratification of royal lust, some have been castrated; but no one ever, by the comm and of his lord, laid violent hands on himself to emasculate himself. They kill themselves in the temples. They supplicate with their wounds and with their blood. If any one has time to see the things they do and the things they suffer, he will find so many things unseemly for men of respectability, so unworthy of freemen, so unlike the doings[Pg 254] of sane men, that no one would doubt that they are mad, had they been mad with the minority; but now the multitude of the insane is the defence of their sanity."
He next relates those things which are wont to be done in the Capitol, and with the utmost intrepidity insists that they are such things as one could only believe to be done by men making sport, or by madmen. For, having spoken with derision of this, that in the Egyptian sacred rites Osiris, being lost, is lamented for, but straightway, when found, is the occasion of great joy by his reappearance, because both the losing and the finding of him are feigned; and yet that grief and that joy which are elicited thereby from those who have lost nothing and found nothing are real;having, I say, so spoken of this, he says, "Still there is a fixed time for this frenzy. It is tolerable to go mad once in the year. Go into the Capitol. One is suggesting divine commands[244] to a god; another is telling the hours to Jupiter; one is a lictor; another is an anointer, who with the mere movement of his arms imitates one anointing. There are women who arrange the hair of Juno and Minerva, standing far away not only from her image, but even from her temple. These move their fingers in the manner of hair-dressers. There are some women who hold a mirror. There are some who are calling the gods to assist them in court. There are some who are holding up documents to them, and are explaining to them their cases. A learned and distinguished comedian, now old and decrepit, was daily playing the mimic in the Capitol, as though the gods would gladly be spectators of that which men had ceased to care about. Every kind of artificers working for the immortal gods is dwelling there in idleness." And a little after he says, "Nevertheless these, though they give themselves up to the gods for purposes superfluous enough, do not do so for any abominable or infamous purpose. There sit certain women in the Capitol who think they are beloved by Jupiter; nor are they frightened even by the look of the, if you will believe the poets, most wrathful Juno."
--
This liberty Varro did not enjoy. It was only the poetical theology he seemed to censure. The civil, which this man cuts to pieces, he was not bold enough to impugn. But if we attend to the truth, the temples where these things are performed are far worse than the theatres where they are represented. Whence, with respect to these sacred rites of the civil theology, Seneca preferred, as the best course to be followed by a wise man, to feign respect for them in act, but to have no real regard for them at heart. "All which things," he says, "a wise man will observe as being commanded by the laws, but not as being pleasing to the gods." And a little after he says, "And what of this, that we unite the gods in marriage, and that not even naturally, for we join brothers and sisters? We marry Bellona to Mars, Venus to Vulcan, Salacia to Neptune. Some of them we leave unmarried, as though there were no match for them, which is surely needless, especially when there are certain unmarried goddesses, as Populonia, or Fulgora, or the goddess Rumina, for whom I am not astonished that suitors have been awanting. All this ignoble crowd of gods, which the superstition of ages has amassed, we ought," he says, "to adore in such a way as to remember all the while that its worship belongs rather to custom than to reality." Wherefore, neither those laws nor customs instituted in the civil theology that which was pleasing to the gods, or which pertained to reality. But this man, whom philosophy had made, as it were, free, nevertheless, because he was an illustrious senator of the Roman people, worshipped what he censured, did what he condemned, adored what he reproached, because, forsooth, philosophy had taught him something great,namely, not to be superstitious in the world, but, on account of the laws of cities and the customs of men, to be an actor, not on the stage, but in the temples,conduct the more to be condemned, that those things which he was deceitfully acting he so acted that the people thought he was acting sincerely. But a stage-actor would rather delight people by acting plays than take them in by false pretences.
11. What Seneca thought concerning the Jews.
Seneca, among the other superstitions of civil theology,[Pg 256] also found fault with the sacred things of the Jews, and especially the sabbaths, affirming that they act uselessly in keeping those seventh days, whereby they lose through idleness about the seventh part of their life, and also many things which demand immediate attention are damaged. The Christians, however, who were already most hostile to the Jews, he did not dare to mention, either for praise or blame, lest, if he praised them, he should do so against the ancient custom of his country, or, perhaps, if he should blame them, he should do so against his own will.
BOOK V. - Of fate, freewill, and God's prescience, and of the source of the virtues of the ancient Romans, #City of God, #Saint Augustine of Hippo, #Christianity
But, as to those who call by the name of fate, not the disposition of the stars as it may exist when any creature is conceived, or born, or commences its existence, but the whole connection and train of causes which makes everything become what it does become, there is no need that I should labour and strive with them in a merely verbal controversy, since they attri bute the so-called order and connection of causes to the will and power of God most high, who is most rightly and most truly believed to know all things before they come[Pg 189] to pass, and to leave nothing unordained; from whom are all powers, although the wills of all are not from Him. Now, that it is chiefly the will of God most high, whose power extends itself irresistibly through all things which they call fate, is proved by the following verses, of which, if I mistake not, Annus Seneca is the author:
"Father supreme, Thou ruler of the lofty heavens, Lead me where'er it is Thy pleasure; I will give A prompt obedience, making no delay, Lo! here I am. Promptly I come to do Thy sovereign will; If Thy comm and shall thwart my inclination, I will still Follow Thee groaning, and the work assigned, With all the suffering of a mind repugnant, Will perform, being evil; which, had I been good, I should have undertaken and performed, though hard, With virtuous cheerfulness. The Fates do lead the man that follows willing; But the man that is unwilling, him they drag."[187]
BOOK XIII. - That death is penal, and had its origin in Adam's sin, #City of God, #Saint Augustine of Hippo, #Christianity
[61] Diogenes especially, and his followers. See also Seneca, De Tranq. c. 14, and Epist. 92; and in Cicero's Tusc. Disp. i. 43, the answer of Theodorus, the Cyrenian philosopher, to Lysimachus, who threatened him with the cross: "Threaten that to your courtiers; it is of no consequence to Theodorus whether he rot in the earth or in the air."
[62] Lucan, Pharsalia, vii. 819, of those whom Csar forbade to be buried after the battle of Pharsalia.
--
[95] Ter. Eun. iii. 5. 36; and cf. the similar allusion in Aristoph. Clouds, 1033-4. It may be added that the argument of this chapter was largely used by the wiser of the hea then themselves. Dionysius Hal. (ii. 20) and Seneca (De Brev. Vit. c. xvi.) make the very same complaint; and it will be remembered that his adoption of this reasoning was one of the grounds on which Euripides was suspected of atheism.
[96] This sentence recalls Augustine's own experience as a boy, which he bewails in his Confessions.
--
[332] The distinction between bona and commoda is thus given by Seneca (Ep. 87, ad fin.): "Commodum est quod plus usus est quam molesti; bonum sincerum debet esse et ab omni parte innoxium."
[333] Book xix. ch. 1.
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[336] Seneca, De Clem. ii. 4 and 5.
[337] Pro. Lig. c. 12.
--
[585] Much of this paradoxical statement about death is taken from Seneca. See, among other places, his epistle on the premeditation of future dangers, the passage beginning, "Quotidie morimur, quotidie enim demitur aliqua pars vit."
[586] Ecclus. xi. 28.
