Collection of Old Philosophy Quotes

Comprehensive collection of Philosophy Quotes. The compilation includes some good quality text submitted by users. Browse through our nice repository of Philosophy Quotes with latest and new quotes being added quite often. You will find unique quotes and sayings which you can rate and review. Explore best and rare collection of Philosophy Quotes here, select any text from the wide range and share or send using mobile. Apart from general Philosophy Quotes, the collection also includes some popular Philosophy Quotes. You can help us to enrich this collection of Philosophy Quotes by sending and submitting more messages from your collection to us and by providing nice ideas. This is Part – 6 of Philosophy Quotes.

My philosophy has always been, ‘do what you love and the money will follow.’

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My philosophy is familiarity breeds contempt.

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My philosophy is to take one day at a time. I don’t worry about the future. Tomorrow is even out of sight for me.

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My philosophy of dating is to just fart right away.

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My philosophy, like colour television, is all there in black and white.

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My philosophy: find what it is you want to say, walk in the room, say it, and get the hell out.

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Nietzsche was personally more philosophical than his philosophy. His talk about power, harshness, and superb immorality was the hobby of a harmless young scholar and constitutional invalid.

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No other job in the world could possibly dispossess one so completely as this job of teaching. You could stand all day in a laundry, for instance, still in possession of your mind. But this teaching utterly obliterates you. It cuts right into your being: essentially, it takes over your spirit. It drags it out from where it would hide. Spinster.

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No propositions astonish me, no belief offends me, however much opposed to my own. The savages who roast and eat the bodies of their dead do not scandalize me so much as those who persecute the living.

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No stream rises higher than its source. What ever man might build could never express or reflect more than he was.

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O philosophy, life’s guide! O searcher-out of virtue and expeller of vices! What could we and every age of men have been without thee? Thou hast produced cities; thou hast called men scattered about into the social enjoyment of life. [Lat., O vitae philosophia dux! O virtutis indagatrix, expultrixque vitiorum! Quid non modo nos, sed omnino vita hominum sine et esse potuisset? Tu urbes peperisti; tu dissipatos homines in societatum vitae convocasti.]

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On the one hand, philosophy is to keep us thinking about things that we may come to know, and on the other hand to keep us modestly aware of how much that seems like knowledge isn’t knowledge.

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One cannot conceive anything so strange and so implausible that it has not already been said by one philosopher or another.

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One may summon his philosophy when they are beaten in battle, not till then.

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One thinks of French philosophy that it aspires to the condition of literature or the condition of art, and that English and American philosophy aspires to the condition of science. French philosophy, one thinks of as picking up an idea and running with it, posibility into a nearby brick wall or over a local cliff, or something like that.

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Philosophers are as jealous as women; each wants a monopoly of praise.

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Philosophers call God the great unknown The great misknown is more like it!

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Philosophers say a great deal about what is absolutely necessary for science, and it is always, so far as one can see, rather naive, and probably wrong.

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Philosophers should consider the fact that the greatest happiness principle can easily be made an excuse for a benevolent dictatorship. We should replace it by a more modest and more realistic principle — the principle that the fight against avoidable misery should be a recognized aim of public policy, while the increase of happiness should be left, in the main, to private initiative.

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Philosophy abounds more than philosophers, and learning more than learned men.


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