My Philosophical Quotes (Τα φιλοσοφικά μου αποσπάσματα)
‘Man must know his place in time, in order to make his own history'.
'In order to discover the truth about nature, one must first understand, what is the true essence of human nature.
'Drink from the fountain of wisdom and your thirst shall be quenched by the abundance of knowledge'.
'Seek not the riches of greed, for what you shall find is the transience of an illusion'.
'If you allow your desires to rule over your intellect than you shall be forsaking your inner self'.
'Virtues are the epitome of one's character, and wisdom is the highest virtue to achieve'.
'We should have temperance in the indulgence of our passions and thoughts'.
'Philosophy is the expression of the mind, and the mind is the vehicle of the philosopher'.
'Silence is either a lingering solitude or a lasting tranquility'.
'Remember that life is revealed through the state of being, for existence is being itself'.
'Search for the reason within the intellect and what will be discovered is the realisation of one's creativity',
'Listen to the innermost voice of rationality, and what shall be heard is the whispers of the truth'.
'Any man can proclaim to a sage, but few men possess the actual wisdom to philosophise'.
'To toil in burden is to be blinded with the illusion of one's reality'.
'Justice must never be enacted with vengeance nor be measured by the sword'.
'The foundation of a true belief must have the three components of logic, substance and meaning'.
'We cannot merely depend on materiality to define the cosmos, nature or our present world. It would be an incomplete observation'.
'The mind is idea, the body is substance and the soul is conscience'.
'The things we observe define the things that we perceive, and the things that we know define the things that we believe'.
'Our minds are voyagers of the unknown and seekers of the riddles of enigmas'.
'When we think, we are processing thoughts from the mind. When we attempt to rationalise them, we are implementing logic'.
'A man who does not fully understand the world does not understand the meaning of the world. Thus, that man does not understand the truth of his existence, or what the world represents'.
'We acquire wisdom from knowledge, ideas from thoughts, perception from observation and truth from supposition'.
'Where does a man find his ultimate truth? In his conscience, where his soul lies'.
'Sacrifice is the ultimate relinquishment of the ego, and the sign of a reward that will satisfy your inner self and not your prominence'.
'We must learn to govern our desires than let desires govern us'.
'A man must know pain to know his strength, and to know his strength, he must learn to suffer'.
'If we do not understand consciousness, then we discover nothing of actual substance'.
'Nothing happens in this world for no apparent reason. It is we the people that must discover the reason.'
'Why is it so complicated to understand that we are by nature sceptics of the truth?'
'If there is an archetype of myself, it is the ethos of my persona and not the nemesis of my ego.'
'Give me science and I give you a theory. Give me philosophy and I give you the mind'.
'To some people, it is difficult to conceive non-existence after death than it is to conceive non-existence before birth'.
'Who determines what I must ascribe to as law, when men are governed by the incidence of corruption?'
'When there are moments that we are deep in anguish, we tend to find escape in our tempting vices'.
'I see the universe in my mind and I perceive the infinity of an indeterminate energy.'
'The genuine purpose of laws are not to impose on that society the commandments of ungovernable laws'.
'The real foundation of thought is not based on what you perceive, but what you create'.
'It is wiser to be worthy in duty than to be selfish in grandeur'.
'What you interpret may not be that what others interpret. Therefore, the interpretation is never absent-minded'.
'A thief is always a thief, but a liar is a thief that conceals the truth'.
'I have committed no crime, except to believe in the true principles of democracy'.
'A scholar is not measured on his laudable education, instead on the wisdom of his teacher'.
'To be human is to be imperfect. To be perfect is simply conceit'.
'Why should I be silent amidst the truth, when my voice echoes the truth?'
'How can you measure the essence of the heart, without the essence of love?'
'Unfortunately, there is an infectious virulence that is spreading its vile nature upon the world, and it is called human ignorance'.
'What we cannot answer, we dismiss. What we doubt, we disbelieve. It is not a question of belief or not, but more of an inclination to think consciousness is indeed reliable'.
'The Logos is the immutable force that governs and the Nous is the undeniable force that provides its reasoning'.
'The world is not given to us on a tray, instead it is shaped in the manner in which we develop those ideas and thoughts'.
'Be not what they would perceive about you, but what the world should know that verily represents you'.
'What is the paradigm of human nature and what is the necessity of its value?'
'I marvel with the capacity that people have to profit from the misery of others and act, as if their intent was meritorious'.
'Democracy is a principle that few men adhere to, but many impose erroneously'.
'To admit to the idea of conformity is to deny the right to disconformity'.
'Destiny is the uncontrollable element that is ungovernable, whilst providence is foresight that guides us'.
'It is senseless classism in society that we must eliminate, for no person should be subjugated to the selfish whims of their oppressors'.
'There is a philosophy that each man should aspire to, be all that man can be to himself and unto others'.
'Virtue is the embodiment of moral excellence and vice is the result of moral fault'.
'Whence we came into this world, we shall depart it with the knowledge that we have sowed the seeds of wisdom and reaped the seeds of enlightenment'.
'Must everything be understood about life or is life in essence, merely all that we understood it to be and to mean?'
'There are such things as immorality, but it is not a question of the condemnation of a false morality, but the absence of reason and logic'.
'The beauty of life is being able to enjoy in such a brief time, the simplistic essence of what it means to be human'.
'A belief cannot be measured on the sole purpose of its principles, when it must depend on believers'.
