Shocking Sayings
758 sayings found from the Ancient era
Give him threepence, since he must make a gain out of what he learns.
As long as Man continues to be the ruthless destroyer of lower living beings, he will never know health or peace. For as long as men massacre animals, they will kill each other. Indeed, he who sows the seed of murder and pain cannot reap joy and love…
There are men and gods, and beings like Pythagoras.
Those by nature overweight, die earlier than the slim.
To eat when you are sick, is to feed your sickness.
Alexander ignored his advisers by his regard for all people with law and government.
Eratosthenes refused to accept the popular understanding of any subject and sought always to find out the truth of a matter for himself.
Those who are enslaved to their sects are not merely devoid of all sound knowledge, but they will not even stop to learn!
After coitus every animal is sad, except the human female and the rooster.
The mind's inclination follows the body's temperature.
But it is best of all to look at the human skeleton with your own eyes. This is very easy in Alexandria, so that the physicians of that area instruct their pupils with the aid of autopsy.
We therefore assume that it is either a text from the Roman physician Galen, or an unknown commentary on his work... describing a bizarre theory on hysteria by the Greco-Roman physician Galen (A.D. 130 –210)... that hysteria was caused by a 'wanderin…
All who drink of this remedy recover in a short time except those whom it does not help, who all die.
A cold and moist brain is an inseparable companion to folly.
The great horde of physicians are always servile imitators, who can neither perceive nor correct the faults of their system, and are always ready to growl at and even to worry the ingenious person that could attempt it. Thus was the system of Galen s…
Employment is Nature's physician, and is essential to human happiness.
Heaven cannot brook two suns, nor earth two masters.
I send you a kaffis of mustard seed, that you may taste and acknowledge the bitterness of my victory.
καὶ σύ, τέκνον (kai sy, teknon) - 'You too, child?'
ista quidem vis est! ('Why, this is violence!' or 'But this is violence!')