COSA - BOOK V, #The Confessions of Saint Augustine, #Saint Augustine of Hippo, #Christianity
Orations, a very few books of Seneca, some things of the poets, and such
few volumes of his own sect as were written in Latin and neatly, and
ENNEAD 01.04 - Whether Animals May Be Termed Happy., #Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 04, #Plotinus, #Christianity
8. If the griefs that he himself undergoes are great, he will support them as well as he can; if they exceed his power of endurance, they will carry him off (as thought Seneca9). In either case, he will not, in the midst of his sufferings, excite any pity: (ever master of his reason) he will not allow his own characteristic light to be extinguished. Thus the flame in the lighthouse continues to shine, in spite of the raging of the tempest, in spite of the violent blowing of the winds. (He should not be upset) even by loss of consciousness, or even if pain becomes so strong that its violence could almost annihilate him. If pain become more intense, he will decide as to what to do; for, under these circumstances, freedom of will is not necessarily lost (for suicide remains possible, as thought Seneca10). Besides, we must realize that these sufferings do not present themselves to the wise man, under the same light as to the common man; that all these need not penetrate to the sanctuary of the man's life; which indeed happens with the greater part of pains, griefs and evils that we see being suffered by others; it would be proof of weakness to be affected thereby. A no less manifest mark of weakness is to consider it an advantage to ignore all these evils, and to esteem ourselves happy that they happen only after death,11 without sympathizing with the fate of others, and thinking only to spare ourselves some grief. This would be a weakness that we should eliminate in ourselves, not allowing ourselves to be frightened by the fear of what might happen. The objection that it is natural to be afflicted at the misfortunes of those who surround us, meets the answer that, to begin with, it is not so with every person; then, that it is part of the duty of virtue to ameliorate the common condition of1032 human nature, and to raise it to what is more beautiful, rising above the opinions of the common people. It is indeed beautiful not to yield to what the common people usually consider to be evils. We should struggle against the blows of fortune not by affected ignoring (of difficulties, like an ostrich), but as a skilful athlete who knows that the dangers he is incurring are feared by certain natures, though a nature such as his bears them easily, seeing in them nothing terrible, or at least considering them terrifying only to children. Certainly, the wise man would not have invited these evils; but on being overtaken by them he opposes to them the virtue which renders the soul unshakable and impassible.
WISDOM IS NONE THE LESS HAPPY FOR BEING UNCONSCIOUS OF ITSELF.
ENNEAD 02.09 - Against the Gnostics; or, That the Creator and the World are Not Evil., #Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 02, #Plotinus, #Christianity
204 Cicero, Orator 2; Seneca, Controversiae v. 36.
205 ii. 8.1.
ENNEAD 03.07 - Of Time and Eternity., #Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 03, #Plotinus, #Christianity
221 As thought Heraclitus and the Stoics, who thought that the stars fed themselves from the exhalations of the earth and the waters; see Seneca, Nat. Quest. vi. 16.
222 See ii. 1.5.
ENNEAD 06.05 - The One and Identical Being is Everywhere Present In Its Entirety.345, #Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 04, #Plotinus, #Christianity
His last period was Stoic practise, for so zealously did he practise austerities that his death was, at1281 least, hastened thereby.446 It is unlikely that he would have followed Stoic precepts without some sympathy for, or acquaintance with their philosophical doctrines; and as we saw above, Porphyry acknowledges Plotinos's writings contain hidden Stoic pieces.447 Then, Plotinos spent the last period of his life in Rome, where ruled, in philosophical circles, the traditions of Cicero, Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus Aurelius.
That these Stoic practices became fatal to him is significant when we remember that this occurred during the final absence of Porphyry, who may, during his presence, have exerted a friendly restraint on the zealous master. At any rate, it was during Porphyry's regime that the chief works of Plotinos were written, including a bitter diatribe against the Gnostics, who remained the chief protagonists of dualism and belief in positive evil. Prophyry's work, "De Abstinentia," proves clearly enough his Stoic sympathies.
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8 In Plutarch, of Wickedness, and in Seneca, de Tranquil, Animi, 14.
9 De Providentia, 3.
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42 Seneca, de Provid. 2.
43 In his Republic, ix. p. 585, Cary, 10.
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77 Marcus Aurelius, Medit. vii. 9; Seneca, Epist. 94.
78 Numenius, iii. 7.
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216 Seneca, Quest. Nat. i. 1.
217 See iii. 4.2, 4.
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238 Seneca, Nat. Quest. ii. 32.
239 According to Aristotle, Met. xii. 3.
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255 See iii. 3.1, 2; see Seneca, de Provid. 5.
256 See ii. 3.17; iii. 8.
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258 See ii. 4; Seneca, de Provid. 5.
259 See ii. 9.2; iii. 2, 3. Seneca, de Provid. 5.
260 Or generative reasons, a Stoic term, Seneca, Quest. Nat. iii. 29; see iii. 3.1, 2, 7.
261 Plotinos is here harking back to his very earliest writing, 1.6, where, before his monistic adventure with Porphyry, he had, under the Numenian influence of Amelius, constructed his system out of a combination of the doctrines of Plato (about the ideas), Aristotle (the distinctions of form and matter and of potentiality and actualization), and the Stoic (the "reasons," "seminal reasons," action and passions, and "hexis," or "habit," the inorganic informing principle). Of these, Numenius seems to have lacked the Aristotelian doctrines, although he left Plato's single triple-functioned soul for Aristotle's combination of souls of various degrees (fr. 53). Plotinos, therefore, seems to have distinguished in every object two elements, matter and form (ii. 4.1; ii. 5.2). Matter inheres potentially in all beings (ii. 5.3, 4) and therefore is non-being, ugliness, and evil (i. 6.6). Form is the actualization (K. Steinhart's Melemata Plotiniana, p. 31; ii. 5.2); that is, the essence and power (vi. 4.9), which are inseparable. Form alone possesses real existence, beauty and goodness. Form has four degrees: idea, reason, nature and habit; which degrees are the same as those of thought and life (Porphyry, Principles 12, 13, 14). The idea is distinguished into "idea" or intelligible Form, or "eidos," principle of human intellectual life. Reason is 1, divine (theios logos, i. 6, 2; the reason that comes from the universal Soul, iv. 3.10), 2, human (principle of the rational life, see Ficinus on ii. 6.2); 3, the seminal or generative reason (principle of the life of sensation, which imparts to the body the sense-form, "morph," 3.12-end; Bouillet, i. 365). Now reasons reside in the soul (ii. 4.12), and are simultaneously essences and powers (vi. 4.9), and as powers produce the nature, and as essences, the habits. Now nature ("physis") is the principle of the vegetative life, and habit, "hexis," Numenius, fr. 55, see ii. 4.16, is the principle of unity of inorganic things.
Liber 46 - The Key of the Mysteries, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
of this monster. Seneca, Burrhus, Thrasea, Corbulon, theirs is the real
guilt of that fearful reign; great men who were either selfish or
Medea - A Vergillian Cento, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
C. Dogson, 1842]). The story, of Medea was, of course, by this point well-known in Rome through such works as Seneca's Medea, and there
is little here not found there, but it is an interesting composition nonetheless, though more for its style than its content.
Talks With Sri Aurobindo 1, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
could fight also but not always so well. Take the Roman thinkersLucretius, Cicero, Seneca, all owe their philosophy to the Greeks.
That, again, is an illustration of what I was saying about the inrush of
The Dwellings of the Philosophers, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
In being born, we die every day. A serious thought of Seneca, the philosopher, an axiom
which we would hardly expect to find here. Evidently, this profound albeit ethical truth,
the Eternal Wisdom, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
16) A happy life is the fruit of wisdom achieved; life bearable, of wisdom commenced. ~ Seneca
17) Wisdom is a well-spring of life unto him that hath it. ~ Proverbs
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30) Wisdom is a thing vast and grand. She demands all the time that one can consecrate to her. ~ Seneca
31) To find our real being and know it truly is to acquire wisdom. ~ Porphyry
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10) Would you call Him Destiny? You will not be wrong. Providence? You will say well. Nature? That too you may. ~ Seneca
11) The Being that is one, sages speak of in many terms. ~ Rig Veda
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1) For what is God? He is the soul of the universe. ~ Seneca
2) He is the soul of all conscious creatures, who constitutes all things in this world, those which are beyond our senses and those which fall within their range. ~ Aswaghosha
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5) If the soul would give itself leisure to take breath and return into itself, it would be easy for it to draw from its own depths the seeds of the true. ~ Seneca
6) Assuredly, whoever wishes to discover the universal truth must sound the depths of his own heart. ~ J. Tauler, "Institutions."