'For every logical variable, there must be its opposite force that is operating as a paradoxical form in life and in the universe'.
'Facts alone cannot be considered logical. There must be something more that provides us with its basis, and that is ratiocination. We cannot make decisions based on facts, without our awareness of their relevancy'.
'Society was never meant to be the throne of empowerment or solely of the intellects, but of the people that gave voice to its necessity'.
'The organon or principles are set to create the ultimate foundation of any established philosophy'.
'When there is the tenuity of our fallibility, there is the strength of our human determination'.
'Knowledge is the viable component that is stored in our thoughts, and when the mind processes those thoughts, then it records the validity of that information that becomes wisdom'.
'There is always an intrinsic cause that precedes the problem, as there is always a problem that precedes the solution'.
'People can truly experiment the wonders of life, when they are receptive to the reality and sensations of the universe'.
'As conscious beings, we conceptualise from our observations, whether a priori or a posteriori, the nature of our world'.
'Time is the undeniable force that human beings think they can accelerate, when it is impossible to alter its immutable course'.
'The essential beliefs of any philosophy should be happiness, reason, nature, progress and liberty. Without either of them, our way of being, thinking, perceiving, realising, understanding and living would be irrelevant and incomplete'.
'Time is not necessarily dependent on motion, but on its infinite state and its predicable nature. Thus, the quantum element of time is an infinitude that transcends the motion of anything'.
'I shall be forgotten as a man, but revered as a brilliant writer with polymathic sense, and a lucid expositor of unique ideas and autodidacticism'.
'Whatever I shall become, and wherever I shall be, the universal question is, howsoever shall I be understood?'
'Within the particles of dust, I can perceive the substance of the dust and its form with observation. It is motion that draws my perception and not the substance or form of the particular'.
'What am I without emotions? What am I without thought? What am I without instinct? What am I without consciousness? What am I without materiality? An immaterial emptiness'.
'Being a knower does not imply having knowledge. It merely implies that we have the capacity to know'.
'Luck is merely a concept that is circumstantial in nature at best'.
'Logic is the immutable force that governs and intellect the undeniable force that provides its reasoning'.
'Facts alone do not sustain the function of logic, or are they reliable to logic, without our awareness of their relevance'.
'The nous is not something that is innate, instead, it is acquired with consciousness'.
'The notion that we are to decipher things without the necessity of logic would be predicated in the belief that we are born with the ability to distinguish things. It is true that we are born with the capacity of intellect, but it does not denote that we have intelligence, or that we do not need to acquire it'.
'The nature of the philosophical acumen for our scepticism is not incongruent to the function of the mind. Nor does it need to result in a differential aspect of an argument for its useful ratiocination'.
'Man's complexity is to understand the alterity of the world and the universal reality, through the gradual pursuit of knowledge'.
'What is troubling is the perception that we know nothing or pretend to know everything, within that contrariety of this notion'.
'I can presume to be anything that my mind perceives me to be, but it does not mean that the perception is entirely valid or demonstrative of the truth'.
'Obstacles are not the extraneous impediments that are imposed upon us, instead the impediments that we impose upon ourselves with our reluctance'.
'Perception is a thing that we often misunderstand, and we tend to mistake perception, from an undefined and undemonstrative observation that is not Orphic in nature'.
'It is seldom seen within the ignorance of people that the inattentive nature of something smaller and irrelevant is the precursor to something bigger and relevant'.
'Vanity will only blind and disrobe your internal essence, leading you to a pointless existence of a mindless ego'.
'The decisions that we make in life, will either benefit us or result as our imponderable compunction'.
'People desire things that they cannot have, but they do not desire the things that they can value. Thus, they disappoint themselves with a superficial materiality'.
'Senseless violence breeds senseless stupidity. That is an undeniable axiom'.
'Which of the two elements, emotion and thought are we to rationalise, as the natural expression of human nature?'
'There are qualities in sentient beings appertained that are particular attributes predominately inherent and transpicuous in all of us'.
'To submit the rational faculties of the mind to a belief that does not sustain or nourish it with common sense, is not only contradictory to its function, but it is irrational to ascribe to that illogical belief also'.
'People believe in many things that appear to have sense, yet discover afterwards that those things are not necessarily the reflection of the truth, but more of our incomplete observation'.
'We could argue for the reason for something, but it does not guarantee that the explanation for that reason is compatible to the germaneness of its induction'.
'Within the complexities we encounter daily, we discover the intricate nature of the surrounding world'.
'There are innumerable things that we shall never know, but there are remarkable things that we shall truly experience'.
'A reasonable person must accept the method of criticism, in order to learn and construct knowledge into an enduring wisdom that will define his or her character'.
'I have often felt the indelible shadow of death nearby, and every time I have felt this presence, I was aware of my susceptible nature and mortal existence'.
'If we do not listen to the voice of our suffering, then we shall be condemning ourselves to an unbearable and ineffable form of human misery that will result in an irrepressible guilt'.
'Intelligence is the self-expression of the mind and knowledge is the full expression of reasoning'.
'There is a common principle that as a nation we are a better society, but that truth does not reveal the terrible image of its sacrifice'.
'Sincerity is the ultimate truth of human relationships, because what is found within its meaning, is the foundation of human nature'.
'It is better to discover the entire world that you live in than to ignore its existing reality'.
