In all your actions, place God before your eyes.
— SEXTUS THE PYTHAGOREAN ⚜️ ‘The Sentences of Sextus’, featured in The Golden Verses of Pythagoras, and Other Pythagorean Fragments [Ed. Florence M. Firth], transl. by William Bridgman, (1904)
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In all your actions, place God before your eyes.
— SEXTUS THE PYTHAGOREAN ⚜️ ‘The Sentences of Sextus’, featured in The Golden Verses of Pythagoras, and Other Pythagorean Fragments [Ed. Florence M. Firth], transl. by William Bridgman, (1904)
Sextus: You can break a man's skull, you can arrest him, you can throw him into a dungeon. But how do you control what's up here? How do you fight an idea?
People who act like it's unrealistic when two characters in a novel discover they're related clearly aren't aware of how Caesar Augustus ended up proscribing his future wife and heir and he owes their not being dead to his nemesis who was making Sicily a safe haven for the proscribed and offering double the monetary reward for any living proscribed people that the Triumvirs were offering for one dead
~ PAINTED DEVILS SPOILERS ~
really digging the 'chaos redhead addresses ghost of librarian-warden by wrong name, also said librarian-warden happens to have his soul embedded in a specific object' vibes
Sextus: For the next 72 hours, we’re going to live off whatever nature sends our way. See that stream? That’s our drinking water. See those berries? That’s our breakfast.
Marcus: See that skeleton? That’s our future.
Tbh this was my favorite scene of episode 1, Right now I don't care about anyone's ship because this scene right here is just so fucking cute and deserves more appreciation and ALSO Cam IS such a SWEETIEE
To our modern minds, scepticism is normally associated with frustration and sceptical conclusions are usually taken to be disturbing because they seem to stand in the way of certainty about the world and our place in it. But famously, or rather infamously, those people in ancient Greece who called themselves Sceptics – meaning ‘investigators’ – were pretty happy about it. They thought of their scepticism as a way of life – as a way of reaching ataraxia or tranquillity. In their view, having beliefs is the ultimate cause of anxiety, and therefore the best way to avoid anxiety, to achieve peace of mind, is to get rid of beliefs altogether. The Sceptics in this sense are often called Pyrrhonists after Pyrrho, the ancient Greek master Sceptic who lived in the 4th and 3rd centuries BCE. [...] Sextus differentiates three schools of thought: ‘When people are investigating any subject, the likely result is either a discovery, or a denial of discovery and a confession of inapprehensibility, or else a continuation of the investigation.’ The first group of thinkers, whom he calls the Dogmatists, believe that they have discovered the truth, and that they know things about the world and the human beings who live in it. The two most famous thinkers from this school are Plato and Aristotle, but scholars often maintain that it is the Stoic school of thought that is the major target of Sextus when he talks about Dogmatists. The second group are those who are called the Academics; they are opposed to the first group and believe that, so to speak, we know that we know nothing. The third group, with whom Sextus identifies himself, are the Sceptics. These people, contrary to the Academics, do not deny anything, they just withhold their assent from beliefs: they continue their investigations and maintain that this continued investigation leads them to tranquillity.
Four scepticisms: what we can know about what we can’t know | Aeon Essays
“It’s all coming together, Camilla.” “You’ve been saying that for two hours, Warden.”
i love their friendship