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9) Your greatness is within and only in yourselves can you find a spectacle worthy of your regard. ~ Seneca
10) Seek and you shall find.... It is when we seek for the things which are within us that quest leads to discovery. ~ Meng-Tse II. 7.3
11) Our true glory and true riches are within. ~ Seneca
12) Of what use is it to run painfully about the troubled world of visible things when there is a purer world within ourselves? ~ Novalis, "The Disciples at Sais."
13) The soul will enjoy veritable felicity when, separating itself from the darkness which surrounds it, it is able to contemplate with a sure gaze the divine light at its source. ~ Seneca
14) Each descent of the gaze on oneself is at the same time an ascension, an assumption, a gaze on the true objectivity. ~ Novalis, "Fragments."
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15) How can the soul which misunderstands itself, have a sure idea of other creatures? ~ Seneca
16) The soul of man is the mirror of the world. ~ Leibnitz
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23) Take care that the reading of numerous writers and books of all kinds does not confuse and trouble thy reason. ~ Seneca
24) It would be better not to have books than to believe all that is found in them. ~ Meng Tse. VII. II. III. 1
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8) Let us lend ear to the sages who point out to us the way. ~ Seneca
9) Employ all the leisure you have in listening to the well-informed; so you shall learn without difficulty what they have learned by long labour. ~ Isocrates
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3) It is extravagance to ask of others what can be procured by oneself. ~ Seneca: Epistles
4) The superior soul asks nothing from any but itself. The vulgar and unmeritable man asks everything of others. ~ Confucius: Lia yu II XV. 20
5) I call him a man who recognises no possessions save those he finds in himself. ~ Seneca
6) He governs his soul and expects nothing from others. ~ Confucius
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9) Nothing is so dangerous as the habit we have of referring to a common opinion. So long as one trusts other people without taking the trouble to judge for oneself, one lives by the faith of others, error is passed on from hand to hand and example destroys us. ~ Seneca
10) To believe blindly is bad. Reason, judge for yourselves, experiment, verify whether what you have been told is true or false. ~ Vivekananda
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16) Let us take care above all not to walk like a flock of sheep each in the other's traces; let us inform ourselves rather of the place where we ought to go than of that where others are going. ~ Seneca
17) They will renounce even the treading in the tracks of their fathers and ancestors. They will shut the doors of friendship and hatred on all the dwellers in the world. ~ Baha-ullah
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15). Deliver thyself from the inconstancy of human things. ~ Seneca: De Providentia
The Kena Upanishad - V View Similar The Doctrine of the Mystics
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2) Let us attach ourselves to a solid good, to a good that shines within and not externally. Let us devote all our efforts to its discovery. ~ Seneca
3) Attach thyself to the sense of-things and not to their form. The sense is the essential, the form is only an encumbrance. ~ Farid-ud.din-attar : Mantic uttair
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13) There is no peace for the man who is troubled with thought for the future, makes himself unhappy before even unhappiness comes to him and claims to assure till the end of his life his possession of the objects to which he is attached. ~ Seneca
14) Give not thy heart over to anxieties. ~ Mahabharara
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4) He is the happy man whose soul is superior to all happenings. ~ Seneca
5) All the accidents of life can be turned to our profit. ~ Seneca
6) In all things to do what depends on oneself and for the rest to remain firm and calm. ~ Epictetus
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22) The perfection of virtue consists in a certain equality of soul and of conduct which should remain un-alterable. ~ Seneca
23) The wise in joy and in sorrow depart not from the equality of their souls. ~ Buddhist Text
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3) Nature has given us strengths in sufficiency, if only we choose to avail ourselves of them and if we collect and employ them all to our profit instead of turning them against ourselves. Our ill will is the cause of what we attri bute to a pretended impossibility. ~ Seneca
4) If a thing is difficult for thee, imagine not therefore! that it is impossible to man; but if a thing is possible and proper to man, think that it is accessible to thee also. ~ Marcus Aurelius
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8) The sage here surpasses God. God fears nothing by the benefit of his nature; the sage fears nothing, but by the sole strength of his spirit. This indeed is great, to have the weakness of a mortal and yet the fearlessness of a god. ~ Seneca
9) It is only the coward who appeals always to destiny and never to courage. ~ Ramayana
10) Fortune fears the brave soul; she crushes the coward. ~ Seneca
11) He who shows not zeal where zeal should be shown, who young and strong gives himself up to indolence, who lets his will and intelligence sleep, that do-nothing, that coward shall not find the way of the perfect knowledge. ~ Dhammapada 280
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7) The least indigent mortal is the one who desires the least. We have everything we wish when we wish only for what is sufficient. ~ Seneca
8) Many things are wanting to indigence, but everything is wanting to greed. A covetous man is useful to none and still less is he of any good to himself. ~ Seneca
9) To covet external objects is to defile the mind. ~ Chu-King
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7) Life is not short if it is filled. The way to fill it is to compel the soul to enjoy its own wealth and to become its own master. ~ Seneca
8) Our intelligence ought to govern us as a herdsman governs his goats, cows and sheep, preferring for himself and his herd all that is useful and agreeable. ~ Philo
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20) The sage should be figured in the image of a robust athlete whom long exercise has hardened, one who can baffle the efforts of the most obstinate enemy. ~ Seneca
21) He is the perfect athlete who surmounts temptations and the incline of his nature towards sin and exercises over his mind domination and empire. ~ J. Tauler. Institutions
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2)We should follow the law which Nature has engraved in our hearts. Wisdom lies in the perfect observation of her law. ~ Seneca
3)What is the true law? It is a right reason invariable, eternal, in conformity with Nature, -which is extended in all human being. ~ Cicero
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8)The sovereign good has its abode in the soul; when that is upright, attentive to its duties, shut in upon itself, it has nothing to desire, it enjoys a perfect happiness. ~ Seneca
9)Learn what are the duties which are engraved in the hearts of men as their means of arriving to beatitude. ~ Laws of Manu
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11)Let the soul be submitted within to an upright judge whose authority extends over our most secret actions. ~ Seneca
12) Whosoever desireth salvation hath no expectation from man, but from him alone who dwelleth in him inwardly and from within the voice speaketh to him; then is he astonished that such words he hath never heard from any mouth, nor hath ever desired to hear them. ~ Epistle of St. Barnabas
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17) Thyself vindicate thyself. ~ Seneca
18)Subject thyself to thee. ~ Bhagavad Gita XII. 11
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7) Let us have always in our hearts this thought: I am a man and nothing that interests humanity is foreign to me. We have a common birth; our society resembles the stones of a road that sustain each other. ~ Seneca
8) One can be solitary in a secluded and temporary environment ; but each of our thoughts and each of our feelings finds, has found and will find an echo in humanity. ~ Amiel
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11) All this universe, and in that word are comprised things divine and human, all is only one great body of which we are the members. ~ Seneca
12) This world is a people of friends, and these friends are first the gods and next men whom Nature has made for each other. ~ Epictetus
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13) If man thinks only of himself and seeks everywhere his own profit, he cannot be happy. If thou wouldst really live for thyself, live for others. ~ Seneca
14) If thou livest for thyself alone, thou feelest thyself surrounded by enemies and the happiness of each an obstacle to thy own happiness. Live for others and thou wilt feel thyself surrounded by friends and the happiness of each will become thy happiness. ~ Tolstoi
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2) The duty of man is to be useful to men: to a great number if he can, if not, to a small number, otherwise to his neighbours, otherwise to himself : in making himself useful to himself, he works for others. As the vicious man injures not only himself but also those to whom he might have been useful if he had been virtuous, likewise in labouring for oneself one labours also for others, since there is formed a man who can be of use to them. ~ Seneca
3) The most perfect man is the one who is most useful to others. ~ Koran
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10) Let us think that we are born for the common good. ~ Seneca
11) Let us be one even with those who do not wish to be one with us. ~ Bossuet
--
27) We shall labour to our last sigh, we shall never cease from contri buting to the common good, serving every individual, helping even our enemies, exercising our talents and our industry. We know not an age destined to repose and, like the heroes of whom Virgil tells, our hair grows white under the helmet. ~ Seneca
Towards the Supramental Time Vision View Similar Concord
The Immortal, #Labyrinths, #Jorge Luis Borges, #Poetry
Among the commentaries inspired by the foregoing publication, the most curious (if not most urbane) is biblically titled A Coat of Many Colours (Manchester, 1948); it is the work of the supremely persvrant pen of Dr. Nahum Cordovero, and contains some hundred pages. It speaks of the Greek anthologies, of the anthologies of late Latin texts, of that Ben Johnson who defined his contemporaries with excerpts from Seneca, of Alexander Ross's Virgilius evangelizans, of the artifices of George Moore and Eliot, and, finally, of "the tale attri buted to the rare-book dealer Joseph Cartaphilus." In the first chapter it points out brief interpolations from Pliny (Historia naturate, V:8); in the second, from Thomas de Quincey (Writings, III: 439); in the third, from a letter written by Descartes to the ambassador Pierre Chanut; in the fourth, from Bernard Shaw (Back to Methuselah, V). From those "intrusions" (or thefts) it infers that the entire document is apocryphal.