'If we assume that consciousness cannot exist without the mind, then we must as well assume that the mind cannot exist without our consciousness'.
'Wise men of philomathy have the capacity to inculcate their knowledge to the youth, and that youth has the responsibility to heed to that wisdom'.
'The elementary principle of monism is the conception of one, indivisible and immutable form. This would imply a certain invariability, whilst only that which is material can be presumed, as an existential thing which is variable. Monism is more than the abstractification and condensation of that state of substantiality. It is its origin'.
'I have no absolute certainty that I shall see tomorrow, but I have the known certainty that I have seen today, at least'.
'Only an open mind will be able to decipher the esoteric crux of the mystery that surrounds the truth that binds us to our apparent reality'.
'We must learn to cherish the value of life and accept that it is relevant, as long as we make it relevant'.
'I seem to have a unique sense of perception and observation that is uncommon to many people. Thus, it is a sphere of consciousness that transcends the actual comprehension of ordinary minds'.
'We all have the power to be observers and knowers, but few of us understand wisdom and knowledge'.
'At times, I find myself trapped within the passage of time that represents, the past and the present'.
'How could anyone be assumed to be more than a mortal being in essence, when the only truth to consider is our mortality is the ephemerality of our natural existence to date?'
'What is more understood is the reason for our insecurities than the cause for their manifestation'.
'I believe I can attest to a reality that is comparative in nature but transparent in its quintessential form and has no veritable name, except that of my reality'.
'To be able to live half your life in happiness is more than to suffer a full life of sadness'.
'I could blame the world for my failures, but that would assume that I was always in the shadow of my ineptitude'.
'When I ponder the balance of social justice, I am inclined to believe that the only form of justice is suited, for the holder of injustice than the beholder of justice'.
'What I fear is the not the same, as what I doubt. What I seek is not the same, as what I discover'.
'I am a corporeal being, that much I clearly acknowledge without discrepancy, but my essence is universal in its composition, because I am both form and matter that is consistent with the universe'.
'I see no function for hypocrites, except the fact that they take up space in the world and waste their time with discommendations'.
'Be mindful of the things that surround us and notice the motion of time and how everything revolves around that continual motion and perception of time'.
'Deception is the psilosopher's blatant method of obfuscation'.
'There is a simplicity in life that we discover, but are reluctant to admit its relevance. This simplicity is called the moment'.
'It is shameful that we care more about the notion of superficiality than the reality of authenticity'.
'I have perceived that sound is not merely restricted to audition, but is activated by the elements of physical stimulation and motion as well'.
'Why should I concern myself with the indistinct absurdity of others, when all that matters is the compatibility of the judicious thoughts that I ascribe to my world vision, instead of their unavailing enmity?'
'If you are to define my character with words, then I must insist that you do not omit that of which is essential to the admission of the truth, my humanity'.
'I do not strive for wealth, or do I consume myself in its obtainable profit. If I dared, I would eventually be lost and consumed with its greed'.
'I know enough to distinguish the natural purpose for life and death, yet I have not fully discovered, which of them will ultimately define me'.
'Is it necessary to believe that anything that is metaphysical is beyond our human perception or is that perception the only truth that we shall ever know, regardless of its material or immaterial nature and conception?'
'Time is the force that operates indiscriminately in our world, and all we know about its relativity, is that it is the beginning and ending to life'.
'People do not inspire by words alone. They inspire by the fundamentals of purpose and conscious thinking'.
'I could measure the quality of my life, with the quantity of my failures or achievements'.
'There is no greater sentiment expressed than compassion, because it does not need the procurement of rationale'.
'For every great man that has a vision, there is a lesser man that has none'.
'It is not determined yet, whether the greatest virtue of a man possesses is the goodness of his character or the purity of his soul'.
'If I am to address my truth, I must first regress to my suffering'.
'There can never be a present or future, if there never was a past to begin with'.
'I could choose to be relevant or irrelevant in life, visible or invisible'.
'Where do I begin and where do I end? When will the cycle of time cease to be the guiding force that defines our existence and consciousness?'
'Perchance, I shall falter one day to the vagaries of obsession and be lost in the maze of internal uncertainty'.
'To declare that philosophy is the natural process of human enquiry is relative to the perceptible measure of human inquisitiveness'.
'How do we properly acknowledge the embedded mechanism that guides our mind, without the sense of perception?'
'What is the paradigm of human nature and what is the necessity of its value?'
'I marvel with the capacity that people have to profit from the misery of others and act, as if their intent was meritorious'.
'Life is seldom the construct we imagine, and all it can be to some is the antecedence to the arrival of death'.
'What is the truth, if it’s no more valid than the question asked?'
'Capitalism is the rich man's definition of the distinction, between the rich and poor'.
'The abundant voices of revolution are the growing clamours, for the justice of the fallen brethren'.
'Democracy is a principle that few men adhere to, but many impose erroneously'.
'What is happiness, if we do not experience, at first, sadness?'
'The indivisibility of consciousness is greater than the divisibility of the body'.
'The advent of religion and the vanguard of science have imposed mainly, the constitution of our teaching and learning, but philosophy has given us the vehicle of enlightenment'.
'We are observant as human beings, and ergo, we are curious in nature and proclivity'.
'What we fail to understand, we forget, what we cannot explain, we simply ignore. That is ignorance'.
'From the singularity of a thought, an idea is created, but from the plurality of ideas, a nation is established'.
