The quote is (abridged) from Xenophon’s Memorabilia, as LordAmplifier explained above. The image was generated by StableDiffusion based on the prompt ‘Socrates driving a cycle’. I can add the full image later.
I found the same quote in an old reddit thread, where someone provides Memorabilia, a book written by a guy called Xenophon of Athens, who was a student of Socrates, as a possible sauce:
3.12.8 “Besides, it is a disgrace to grow old through sheer carelessness before seeing what manner of man you may become by developing your bodily strength and beauty to their highest limit. But you cannot see that, if you are careless; for it will not come of its own accord."
Archive link to the relevant chapter because the original University of Chicago link is dead.
According to this Wikipedia article, the book is a collection of Socratic dialogues, so it’s not a collection of quotes. Book 3, where this particular quote comes from, is about Socrates giving advice to his family and friends, so I guess Xenophon claims that it is an authentic quote, but I don’t know if there’s a way to verify that.
Wow! A rare Xenophon quote?? That’s awesome. Thank you. It sounds like something Socrates might have discussed but I couldn’t think of which Platonic dialog it came from. I guess that explains it.
hold up
where is that Socrates image from?
Can i have a full sized copy?
when did he say the body thing? and why would anyone attribute a quote to Socrates instead of Plato? Socrates never wrote anything
The quote is (abridged) from Xenophon’s Memorabilia, as LordAmplifier explained above. The image was generated by StableDiffusion based on the prompt ‘Socrates driving a cycle’. I can add the full image later.
thank you!
“Never trust a quote on the internet especially when it comes with an ai generated image.” - Miyamoto Musashi
“There has been a ssl error connecting to the Shakespeare quotes server”
- Shakespeare
I found the same quote in an old reddit thread, where someone provides Memorabilia, a book written by a guy called Xenophon of Athens, who was a student of Socrates, as a possible sauce:
Archive link to the relevant chapter because the original University of Chicago link is dead.
According to this Wikipedia article, the book is a collection of Socratic dialogues, so it’s not a collection of quotes. Book 3, where this particular quote comes from, is about Socrates giving advice to his family and friends, so I guess Xenophon claims that it is an authentic quote, but I don’t know if there’s a way to verify that.
Wow! A rare Xenophon quote?? That’s awesome. Thank you. It sounds like something Socrates might have discussed but I couldn’t think of which Platonic dialog it came from. I guess that explains it.