To my way of thinking, that conclusion is unacceptable. As the end approaches, wrote Cartaphilus, there are no longer any images from memory - there are only words. Words, words, words taken out of place and mutilated, words from other men - those were the alms left him by the hours and the centuries.
Timaeus, #unset, #Anonymous, #Various
2. It is an interesting and not unimportant question which is touched upon by Martin, whether the Atlantis of Plato in any degree held out a guiding light to the early navigators. He is inclined to think that there is no real connexion between them. But surely the discovery of the New World was preceded by a prophetic anticipation of it, which, like the hope of a Messiah, was entering into the hearts of men? And this hope was nursed by ancient tradition, which had found expression from time to time in the celebrated lines of Seneca and in many other places. This tradition was sustained by the great authority of Plato, and therefore the legend of the Island of Atlantis, though not closely connected with the voyages of the early navigators, may be truly said to have contri buted indirectly to the great discovery.
The Timaeus of Plato, like the Protagoras and several portions of the Phaedrus and Republic, was translated by Cicero into Latin. About a fourth, comprehending with lacunae the first portion of the dialogue, is preserved in several MSS. These generally agree, and therefore may be supposed to be derived from a single original. The version is very faithful, and is a remarkable monument of Cicero's skill in managing the difficult and intractable Greek. In his treatise De Natura Deorum, he also refers to the Timaeus, which, speaking in the person of Velleius the Epicurean, he severely criticises.
--- Overview of noun seneca
The noun seneca has 3 senses (no senses from tagged texts)
1. Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca ::: (Roman statesman and philosopher who was an advisor to Nero; his nine extant tragedies are modeled on Greek tragedies (circa 4 BC - 65 AD))
2. Seneca ::: (a member of the Iroquoian people formerly living in New York State south of Lake Ontario)
3. Seneca ::: (the Iroquoian language spoken by the Seneca)
--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun seneca
3 senses of seneca
Sense 1
Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
INSTANCE OF=> statesman, solon, national leader
=> politician, politico, pol, political leader
=> leader
=> person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
=> organism, being
=> living thing, animate thing
=> whole, unit
=> object, physical object
=> physical entity
=> entity
=> causal agent, cause, causal agency
=> physical entity
=> entity
INSTANCE OF=> dramatist, playwright
=> writer, author
=> communicator
=> person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
=> organism, being
=> living thing, animate thing
=> whole, unit
=> object, physical object
=> physical entity
=> entity
=> causal agent, cause, causal agency
=> physical entity
=> entity
INSTANCE OF=> philosopher
=> scholar, scholarly person, bookman, student
=> intellectual, intellect
=> person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
=> organism, being
=> living thing, animate thing
=> whole, unit
=> object, physical object
=> physical entity
=> entity
=> causal agent, cause, causal agency
=> physical entity
=> entity
Sense 2
Seneca
=> Iroquois
=> Indian, American Indian, Red Indian
=> Amerindian, Native American
=> person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
=> organism, being
=> living thing, animate thing
=> whole, unit
=> object, physical object
=> physical entity
=> entity
=> causal agent, cause, causal agency
=> physical entity
=> entity
=> person of color, person of colour
=> person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
=> organism, being
=> living thing, animate thing
=> whole, unit
=> object, physical object
=> physical entity
=> entity
=> causal agent, cause, causal agency
=> physical entity
=> entity
Sense 3
Seneca
=> Iroquoian, Iroquois, Iroquoian language
=> Amerind, Amerindian language, American-Indian language, American Indian, Indian
=> natural language, tongue
=> language, linguistic communication
=> communication
=> abstraction, abstract entity
=> entity
--- Hyponyms of noun seneca
--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun seneca
3 senses of seneca
Sense 1
Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
INSTANCE OF=> statesman, solon, national leader
INSTANCE OF=> dramatist, playwright
INSTANCE OF=> philosopher
Sense 2
Seneca
=> Iroquois
Sense 3
Seneca
=> Iroquoian, Iroquois, Iroquoian language
--- Coordinate Terms (sisters) of noun seneca
3 senses of seneca
Sense 1
Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
-> statesman, solon, national leader
=> elder statesman
=> Founding Father
=> stateswoman
HAS INSTANCE=> Acheson, Dean Acheson, Dean Gooderham Acheson
HAS INSTANCE=> Adenauer, Konrad Adenauer
HAS INSTANCE=> Agrippa, Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa
HAS INSTANCE=> Alcibiades
HAS INSTANCE=> Arafat, Yasser Arafat
HAS INSTANCE=> Ataturk, Kemal Ataturk, Kemal Pasha, Mustafa Kemal
HAS INSTANCE=> Attlee, Clement Attlee, Clement Richard Attlee, 1st Earl Attlee
HAS INSTANCE=> Augustus, Gaius Octavianus, Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus, Octavian
HAS INSTANCE=> Bacon, Francis Bacon, Sir Francis Bacon, Baron Verulam, 1st Baron Verulam, Viscount St. Albans
HAS INSTANCE=> Baldwin, Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley
HAS INSTANCE=> Balfour, Arthur James Balfour, 1st Earl of Balfour
HAS INSTANCE=> Baruch, Bernard Baruch, Bernard Mannes Baruch
HAS INSTANCE=> Begin, Menachem Begin