'I have no fond proclivity for nationality, race or creed, when I much prefer the word human'.
'Governments are the enslavers of democracies and politicians, the benefactors of greed'.
'Silence is the irrepressible intonation of your voice that deafens, with the awareness of its effects'.
'The tragedy of mankind is not war in itself, but the destructive repetition of its usage'.
'Verily, the world would be vastly different, if we only effectuated the contemplation of peace'.
'How can I be mad, if the world that I live in is not conducive to reason? Who is madder then?'
'A genius is the embodiment of a philosopher, for his wisdom is unmatched'.
'What good are laws or a constitution, if neither cannot guarantee the liberty of our inalienable rights to manifest?'
'I do not require salvation from a god, when I procure salvation from the tyranny of man'.
'In order to know the universal truth, we must first know what it is, from what it is not'.
'What cannot be explained should not be called supernatural. It should be given the name of undetermined'.
'Stupidity is not what you know or do not know. It is the fool who acknowledges himself as stupid'.
'We must always use the criterion of relativity to make any logical arguments plausible, in the commonality of universal sense'.
'I ascribe ethics to the basic element of our conduct, because it promotes the effectivity of the conscience and maintains the logic of the mind'.
'That which we fear is nothing more than the exaggeration of our insecure thoughts'.
'Beauty is not in the eye of the beholder, but in the form of that contemplation'.
'The mystery of the origin of the universe is forever connected to the mystery of the origin of man'.
'If my mind is empty of thought and substance, then the shape of its form will be shapeless like water'.
'It is practical to believe that existence is not conditioned to an impeding force, but we must define the nature of existence'.
'I cannot quite explain or understand the cycle of life and death, except that I pertain to its form of repetition'.
'Suicide is the insoluble mystery that death does not invite to our funeral'.
'Where there is fear, there is terror. Where there is terror, there is darkness'.
'Cowards are born each day, but heroes die on a given day of valour'.
'How can you measure the essence of the heart, without the essence of love?'
'Is it inconceivable to believe that we are dead, and the world is an illusion?'
'Why should I be silent amidst the truth, when my voice echoes the truth?'
'Vocabulary is not mere speech or enunciation. It is the voice of our mind'.
'Character is not solely based on integrity, but the evident accountability of judgement and action'.
'We are beings that reside in the continuum of the space of our consciousness and subconsciousness'.
'The real foundation of thought is not based on what you perceive, but what you create'.
'There are people that crave money, when it is only a piece of paper printed or coins carved to be worshipped by ingrates'.
'If I told you I know nothing, you would call me an idiot. If I told you that I know something, you would still call me an idiot. But if I told you that I know everything, you would call me a blind idiot'.
'There is not a moment, when I don't think of what if, then the next question arises what then?'
'Nothing can be worse than the drug of ignorance'.
'Who is relevant, the individual that assumes to know facts or the individual that offers his interpretation of the facts?'
'To ascribe to a belief is not manipulation, but to believe that it is the only belief, that is indeed manipulation'.
'An idiot is he that claims he knows nothing; a fool is someone that speaks the idiom of the idiot'.
'I shall loathe the thought that in the future, my writing is revered, when in the present is at times, sorely misunderstood'.
'Who am I amidst the crowd of onlookers, you ask? I am the sole voice of reason'.
'Is there nothing more terrible than the realisation of your reality and misery?'
'I was once asked how I became intelligent, and my response was, I am neither intelligent nor ignorant, but wiser'.
'When I observe the society of today, I am an observant of materialism in the purest form of capitalism'.
'Dignity is the humble man's word for honour'.
'Who is more productive a colony of ants or a colony of men, whose edifices are built by greed, and the others built by mere necessity?'
'I see the universe in my mind and I perceive the infinity of an indeterminate energy'.
'There must be a primary and material substance to the universe that relates, accordingly to the time of chronos and kairos. This substance is called existence'.
'As an exponent of the thought of metaphysics, the universe has related forms and ideas that are multivalent but coincide with the observation of existential matters of forms established that are not inconclusive or necessarily of eternality'.
'We exist in a physical world that has physical boundaries and metaphysical interpretations. There must be universal order for all existential value to be germane'.
'To base an inference of existence of a god would simply be negating the understanding of our present reality and abate in the argument proof by contradiction conflated'.
'Mathematical equations do not reveal infinities as being non-existent in essence, and our universe could be in the end infinite in spatial or temporal extent'.
'The philosophic question that is apposite to humanity is not what makes things universally existent, but what binds them to our parenthetical reality? We could argue for a point of inference for existence or accept that cosmic existence is not conditioned to a metaphenomenal reference'.
'I could assume my virtues as being a natural inherency of my disposition or claim that there are only a token gesture of my humanity'.
'Am I less moral, because I choose to not worship a god, or is this god more immoral for rejecting me?'
'Is it moral to condemn a man for his disbelief than to accept his nobility, as a sign of your immorality?'
'The things that are known to us are not the same as the things known unconditionally. These things we call the haplos and those things that are induced instinctively are the propathos'.
'Philosophy is the renewal of our temperance and virtue'.
'If there was a way to make the world smarter, I would begin with the idiocy of the question'.
'There are so many ways to express something, yet there are fewer ways to understand the expression'.
'What becomes of our society, when we can no longer be civil amongst each other?'
'Is the world a creation of our own imagination, or is our imagination a creation of the world?'
