180 quote from Greek philosopher re: adulthood and growing up
Date: June 14th, 2014 3:03 AM
Author: tedcruz unwrapping tamales on Xmas (ConformityIsAVirtue,CreativitySuspect,HumorFordbidden, VoiceMute)
How
long do you put off thinking yourself worthy of the best things, and
never going against the definitive capacity of reason? You have received
the philosophical propositions that you ought to agree to and you have
agreed to them. Then what sort of teacher are you still waiting for,
that you put off improving yourself until he comes? You are not a boy
any more, but already a full-grown man. If you now neglect things and
are lazy and are always making delay after delay and set one day after
another as the day for paying attention to yourself, then without
realizing it you will make no progress but will end up a non-philosopher
all through life and death. So decide now that you are worthy of living
as a full-grown man who is making progress, and make everything that
seems best be a law that you cannot go against. And if you meet with any
hardship or anything pleasant or reputable or disreputable, then
remember that the contest is NOW and the Olympic games are NOW and you
cannot put things off any more and that your progress is made or
destroyed by a single day and a single action. Socrates became fully
perfect in this way, by not paying attention to anything but his reason
in everything that he met with. You, even if you are not yet Socrates,
ought to live as someone wanting to be Socrates.