HAS INSTANCE=> Ben Gurion, David Ben Gurion, David Grun
HAS INSTANCE=> Bevin, Ernest Bevin
HAS INSTANCE=> Bismarck, von Bismarck, Otto von Bismarck, Prince Otto von Bismarck, Prince Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck, Iron Chancellor
HAS INSTANCE=> Blair, Tony Blair, Anthony Charles Lynton Blair
HAS INSTANCE=> Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius
HAS INSTANCE=> Bolivar, Simon Bolivar, El Libertador
HAS INSTANCE=> Brandt, Willy Brandt
HAS INSTANCE=> Brezhnev, Leonid Brezhnev, Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev
HAS INSTANCE=> Brutus, Marcus Junius Brutus
HAS INSTANCE=> Burke, Edmund Burke
HAS INSTANCE=> Caesar, Julius Caesar, Gaius Julius Caesar
HAS INSTANCE=> Cassius, Cassius Longinus, Gaius Cassius Longinus
HAS INSTANCE=> Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain, Arthur Neville Chamberlain
HAS INSTANCE=> Chateaubriand, Francois Rene Chateaubriand, Vicomte de Chateaubriand
HAS INSTANCE=> Chesterfield, Fourth Earl of Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope
HAS INSTANCE=> Chiang Kai-shek, Chiang Chung-cheng
HAS INSTANCE=> Churchill, Winston Churchill, Winston S. Churchill, Sir Winston Leonard Spenser Churchill
HAS INSTANCE=> Cicero, Marcus Tullius Cicero, Tully
HAS INSTANCE=> Cincinnatus, Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus
HAS INSTANCE=> Clemenceau, Georges Clemenceau, Georges Eugene Benjamin Clemenceau
HAS INSTANCE=> Clive, Robert Clive, Baron Clive, Baron Clive of Plassey
HAS INSTANCE=> Cosimo de Medici, Cosimo the Elder
HAS INSTANCE=> Cromwell, Oliver Cromwell, Ironsides
HAS INSTANCE=> Davis, Jefferson Davis
HAS INSTANCE=> Dayan, Moshe Dayan
HAS INSTANCE=> de Gaulle, General de Gaulle, Charles de Gaulle, General Charles de Gaulle, Charles Andre Joseph Marie de Gaulle
HAS INSTANCE=> Demosthenes
HAS INSTANCE=> Deng Xiaoping, Teng Hsiao-ping, Teng Hsiaoping
HAS INSTANCE=> de Valera, Eamon de Valera
HAS INSTANCE=> Disraeli, Benjamin Disraeli, First Earl of Beaconsfield
HAS INSTANCE=> Flaminius, Gaius Flaminius
HAS INSTANCE=> Fox, Charles James Fox
HAS INSTANCE=> Gandhi, Indira Gandhi, Indira Nehru Gandhi, Mrs. Gandhi
HAS INSTANCE=> Gladstone, William Gladstone, William Ewart Gladstone
HAS INSTANCE=> Gorbachev, Mikhail Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev
HAS INSTANCE=> Grey, Charles Grey, Second Earl Grey
HAS INSTANCE=> Haldane, Richard Haldane, Richard Burdon Haldane, First Viscount Haldane of Cloan
HAS INSTANCE=> Hamilton, Alexander Hamilton
HAS INSTANCE=> Havel, Vaclav Havel
HAS INSTANCE=> Hindenburg, Paul von Hindenburg, Paul Ludwig von Beneckendorff und von Hindenburg
HAS INSTANCE=> Ho Chi Minh, Nguyen Tat Thanh
HAS INSTANCE=> Jinnah, Muhammad Ali Jinnah
HAS INSTANCE=> Kalinin, Mikhail Kalinin, Mikhail Ivanovich Kalinin
HAS INSTANCE=> Kaunda, Kenneth Kaunda, Kenneth David Kaunda
HAS INSTANCE=> Kenyata, Jomo Kenyata
HAS INSTANCE=> Kerensky, Aleksandr Feodorovich Kerensky
HAS INSTANCE=> Khama, Sir Seretse Khama
HAS INSTANCE=> Khrushchev, Nikita Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev
HAS INSTANCE=> Konoe, Fumimaro Konoe, Prince Fumimaro Konoe, Konoye, Fumimaro Konoye, Prince Fumimaro Konoye
HAS INSTANCE=> Kruger, Oom Paul Kruger, Stephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger
HAS INSTANCE=> Lorenzo de'Medici, Lorenzo the Magnificent
HAS INSTANCE=> Machiavelli, Niccolo Machiavelli
HAS INSTANCE=> Major, John Major, John R. Major, John Roy Major
HAS INSTANCE=> Mandela, Nelson Mandela, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela
HAS INSTANCE=> Marshall, George Marshall, George Catlett Marshall
HAS INSTANCE=> Meir, Golda Meir
HAS INSTANCE=> Metternich, Klemens Metternich, Prince Klemens Wenzel Nepomuk Lothar von Metternich
HAS INSTANCE=> Mitterrand, Francois Mitterrand, Francois Maurice Marie Mitterrand
HAS INSTANCE=> Molotov, Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov
HAS INSTANCE=> More, Thomas More, Sir Thomas More
HAS INSTANCE=> Morris, Gouverneur Morris
HAS INSTANCE=> Mubarak, Hosni Mubarak
HAS INSTANCE=> Nansen, Fridtjof Nansen
HAS INSTANCE=> Nasser, Gamal Abdel Nasser
HAS INSTANCE=> Nehru, Jawaharlal Nehru
HAS INSTANCE=> North, Frederick North, Second Earl of Guilford
HAS INSTANCE=> Ortega, Daniel Ortega, Daniel Ortega Saavedra
HAS INSTANCE=> Paderewski, Ignace Paderewski, Ignace Jan Paderewski
HAS INSTANCE=> Pericles
HAS INSTANCE=> Pitt, William Pitt, First Earl of Chatham, Pitt the Elder
HAS INSTANCE=> Pitt, William Pitt, Second Earl of Chatham, Pitt the Younger
HAS INSTANCE=> Pompey, Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, Pompey the Great
HAS INSTANCE=> Powell, Colin Powell, Colin luther Powell
HAS INSTANCE=> Putin, Vladimir Putin, Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin
HAS INSTANCE=> Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
HAS INSTANCE=> Richelieu, Duc de Richelieu, Armand Jean du Plessis, Cardinal Richelieu
HAS INSTANCE=> Rockingham, Second Marquis of Rockingham, Charles Watson-Wentworth
HAS INSTANCE=> Sadat, Anwar Sadat, Anwar el-Sadat
HAS INSTANCE=> Schmidt, Helmut Schmidt, Helmut Heinrich Waldemar Schmidt
HAS INSTANCE=> Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
HAS INSTANCE=> Smith, Ian Smith, Ian Douglas Smith
HAS INSTANCE=> Smuts, Jan Christian Smuts
HAS INSTANCE=> Suharto
HAS INSTANCE=> Sukarno, Achmad Sukarno
HAS INSTANCE=> Sully, Duc de Sully, Maxmilien de Bethune
HAS INSTANCE=> Sun Yat-sen, Sun Yixian
HAS INSTANCE=> Talleyrand, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand
HAS INSTANCE=> Themistocles
HAS INSTANCE=> Tito, Marshal Tito, Josip Broz
HAS INSTANCE=> Vargas, Getulio Dornelles Vargas
HAS INSTANCE=> Verwoerd, Hendrik Verwoerd, Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd
HAS INSTANCE=> Waldheim, Kurt Waldheim
HAS INSTANCE=> Walesa, Lech Walesa
HAS INSTANCE=> Walpole, Robert Walpole, Sir Robert Walpole, First Earl of Orford
HAS INSTANCE=> Warwick, Earl of Warwick, Richard Neville, Kingmaker
HAS INSTANCE=> Weizmann, Chaim Weizmann, Chaim Azriel Weizmann
HAS INSTANCE=> Wellington, Duke of Wellington, First Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley, Iron Duke
HAS INSTANCE=> Wykeham, William of Wykeham
-> dramatist, playwright
HAS INSTANCE=> Aeschylus
HAS INSTANCE=> Albee, Edward Albee, Edward Franklin Albeen
HAS INSTANCE=> Anderson, Maxwell Anderson
HAS INSTANCE=> Anouilh, Jean Anouilh
HAS INSTANCE=> Aristophanes
HAS INSTANCE=> Barrie, James Barrie, J. M. Barrie, James Matthew Barrie, Sir James Matthew Barrie
HAS INSTANCE=> Beaumont, Francis Beaumont
HAS INSTANCE=> Beckett, Samuel Beckett
HAS INSTANCE=> Brecht, Bertolt Brecht
HAS INSTANCE=> Calderon, Calderon de la Barca, Pedro Calderon de la Barca
HAS INSTANCE=> Capek, Karel Capek
HAS INSTANCE=> Cervantes, Miguel de Cervantes, Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
HAS INSTANCE=> Chekhov, Chekov, Anton Chekhov, Anton Chekov, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich Chekov
HAS INSTANCE=> Congreve, William Congreve
HAS INSTANCE=> Corneille, Pierre Corneille
HAS INSTANCE=> Coward, Noel Coward, Sir Noel Pierce Coward
HAS INSTANCE=> Crouse, Russel Crouse
HAS INSTANCE=> Cyrano de Bergerac, Savinien Cyrano de Bergerac
HAS INSTANCE=> Dekker, Decker, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Decker
HAS INSTANCE=> Dryden, John Dryden
HAS INSTANCE=> Eliot, T. S. Eliot, Thomas Stearns Eliot
HAS INSTANCE=> Euripides
HAS INSTANCE=> Fletcher, John Fletcher
HAS INSTANCE=> Fry, Christopher Fry
HAS INSTANCE=> Fugard, Athol Fugard
HAS INSTANCE=> Garcia Lorca, Frederico Garcia Lorca, Lorca
HAS INSTANCE=> Genet, Jean Genet
HAS INSTANCE=> Gide, Andre Gide, Andre Paul Guillaume Gide
HAS INSTANCE=> Giraudoux, Jean Giraudoux, Hippolyte Jean Giraudoux
HAS INSTANCE=> Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
HAS INSTANCE=> Goldoni, Carlo Goldoni
HAS INSTANCE=> Granville-Barker, Harley Granville-Barker
HAS INSTANCE=> Hart, Moss Hart
HAS INSTANCE=> Havel, Vaclav Havel
HAS INSTANCE=> Hebbel, Friedrich Hebbel, Christian Friedrich Hebbel
HAS INSTANCE=> Hellman, Lillian Hellman
HAS INSTANCE=> Hugo, Victor Hugo, Victor-Marie Hugo
HAS INSTANCE=> Ibsen, Henrik Ibsen, Henrik Johan Ibsen
HAS INSTANCE=> Inge, William Inge
HAS INSTANCE=> Ionesco, Eugene Ionesco
HAS INSTANCE=> Jonson, Ben Jonson, Benjamin Jonson
HAS INSTANCE=> Kaufman, George S. Kaufman, George Simon Kaufman
HAS INSTANCE=> Kleist, Heinrich von Kleist, Bernd Heinrich Wilhelm von Kleist
HAS INSTANCE=> Kyd, Kid, Thomas Kyd, Thomas Kid
HAS INSTANCE=> Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
HAS INSTANCE=> Lindsay, Howard Lindsay
HAS INSTANCE=> Luce, Clare Booth Luce
HAS INSTANCE=> Maeterlinck, Count Maurice Maeterlinck
HAS INSTANCE=> Mamet, David Mamet
HAS INSTANCE=> Marlowe, Christopher Marlowe
HAS INSTANCE=> Marstan, John Marstan
HAS INSTANCE=> Menander
HAS INSTANCE=> Middleton, Thomas Middleton
HAS INSTANCE=> Miller, Arthur Miller
HAS INSTANCE=> Moliere, Jean-Baptiste Poquelin
HAS INSTANCE=> Molnar, Ferenc Molnar
HAS INSTANCE=> O'Casey, Sean O'Casey
HAS INSTANCE=> Odets, Clifford Odets
HAS INSTANCE=> O'Neill, Eugene O'Neill, Eugene Gladstone O'Neill
HAS INSTANCE=> Osborne, John Osborne, John James Osborne
HAS INSTANCE=> Pinter, Harold Pinter
HAS INSTANCE=> Pirandello, Luigi Pirandello
HAS INSTANCE=> Pitt, George Pitt, George Dibdin Pitt, George Dibdin-Pitt
HAS INSTANCE=> Plautus, Titus Maccius Plautus
HAS INSTANCE=> Racine, Jean Racine, Jean Baptiste Racine
HAS INSTANCE=> Rattigan, Terence Rattigan, Sir Terence Mervyn Rattigan
HAS INSTANCE=> Rice, Elmer Rice, Elmer Leopold Rice, Elmer Reizenstein
HAS INSTANCE=> Robinson, Lennox Robinson, Esme Stuart Lennox Robinson
HAS INSTANCE=> Rostand, Edmond Rostand
HAS INSTANCE=> Sartre, Jean-Paul Sartre
HAS INSTANCE=> Scribe, Augustin Eugene Scribe
HAS INSTANCE=> Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
HAS INSTANCE=> Shakespeare, William Shakespeare, Shakspere, William Shakspere, Bard of Avon
HAS INSTANCE=> Shaw, G. B. Shaw, George Bernard Shaw
HAS INSTANCE=> Shepard, Sam Shepard
HAS INSTANCE=> Sheridan, Richard Brinsley Sheridan
HAS INSTANCE=> Sherwood, Robert Emmet Sherwood
HAS INSTANCE=> Simon, Neil Simon, Marvin Neil Simon
HAS INSTANCE=> Sophocles
HAS INSTANCE=> Stoppard, Tom Stoppard, Sir Tom Stoppard, Thomas Straussler
HAS INSTANCE=> Strindberg, August Strindberg, Johan August Strindberg
HAS INSTANCE=> Synge, J. M. Synge, John Millington Synge, Edmund John Millington Synge
HAS INSTANCE=> Terence, Publius Terentius Afer
HAS INSTANCE=> Tirso de Molina, Gabriel Tellez
HAS INSTANCE=> Ustinov, Sir Peter Ustinov, Peter Alexander Ustinov
HAS INSTANCE=> Vega, Lope de Vega, Lope Felix de Vega Carpio
HAS INSTANCE=> Webster, John Webster
HAS INSTANCE=> Wilde, Oscar Wilde, Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
HAS INSTANCE=> Wilder, Thornton Wilder, Thornton Niven Wilder
HAS INSTANCE=> Williams, Tennessee Williams, Thomas Lanier Williams
HAS INSTANCE=> Wycherley, William Wycherley
HAS INSTANCE=> Yeats, William Butler Yeats, W. B. Yeats
-> philosopher
=> nativist
=> Cynic
=> eclectic, eclecticist
=> empiricist
=> epistemologist
=> esthetician, aesthetician
=> ethicist, ethician
=> existentialist, existentialist philosopher, existential philosopher
=> gymnosophist
=> libertarian
=> mechanist
=> moralist
=> naturalist
=> necessitarian
=> nominalist
=> pluralist
=> pre-Socratic
=> realist
=> Scholastic
=> Sophist
=> Stoic
=> transcendentalist
=> yogi