'We are excessively indulging ourselves in the art of duplicity'.
'There is a new revolution in the world and it is called philosophy'.
'I have lived countless experiences, through the simplicity of one life'.
'What is the purpose of books, if we do not utilise their value?'
'Can a man live with half of his essence attached to his conscience?'
'To be creative does not denote merely intelligence, but an impeccable sign of our brilliance'.
'The horrible nature of suicide is the silent voice of its solitude and its maddening presence'.
'To believe that we are destined for something great, we must be first conscious of that implication'.
'I shall never understand the logic of an excuse, except that it is a never-ending continuation that repeats itself'.
'I shall not concern myself, with the stupidity of others. Instead, with the exception of the demonstration of the intelligence of the few sensible minds'.
'Why do we assume that we are the centre of the universe, when we are not even a small fraction of it?'
'Any intricate theory or concept can be refuted with facts, but the discordance is not in the proposition of its truism, but more in the value of its argument'.
'Conscience is a powerful mechanism that enhances our ethos and makes us mindful of the situations and ordeals we must confront, despite their unpredictable circumstances'.
'To believe in trust, one must establish its relevance before'.
'What is enlightenment, if we do not exercise the mind daily?'
'Who determines, what I must ascribe to as law, when men are governed by the incidence of corruption?'
'One mortal man cannot change the world, but his philosophy can'.
'Poverty is the abomination of man's visible avidity and classism'.
'The wonder of life is not the guise it reflects, but the joy it permeates'.
'Drama is the sole provocation of the theatre of insanity manifest'.
'What can be assumed as the truth must be governed by knowledge'.
'I have with great frequency discover that my mind is constantly evolving, with every fantastic wonder that is born from my creativity'.
'Philosophy is the explanatory method to enhance the instrument of the mind'.
'It is regrettable that with every minute passed there is a death, and that in every death there is ultimately a name attached to it'.
'To dream is to acknowledge that you are in a subconscious state of absolute surrealism that is perhaps a parallel world yet undiscovered'.
'We are like the manifold flowers that blossom in the spring, but wilt in the autumn. Thus, is the essence of our transient mortality that has no other transcendence'.
'Human rights are never respected, when men only respect power'.
'The act of extinction is not, when something has become extinct. It is when we forget that something has existed before'.
'Philosophy is not the ultimate salvation for mankind, but it is a beginning'.
'I have ere contemplated the possibility of a parallel universe, but the question I pose in alterity am I am living in that parallel universe, instead of my assumed reality?'
'If there was or is a divine agent that created the actual universe, the obvious question would be, what or who created this supreme agent knowingly?'
'How we perceive an object is mostly related to the perception of our eyes and not our mind. Therefore, reality appears to be what we see than we construe'.
'To better understand the ipseity, we must accentuate the rationale of the seity'.
'A theist is a conformist of religion, an atheist a conformist of science, but a revolutionist is a thinker of philosophy'.
'Existence is the subjugation that effects in its order of realism, because it involves the two elements of our evolution, change and growth'.
'The mind cannot function intellectually, if there is no established system or paradigm as a general rule, for its ultimate purpose. Ergo, this is the function of logic'.
'Without thought our minds are emerged, in a senseless vacuity that relies on the dependency of our instinct'.
'In every discipline of human knowledge, we seek to establish an order, in a logical manner that can be fully understood'.
'The instrument of logic is conditioned to the accessibility of its imperative usage that does not obviate its purpose'.
'If existence is primary and consciousness is secondary, then we construe within the physical and abstract of the universals or properties that existence is defined by our consciousness'.
'The agency of an eternal motion and energy, the noetic inception of the cosmos; they are all related to universal existence'.
'What makes two human beings different is not their substantial form that remains the same, or their accidental form that can differ, but their matter. Matter not form is what defines us in being'.
'A sensible opinion is rendered worthless, when that opinion results worthless'.
'I do not presume to be a benefactor of words, instead an innovative creator of philosophy'.
'I do not consider myself an expert of anything. I am merely a philosopher'.
'The mere thought of obsession can constrain the foundation of man, with an uncontrollable desire of anxiety'.
'I can choose to define myself as matter and my existence would be transparent as an illustration of that animation, or I could assume that I am nothing, except the divisible avatar of a contingency of cosmic consciousness'.
'Few people realise that protean matter changes from one state to another in form, but its matter still remains exact'.
'Call me a man with a vision and I shall acknowledge my providence as just merit'.
'What cannot be saved must perish, but what can, must be spared for the posterity'.
'There is no amount of sympathy that could equate to the antipathy of an action'.
'Do not presume to know everything, when it is better to assume that knowledge is so far only that which you presently know'.
'The moral of the story of life can be resumed in its simplicity'.
'I am continuously emerged, in the evolving matrix that is my reality'.
'Can there be any relevancy to something that cannot be demonstrated to be valid?'
'There can be no greater cause to serve than the noble cause of humanity'.
'To explain the reason why some of us live and others die, would mean that I would have to explain the indifference of a god'.
'Our mind computes thoughts into variables that are expressed, by answers or solutions to our questions and problems'.
'If everything that is involved with the process of animation were to die and remain in that invariable state of non-existence through the culmination of that process, would not everything ultimately have to be dead and nothing alive in the universe?'
'Often, we regress in our conduct to the atavistic propensity of our causation, and we alter our perception of life radically, to the complacent comfort of acceptance in society'.
