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QUOTE COLLECTIONS OF Baruch Spinoza
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Quotes By author - Starting with B - Baruch Spinoza
There are 17 quotes for the author Baruch Spinoza
Quotations 1 to 17 of 17
Results Page:   1
Do not weep; do not wax indignant. Understand.

Whatsoever is contrary to nature is contrary to reason, and whatsoever is contrary to reason is absurd.

Fame has also this great drawback, that if we pursue it, we must direct our lives so as to please the fancy of men.

The endeavor to understand is the first and only basis of virtue.

We feel and know that we are eternal.

He alone is free who lives with free consent under the entire guidance of reason.

Ambition is the immoderate desire for power.

Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice.

The greatest pride, or the greatest despondency, is the greatest ignorance of one's self.

I would warn you that I do not attribute to nature either beauty or deformity, order or confusion. Only in relation to our imagination can things be called beautiful or ugly, well-ordered or confused.

There is no hope unmingled with fear, and no fear unmingled with hope.

One and the same thing can at the same time be good, bad, and indifferent, e.g., music is good to the melancholy, bad to those who mourn, and neither good nor bad to the deaf.

Those who are believed to be most abject and humble are usually most ambitious and envious.

Fear cannot be without hope nor hope without fear.

None are more taken in by flattery than the proud, who wish to be the first and are not.

If men were born free, they would, so long as they remained free, form no conception of good and evil.

Only that thing is free which exists by the necessities of its own nature, and is determined in its actions by itself alone.

Quotations 1 to 17 of 17
Results Page:   1

   
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