HAS INSTANCE=> Abelard, Peter Abelard, Pierre Abelard
HAS INSTANCE=> Anaxagoras
HAS INSTANCE=> Anaximander
HAS INSTANCE=> Anaximenes
HAS INSTANCE=> Arendt, Hannah Arendt
HAS INSTANCE=> Aristotle
HAS INSTANCE=> Averroes, ibn-Roshd, Abul-Walid Mohammed ibn-Ahmad Ibn-Mohammed ibn-Roshd
HAS INSTANCE=> Avicenna, ibn-Sina, Abu Ali al-Husain ibn Abdallah ibn Sina
HAS INSTANCE=> Bacon, Francis Bacon, Sir Francis Bacon, Baron Verulam, 1st Baron Verulam, Viscount St. Albans
HAS INSTANCE=> Bentham, Jeremy Bentham
HAS INSTANCE=> Bergson, Henri Bergson, Henri Louis Bergson
HAS INSTANCE=> Berkeley, Bishop Berkeley, George Berkeley
HAS INSTANCE=> Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius
HAS INSTANCE=> Bruno, Giordano Bruno
HAS INSTANCE=> Buber, Martin Buber
HAS INSTANCE=> Cassirer, Ernst Cassirer
HAS INSTANCE=> Cleanthes
HAS INSTANCE=> Comte, Auguste Comte, Isidore Auguste Marie Francois Comte
HAS INSTANCE=> Condorcet, Marquis de Condorcet, Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas Caritat
HAS INSTANCE=> Confucius, Kongfuze, K'ung Futzu, Kong the Master
HAS INSTANCE=> Democritus
HAS INSTANCE=> Derrida, Jacques Derrida
HAS INSTANCE=> Descartes, Rene Descartes
HAS INSTANCE=> Dewey, John Dewey
HAS INSTANCE=> Diderot, Denis Diderot
HAS INSTANCE=> Diogenes
HAS INSTANCE=> Empedocles
HAS INSTANCE=> Epictetus
HAS INSTANCE=> Epicurus
HAS INSTANCE=> Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Haeckel
HAS INSTANCE=> Hartley, David Hartley
HAS INSTANCE=> Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
HAS INSTANCE=> Heraclitus
HAS INSTANCE=> Herbart, Johann Friedrich Herbart
HAS INSTANCE=> Herder, Johann Gottfried von Herder
HAS INSTANCE=> Hobbes, Thomas Hobbes
HAS INSTANCE=> Hume, David Hume
HAS INSTANCE=> Husserl, Edmund Husserl
HAS INSTANCE=> Hypatia
HAS INSTANCE=> James, William James
HAS INSTANCE=> Kant, Immanuel Kant
HAS INSTANCE=> Kierkegaard, Soren Kierkegaard, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
HAS INSTANCE=> Lao-tzu, Lao-tse, Lao-zi
HAS INSTANCE=> Leibniz, Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz
HAS INSTANCE=> Locke, John Locke
HAS INSTANCE=> Lucretius, Titus Lucretius Carus
HAS INSTANCE=> Lully, Raymond Lully, Ramon Lully
HAS INSTANCE=> Mach, Ernst Mach
HAS INSTANCE=> Machiavelli, Niccolo Machiavelli
HAS INSTANCE=> Maimonides, Moses Maimonides, Rabbi Moses Ben Maimon
HAS INSTANCE=> Malebranche, Nicolas de Malebranche
HAS INSTANCE=> Marcuse, Herbert Marcuse
HAS INSTANCE=> Marx, Karl Marx
HAS INSTANCE=> Mead, George Herbert Mead
HAS INSTANCE=> Mill, John Mill, John Stuart Mill
HAS INSTANCE=> Mill, James Mill
HAS INSTANCE=> Montesquieu, Baron de la Brede et de Montesquieu, Charles Louis de Secondat
HAS INSTANCE=> Moore, G. E. Moore, George Edward Moore
HAS INSTANCE=> Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
HAS INSTANCE=> Occam, William of Occam, Ockham, William of Ockham
HAS INSTANCE=> Origen
HAS INSTANCE=> Ortega y Gasset, Jose Ortega y Gasset
HAS INSTANCE=> Parmenides
HAS INSTANCE=> Pascal, Blaise Pascal
HAS INSTANCE=> Peirce, Charles Peirce, Charles Sanders Peirce
HAS INSTANCE=> Perry, Ralph Barton Perry
HAS INSTANCE=> Plato
HAS INSTANCE=> Plotinus
=> Popper, Karl Popper, Sir Karl Raimund Popper
HAS INSTANCE=> Pythagoras
HAS INSTANCE=> Quine, W. V. Quine, Willard Van Orman Quine
HAS INSTANCE=> Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
HAS INSTANCE=> Reid, Thomas Reid
HAS INSTANCE=> Rousseau, Jean-Jacques Rousseau
HAS INSTANCE=> Russell, Bertrand Russell, Bertrand Arthur William Russell, Earl Russell
HAS INSTANCE=> Schopenhauer, Arthur Schopenhauer
HAS INSTANCE=> Schweitzer, Albert Schweitzer
HAS INSTANCE=> Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
HAS INSTANCE=> Socrates
HAS INSTANCE=> Spencer, Herbert Spencer
HAS INSTANCE=> Spengler, Oswald Spengler
HAS INSTANCE=> Spinoza, de Spinoza, Baruch de Spinoza, Benedict de Spinoza
HAS INSTANCE=> Steiner, Rudolf Steiner
HAS INSTANCE=> Stewart, Dugald Stewart
HAS INSTANCE=> Tagore, Rabindranath Tagore, Sir Rabindranath Tagore
HAS INSTANCE=> Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
HAS INSTANCE=> Thales, Thales of Miletus
HAS INSTANCE=> Theophrastus
HAS INSTANCE=> Weil, Simone Weil
HAS INSTANCE=> Whitehead, Alfred North Whitehead
HAS INSTANCE=> Williams, Sir Bernard Williams, Bernard Arthur Owen Williams
HAS INSTANCE=> Wittgenstein, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johan Wittgenstein
HAS INSTANCE=> Xenophanes
HAS INSTANCE=> Zeno, Zeno of Citium
HAS INSTANCE=> Zeno, Zeno of Elea
Sense 2
Seneca
-> Iroquois
=> Cayuga
=> Cherokee
=> Erie
=> Mohawk
=> Oneida
=> Onondaga
=> Seneca
=> Tuscarora
Sense 3
Seneca
-> Iroquoian, Iroquois, Iroquoian language
=> Cherokee
=> Cayuga
=> Mohawk
=> Seneca
=> Oneida
=> Onondaga
=> Tuscarora
--- Grep of noun seneca
lake seneca
lucius annaeus seneca
seneca
seneca lake
seneca snakeroot
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Integral World - Integral Studies and Academia, Barriers and Gateways, Jeff Meyerhoff
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Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth(1992) - A sleazy nightclub owner purchases a strange, disturbing sculpture, which he soon discovers contains a mysterious, ornate puzzle box. This box is a legendary object that promises the secrets of ultimate pain and pleasure, but is in fact a gateway to hell. Soon the box's new owner has unleashed the e...
Lock Up(1989) - Sylvester Stallone plays Frank Leone, a convict that is serving the last few months of his sentence. Leone is transferred in the middle of the night to Gateway Prison where he meets with Warden Drumgoole played by Donald Sutherland. Drumgoole is holding a serious grudge since Leone had escaped from...