'Our society has been plagued, with imprudent forms of radical religions, subversive governments and proactive systems of tyranny'.
'As human beings, we can be ethical in our virtues and at the same time regardful of our defects'.
'Philosophy represents the universal view, about the things conceived by perception and construed by interpretation'.
'A thought is a perceived notion, but an expression is an actuated conception'.
'Depression is the embodiment of the sorrowful malady of the human mind'.
'It is incumbent upon us that we fully comprehend the volatility of emotions and how they affect our discipline and will'.
'We are all observers of life, but we choose to be participants of our observations'.
'The evolution of man is not contingent to the perception of its origin'.
'We are often fearful about the things that are inexplicable and remain unknown to us'.
'To attempt to understand the convolutions of the nature of reality, we must acknowledge the unusual effect of the perceptible ability to distinguish it'.
'If we are dependent on mere science to answer every question feasible, then we are at the mercy of those who will never understand the capability and function of the mind universally'.
'I am cognisant of the power of the cognitive ability to discern the most intelligible variable of something irrelevant to others'.
'It is good to learn about Logic, Rhetoric, Ethics and Metaphysics, to be able to structure a coherent argument, because if not, our argument would be purely emotional'.
'The only effective method of learning a philosophy is by application. First there is observation, second there is perception, and third there is interpretation'.
'Human beings possess the oracle of knowledge to understand the reason for everything'.
'We are born with the innate ability to empower our intelligence and increase its effects, in productive intervals of knowledge'.
'As human beings there must be a definite protocol of the observance of ethics, for the accountability of our moral behaviour'.
'We cannot exist in a lawless society or in a misguided world of ingrates'.
'At variance, the resolution of a human being is deserving of its implementation, because it allows the mind to function with it'.
'All forms of belief must have a foundation that serves, as an allegorical reference and inference to the need for its function'.
'We are by nature, people of fallibility and often resort to bad judgement and acts of crime that are merely reprehensible'.
'As a society and democracy in general, we should procure the preservation of philosophy and the eradication of indigence'.
'For every question there must be an answer, in order to justify the validity of the question and understand the unreasonable contradictions to logic'.
'The mind is prone to subtle adversity and decision-making, in a prepense action and manner that is required, for any implementation of justice'.
'Why is it difficult to conceive non-existence after death than it is to conceive non-existence before birth?'
'All I that I have known before is the history of one version and that version was an erroneous interpretation of the victor'.
'The greatest gift that I was bestowed was never a profitable one to begin with'.
'If a fine-tuned universe was exact, the universe would be better suited for the environment we required than for the necessity of our lives'.
'Matter does not require creation to become form or something, if it can emerge from another kind of matter'.
'People once believed that the lightning and thunder of storms were conjoined phenomena that were produced by a god, when they have been proven to be of natural causes'.
'If there is a supreme agent and originator of the universe, then how could this agent be external and internal to the universe?'
'I think; therefore, I have a mind. I reason; therefore, I have a consciousness. I observe; therefore, I have a perception. I live, therefore, I have an existence'.
'The mechanism of the universe is often more understood, by nature than by man'.
'Man cannot live by faith or belief alone, because he is a curious being by nature and has the need to explore the truth about his reality'.
'Our space is an actual continuum and it does not necessarily impose upon us. It is we who impose the visible limitations of space'.
'Anyone can believe that a force of energy is eternal, omnipresent and powerful, but it would not be the undeniable quintessence of an indivisible deity that creates or destroys at will'.
'A reason does not justify a belief. It merely offers an intended purpose for that belief'.
'Whether free will, determinism and compatibilism are compossible is a matter more of endeitic states of probability'.
'Any cause to something whether it be necessary, secondary or joint, should be measured by the purport and intent elicited of that cause'.
'In the universe there are objects that possess properties that are either accidental or essential in nature and inherence'.
'The ipseity is the oneself of something. The seity is what is peculiar to the oneself, and the aseity is the self-existence of that something'.
'There are certain decisions and thoughts that are manifest, in the homoiosis of the natural process of our thinking'.
'It is common to have the desire to know and the perception to understand. These things are called the jorexis and the antilipsis'.
'Every cause aspired and plight elicited should be authentic as the reason proposed'.
'The most obstinate people are those who are strongly inculcated in their normative ways, due to their upbringing and culture'.
'Any basis introduced of a claim should be conducive to an actual form of observation, perception and interpretation that is not solely arbitrary in the objective truth'.
'Because we do not know the full extent of existence in the universe or plausible multiverses, we are irrelevant to the universe's ultimate function and design'.
'The premise of an argument is presented in order to reach a rational conclusion on a topic; although the argument could conclude, as an abstract inverity'.
'I find atheism to be a platitudinous dogmatism of science and theism a senseless protervity of religion'.
'In philosophy the main contrast between objectivity and subjectivity is determined, with the interpretation of the facts and its relativity to the perception of the object observed'.
'Any one is capable of making a reasonable assumption about something, but not everyone can intelligise the basis for that assumption'.
'To be virtuous is to possess a sort of wisdom that is more common than uncommon. It is known as phronesis'.
'The issue of morality is not originally a concept of religion. In essence it is founded on the philosophic morality of ethics'.
'The dichotomy between science and philosophy is revealed, by the lucid interpretation of any observable evidence. What can be proven can be debatable with the interpretation, but what can be surmised is the deduction that is either factual or a paradox'.
