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Quotes about Philosophy

Also, that which is desirable in itself is more desirable than what is desirable per accidens.
— Aristotle
Most sets of values would give rise to universes that, although they might be very beautiful, would contain no one able to wonder at that beauty.
— Stephen Hawking
We must as second best, as people say, take the least of the evils.
— Aristotle
Relativity applies to physics, not ethics.
— Albert Einstein
I never truly believed that human business was some serious thing.
— Albert Camus
Nothing could be more irrational than the idea that something comes from nothing.
— RC Sproul
Socrates: So even our walks are dangerous here. But you seem to have avoided the most dangerous thing of all. Bertha: What's that? Socrates: Philosophy. Bertha: Oh, we have philosophers here. Socrates: Where are they? Bertha: In the philosophy department. Socrates: Philosophy is not department. Bertha: Well, we have philosophers. Socrates: Are they dangerous? Bertha: Of course not. Socrates: Then they are not true philosophers.
— Peter Kreeft
It is reasonable to love the Absolute absolutely for the same reason it is reasonable to love the relative relatively.
— Peter Kreeft
Philosophy is not confined to philosophers, thank God. Everyone has a philosophy. As Cicero famously said, you have no choice between having a philosophy and not having one, only between having a good one and having a bad one. And not to admit that you have a philosophy at all is to have a bad one. For it is one that does not know itself. So how could it know anything else, especially us?
— Peter Kreeft
That's what's so striking about the title of Kushner's book: When Bad Things Happen to Good People. How is that fair? Well, the answer to that is that there are no good people.
— Peter Kreeft
Haven't you forgotten the first and most important lesson in all of philosophy, the lesson taught to all of us by Socrates, the father of philosophy? That you are wise only when you are humble, that the very first bit of wisdom and the prerequisite for all others is the realization that we are not wise
— Peter Kreeft
If we seek the truth without realizing how far we are from it, we will be dogmatists. If we realize how far we are from the truth but do not seek it, we will be skeptics. If we both seek the truth and realize how far we are from it, we will be wise.
— Peter Kreeft