Counterpart ::: TV-MA | 1h | Drama, Sci-Fi, Thriller | TV Series (20172019) -- A hapless UN employee discovers that the agency he works for is hiding a gateway to a parallel dimension that's in a cold war with our own, and where his other self is a top spy. The war slowly heats up thanks to spies from both sides. Creator:
Counterpart ::: TV-MA | 1h | Drama, Sci-Fi, Thriller | TV Series (2017-2019) Episode Guide 20 episodes Counterpart Poster -- A hapless UN employee discovers that the agency he works for is hiding a gateway to a parallel dimension that's in a cold war with our own, and where his other self is a top spy. The war slowly heats up thanks to spies from both sides. Creator:
Forbidden Zone (1980) ::: 6.7/10 -- R | 1h 14min | Comedy, Fantasy, Musical | 21 March 1982 (USA) -- The bizarre and musical tale of a girl who travels to another dimension through the gateway found in her family's basement. Director: Richard Elfman Writers: Richard Elfman (story), Richard Elfman (screenplay) | 3 more credits
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Jigokudou Reikai Tsuushin -- -- - -- 1 ep -- Novel -- Fantasy Horror -- Jigokudou Reikai Tsuushin Jigokudou Reikai Tsuushin -- Tetsushi, Ryouchin and Shiina are a youthful trio not to be trifled with; they have a fearsome reputation. One day they decide to enter Jingkudou, a store which is rumored to be the gateway to Hell, the storekeeper sure is creepy enough. He tells them a story and after that they decide, with a magical token provided by the storekeeper, to try and find the restless spirit of a murder victim in order to give her release. This is only the start of their supernatural career... -- -- (Source: BakaBT) -- OVA - Aug 9, 1996 -- 854 6.15
Kekkai Sensen & Beyond -- -- Bones -- 12 eps -- Manga -- Action Comedy Fantasy Shounen Super Power Supernatural Vampire -- Kekkai Sensen & Beyond Kekkai Sensen & Beyond -- Three years ago, a gateway between Earth and the Beyond opened in New York City, trapping extradimensional creatures and humans alike in an impermeable bubble. After the city's restoration, monsters, magic, and madness are common findings in the area now known as Hellsalem's Lot. Leonardo Watch, a young photographer who unwillingly obtained the "All-seeing Eyes of the Gods" in exchange for his sister's eyesight, came to this paranormal city to find answers to the mysterious power that he possesses. He later finds his life drastically changed when he joins Libra, a secret organization of people with supernatural abilities dedicated to maintaining order in the everyday chaos of Hellsalem's Lot. -- -- However, this is only the beginning of Leonardo's unexpected journey ahead. Regardless of the constant threat of otherworldly enemies, he is determined to uncover the secrets of his power and find a way to restore his sister's eyesight. Kekkai Sensen & Beyond follows Leonardo as he sets off on more crazy adventures with his comrades, fighting to ensure peace and order. -- -- 314,725 7.86
Kekkai Sensen & Beyond -- -- Bones -- 12 eps -- Manga -- Action Comedy Fantasy Shounen Super Power Supernatural Vampire -- Kekkai Sensen & Beyond Kekkai Sensen & Beyond -- Three years ago, a gateway between Earth and the Beyond opened in New York City, trapping extradimensional creatures and humans alike in an impermeable bubble. After the city's restoration, monsters, magic, and madness are common findings in the area now known as Hellsalem's Lot. Leonardo Watch, a young photographer who unwillingly obtained the "All-seeing Eyes of the Gods" in exchange for his sister's eyesight, came to this paranormal city to find answers to the mysterious power that he possesses. He later finds his life drastically changed when he joins Libra, a secret organization of people with supernatural abilities dedicated to maintaining order in the everyday chaos of Hellsalem's Lot. -- -- However, this is only the beginning of Leonardo's unexpected journey ahead. Regardless of the constant threat of otherworldly enemies, he is determined to uncover the secrets of his power and find a way to restore his sister's eyesight. Kekkai Sensen & Beyond follows Leonardo as he sets off on more crazy adventures with his comrades, fighting to ensure peace and order. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- 314,725 7.86
Kekkai Sensen -- -- Bones -- 12 eps -- Manga -- Action Comedy Super Power Supernatural Vampire Fantasy Shounen -- Kekkai Sensen Kekkai Sensen -- Supersonic monkeys, vampires, talking fishmen, and all sorts of different supernatural monsters living alongside humans—this has been part of daily life in Hellsalem's Lot, formerly known as New York City, for some time now. When a gateway between Earth and the Beyond opened three years ago, New Yorkers and creatures from the other dimension alike were trapped in an impenetrable bubble and were forced to live together. Libra is a secret organization composed of eccentrics and superhumans, tasked with keeping order in the city and making sure that chaos doesn't spread to the rest of the world. -- -- Pursuing photography as a hobby, Leonardo Watch is living a normal life with his parents and sister. But when he obtains the "All-seeing Eyes of the Gods" at the expense of his sister's eyesight, he goes to Hellsalem's Lot in order to help her by finding answers about the mysterious powers he received. He soon runs into Libra, and when Leo unexpectedly joins their ranks, he gets more than what he bargained for. Kekkai Sensen follows Leo's misadventures in the strangest place on Earth with his equally strange comrades—as the ordinary boy unwittingly sees his life take a turn for the extraordinary. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- 652,112 7.64
Nouryou Anime: Denkyuu Ika Matsuri -- -- - -- 1 ep -- Original -- Psychological Dementia Horror -- Nouryou Anime: Denkyuu Ika Matsuri Nouryou Anime: Denkyuu Ika Matsuri -- Death is the gateway to birth. The deceased crosses the line to join the kingdom of the dead. He sees there the dance of the sperm and the egg. He is drawn towards the sky. This is the path to the afterlife. -- -- (Source: starandshadow.org.uk) -- Movie - ??? ??, 1993 -- 615 4.58
Touhou Niji Sousaku Doujin Anime: Musou Kakyou -- -- - -- ? eps -- Game -- Magic Vampire Fantasy -- Touhou Niji Sousaku Doujin Anime: Musou Kakyou Touhou Niji Sousaku Doujin Anime: Musou Kakyou -- Welcome to the fascinating world of Gensokyo, in which youkai (A term for all sorts of spiritual creatures), animals and some humans live, completely separated from our world by a magical barrier. The only gateway between the two worlds is the Hakurei shrine. -- -- Reimu Hakurei is the maiden working at said shrine. Whenever problems of supernatural causes (known as "Incidents") occur, Reimu goes out with her friends to investigate, eliminate the cause and hopefully restore Gensokyo to its equilibrium. -- OVA - Dec 29, 2008 -- 31,524 7.15
Warau Salesman Tokubetsu Bangumi -- -- Shin-Ei Animation -- 14 eps -- Manga -- Psychological Supernatural Seinen -- Warau Salesman Tokubetsu Bangumi Warau Salesman Tokubetsu Bangumi -- A special program of Warau Salesman, these episodes were released in a blast format on 3 days in a nearly 2 hour long timeslot each. The individual episodes have their own OPs. The first blast release differed from the main series by having live-action footage of real locations in Japan before delving into the story for each episode. The 2nd had Moguro with the Master interacting with the viewer as if behind the scenes for a studio before delving into each episode. And the 3rd had Moguro and the Master playing outside in the snow as if reporting on an on-location event to the viewer before delving into each episode. -- Special - Dec 26, 1992 -- 653 N/A -- -- Nouryou Anime: Denkyuu Ika Matsuri -- -- - -- 1 ep -- Original -- Psychological Dementia Horror -- Nouryou Anime: Denkyuu Ika Matsuri Nouryou Anime: Denkyuu Ika Matsuri -- Death is the gateway to birth. The deceased crosses the line to join the kingdom of the dead. He sees there the dance of the sperm and the egg. He is drawn towards the sky. This is the path to the afterlife. -- -- (Source: starandshadow.org.uk) -- Movie - ??? ??, 1993 -- 615 4.58
Wolf's Rain -- -- Bones -- 26 eps -- Original -- Action Adventure Drama Fantasy Mystery Sci-Fi -- Wolf's Rain Wolf's Rain -- In a dying world, there exists an ancient legend: when the world ends, the gateway to paradise will be opened. This utopia is the sole salvation for the remnants of life in this barren land, but the legend also dictates that only wolves can find their way to this mythical realm. Though long thought to be extinct, wolves still exist and live amongst humans, disguising themselves through elaborate illusions. -- -- A lone wolf named Kiba finds himself drawn by an intoxicating scent to Freeze City, an impoverished town under the rule of the callous Lord Orkham. Here, Kiba discovers that wolves Hige, Tsume, and Toboe have been drawn in by the same aroma. By following the fragrance of "Lunar Flowers," said to be the key to opening the door to their ideal world, the wolves set off on a journey across desolate landscapes and crumbling cities to find their legendary promised land. However, they are not the only ones seeking paradise, and those with more sinister intentions will do anything in their power to reach it first. -- -- 277,381 7.82
Wolf's Rain -- -- Bones -- 26 eps -- Original -- Action Adventure Drama Fantasy Mystery Sci-Fi -- Wolf's Rain Wolf's Rain -- In a dying world, there exists an ancient legend: when the world ends, the gateway to paradise will be opened. This utopia is the sole salvation for the remnants of life in this barren land, but the legend also dictates that only wolves can find their way to this mythical realm. Though long thought to be extinct, wolves still exist and live amongst humans, disguising themselves through elaborate illusions. -- -- A lone wolf named Kiba finds himself drawn by an intoxicating scent to Freeze City, an impoverished town under the rule of the callous Lord Orkham. Here, Kiba discovers that wolves Hige, Tsume, and Toboe have been drawn in by the same aroma. By following the fragrance of "Lunar Flowers," said to be the key to opening the door to their ideal world, the wolves set off on a journey across desolate landscapes and crumbling cities to find their legendary promised land. However, they are not the only ones seeking paradise, and those with more sinister intentions will do anything in their power to reach it first. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Bandai Entertainment, Funimation -- 277,381 7.82
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