'There is a strange sensation I perceive around me, as if I was part of a universal motion and sequence that I only recognise as being particular to me'.
'If I do not awaken the next day, then the callous world will have continued its course and I shall have concluded mine'.
'Sometimes, the most ordinary thing can present itself, as an emergent mystery'.
'Life is a natural experiment that we experience daily, and the wonders of life are to be understood like the misfortunes that befall, as a part of the influential process of our evolution'.
'Trust is something gained and confidence is something obtained'.
'Every scandal that exists has a certain thing that is worse than that scandal, and that is natural drama'.
'The pillars of any structure of government must sustain the veracity of the principles of democracy'.
'History will always be written by the victors, and the ultimate truth will be lost in the details'.
'The hardest thing about a defeat is realising how close you were to being victorious'.
'Our intelligibility manifests by our observation'.
'From whence I came into this world, I shall depart it with the knowledge that I have sowed the seeds of wisdom and reaped the seeds of enlightenment'.
'Whatever principle a man could aspire, there is always the constant desire to be understood and reasonable'.
'Nothing happens in this world for no apparent reason. It is we the people that must discover the reason'.
'The world we know is sometimes reduced only to the thought of the vestiges of our indelible memories'.
'Every living being must experience the need for growth in some form of capacity or that being would not evolve'.
'Not all material substances on the planet are animated, but they are existential'.
'There are times, when the irrepressible urge to satisfy our desires are more of a discontent than contentment'.
'Nothing can be presumed to be reasonable, if there is no validity in the pattern of logic'.
'A universal proposition must be explanatory and logical, so that the proposition could be associated to a valid inference and syllogism'.
'There are lies that are based on the premise of the deception of falsehood or the lies that are invented for the benefit of the truth'.
'I prefer to assume the position that all that is knowledge is mostly consistent, with all that is applicable in nature'.
'We either embrace the profound emotion of love with our acceptance of its beauty, or we disregard the essence of that beauty knowingly'.
'Love is an expression that few people comprehend in the end, and it is a prize unattainable to some, whilst achievable to others'.
'What we desire is often that what we cannot procure, within the profluence of time and the sequential order of it'.
'Eros can be established reasonably, as a concept that is variable and necessary. Its definition as well as its application are observed, with different interpretations'.
'The incredible beauty of sexual exploration is the emotion and thought shared, in the physical or mental act displayed'.
'A quasi thought that is questionable can result in a responsive action'.
'A thought is not meant to be an artificial intelligence, but a natural function of the mind that is exhibited'.
'I cannot reason with an inflexible person that fails to realise the absurdity of his belief or argument, because his emotions will deprive him of any reasonable thought'.
'The observable universe must consist of the principles of existence, within the possibilities of necessity, purpose and multiplicity'.
'I cannot fathom the thought that in the future, the world will be in accordance to the vision that we have dictated'.
'Creativity has only the boundaries that we impose'.
'The inherent qualities that reflect are personality, individuality, ability, mentality, rationality, proclivity, intelligibility, scibility, comprehensibility, sexuality, universality, humanity and simplicity are demonstratively of our natural disposition and inception'.
'I am convinced about the powerful utility of cognitive activity and how it relates to the mental evolution of the physical brain'.
'A building could seem to require a builder. This statement would conclude as being a logical inference, but if I examine the building, I could deduce that each object would need also other elements of matter to contribute in its composition. Without the ground for the building, its construction would not be effectuated, because a builder would too require a brain that is substance'.
'From amongst the world of mortal men, there are a selective few of them that are born, with the capacity for the impeccable acumen of intellectual insight of the principles of philosophy'.
'In philosophy, the sphere of the human consciousness is not defined by its absolute function, instead by its implex nature. It is not constant, or a particular, because it is more of a universal'.
'I am what knowledge I have learnt and I shall be what wisdom that I have obtained'.
'A republic cannot stand alone or be ruled by the oligarchists. It must always be ruled, by a legitimate constitution that holds true to its conviction, governance and authority'.
'The composition of the universe is better defined, by the amalgam of matter and form of naturalism than the subliminal perception of divine creation'.
'If life is governed by the set of rules of probabilistic or deterministic causes to occurrences, then everything in life would either be perceived, as being predictable or unpredictable in nature'.
'If things were created out of mere nothing, then the physical laws that govern the universe would be non-existent, unnecessary, nonutilitarian and contradictory'.
'The self is what identifies us internally, whilst the will is something that we possess'.
'What we yearn is not the same, as what our will determines. Yearning is something that we crave for, whilst the will is something that defines us'.
'Our duty is first to serve, then to be modest in our deeds'.
'Men of power who are presumed beholders of justice, must never succumb to the vile corruption of their avidity'.
'There is a clear difference and particularity, between what is proposed from a thought than what is generated from an idea. A thought tends to be more objective, while an opinion is more subjective'.
'The difference between a conscious thought and subconscious thought is in the condition with what they each represent'.
'When we share the exact experience of pain and sorrow, we tend to seek to bond with others knowingly, or we tend to feel these experiences of others willingly'.
'Without the elementary components that are known to us as thought, instinct, emotion and intuition, our minds would fail to establish a necessary pattern of reasoning and remain in a state of constant uncertainty and misunderstanding'.
'A function cannot operate, if that function is not conducive to the mind's capacity. The ability of the mind is what conduces us to create our thoughts and produce our emotions. Once we have established that, then we can explore our intuition'.
'Suffering does not distinguish, from either degree of its variable, because the suffering is apathetic in its original form and essence'.
'To express anguish is suffering. To not express anything is not normal'.
'There is a sea of suffering that drowns us, in a quotidian despair and guilt'.
'The five reasons for equilibrium are stability, judgement, logic, thinking and knowledge'.
'Romantic love is the relation that is based on trust and mutual respect, because it is of considerable worth'.
'Desire is something that intuitively, we learn to appreciate, when that desire expressed is natural'.
'Love can be apperceived within its composition, as poetical, logical or merely sentimental, in its value and mansuetude'.
'Within the musing thought we conceive, there is an esoteric vision of love that prevails, in the profundity of our hearts amain'.
'If we can achieve the relativity of love, within the concept of eros, then we can emphasise its importance, in its affinity to philosophy'.
'When we desire anything or anyone, we usually are more aware of its primal necessity and capability than of its nocive effect'.
'The best inducement for desire in human beings is demonstrated, at intermittent intervals of our thoughts and passion'.
'What differentiates pleasure from desire is that one is a state of satisfaction, whilst the other, a state of yearning'.
'Philosophy teaches that human beings are conscious of the state of pleasure, but their actions are not always enticed by emotions'.
'The ultimate experience of pleasure is not necessarily the thought, but the action that indicates its fulfilment'.
'Philosophy is the ampliative fountain of lectical information that we imbibe constantly in our lives'.
'The exploration of sex is not a unique occurrence any longer, yet we are intrigued with our curiosity to decipher its composition in every aspect'.
'We are born to discover the essence of sex, and we learn the application of its discipline subsequently, in the sequence of time'.
'Why we succumb to the weakness of the body is thus discovered, in the weakness of the mind. A weak mind is the obvious reason of the acrasial effect we experiment, at intermittent intervals'.
'Satisfaction is not to be mistaken for alleviation, because the two words are expressed equally, but mean different things in an opposite contrast'.
'A wise man is much better than a presumptuous man, for a wise man was once ignorant, but the presumptuous man will always remain an ignoramus'.
'We cannot return to the past to change it, or change the outcome of a future that does not exist'.
'Some men are foes to themselves, before they are genuine friends to others'.
'Evil is inherently good at being evil, but good is instinctively bad at being evil'.
'We should not pity the poor because they are simply poor, we should pity the rich. For no wealth could ever make their hearts rich in humility'.
'True justice must always reflect the truth of the evidence, not the mere speculations of men'.
'What makes us moral agents is the capacity for us to comprehend the distinction, between what is just from unjust, humane than inhumane. We cannot function as moral agents, if we are depraved of any semblance of rational thinking'.
'I can choose to be moral or immoral. I am not born with either trait, but I have a mind that distinguishes what is moral and immoral'.
'There is an abyss within us all that cannot be eradicated. It has no shape, no internal essence, except that it is there'.
'In life, a man cannot be a hostage to his irrational desires or thoughts. He must learn to accept his weaknesses and strengthen his conscious mind'.
'We could assume that life is somehow predestined, or believe that it is ultimately what we create from it'.
'Enlightenment is like a stream of water. It has currents flowing inwardly or outwardly. The stream is the mind and the currents thoughts'.
'If we examined a tree and saw it grow leaves, we would conclude that it is the season for those leaves to grow. But if those leaves would wilt and change colour, we would assume the same thing, it is due to change. The leaves would be our thoughts and the tree our foundation. The cycles of seasons are no more different than the pattern of thoughts'.
'Enlightenment is not about desiring a state of perfection. It is about accepting our imperfections and releasing the unnecessary burdens that we realise with consciousness'.
'We must find purpose and meaning to all things that are intellectual and rewarding'.
'With change, there is a new sense of belonging and life that is yearned'.
'Our acts of benevolence must not be overshadowed by our indifferences to people'.
'To sip from the fountain of wisdom is to taste the purity of virtue'.
'It is important to denote that fortune itself does not exemplify dignity in the eyes of philosophy. It merely manifests, as an apathetic thing'.
'What we deem responsible is the duty we uphold, by living a life with the utmost regard for service unto others and for the noble cause it represents'.
'It is wiser to be better worthy in duty than to be selfish in grandeur'.
'Duty is not about one's reputation to seek worthless glory, it is about the pursuit of the cause that makes us noble in the first place.'
'Virtue is meant to endow us with the essence of sapience'.
'What defines our character is our virtues, and what defines our avidity is our ego. We choose which to pursue in life'.
'It is wiser to be moral than to falter under the influence of corruption, because the temptation of corruption is much more poisonous'.
'To express pain is suffering. To not express anything is abnormal'.
'Suffering has no actual cause, except that of which it proposes, suffering. It is no more no less than what it seems'.
'Life in itself is not cruel. It is our perception that makes it cruel in its nature'.
'Nothing about love can be presumed to be unnatural, when it is reflective in its genuine form'.
'There are such things as acts of immorality, but it is not a question of the condemnation of a false morality, but the absence of reason and logic'.
'Man created a god, not a god created man. The myth of a god was first created by man, and the meaning of a god was defined then by this myth'.
'Nothing can suppress love, when it is naturally pure'.
'Intellect is the universe of the mind'.
'Reason is the governance of the mind'.
'Logic is the algorithm of the mind'.
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