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First Phrase Abbreviations Mottos
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Augustine Caesar Cato Cicero Erasmus Horace Ovid Pliny Seneca Syrus Tacitus Virgil
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Seneca (1-65 AD), Spanish Philosopher, counselor to Nero
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
He was born in Cordoba, Spain. His works include
Controversiae
(Disputes),
Suasoriae (Councils),
Epistulae morales
ad Lucilium, (124 letters to Liculius) and Dialogi
(Dialogues) .
- Aequat omnes cinis - Ashes makes everybody equal (Seneca)
- Aliquando et insanire iucundum est - Sometimes it is enjoyable to be insane (Seneca De tranquillitate animi XVII 10)
- Animum debes mutare non coelum - You should change your attitude, not your sky (Seneca - Epistulae morales ad Lucilium, XXVIII - You don't make things better, just by moving to another place. You need to change your way of life.)
- Athenea fuerunt lumen orbis - Athens was the torch's world (Seneca)
- Aut regem, aut fatuum nasci oportet - One Ought to Be Born a King or a Fool (Seneca - Apocolocyntosis, I, 1)
- Bonis nocet qui malis parcet - Goodness injures what evil spares (Seneca - De Moribus, 114 - Goodness discourages what evil doesn't discourage)
- Copia ciborum, subtilitas impeditur - The abundance of food hampers intelligence (Seneca)
- Crudelius est quam mori semper timere mortem - It is more cruel to always fear death than to die (Seneca)
- Cui prodest scelus, is fecit - Who benefits by the crime, he is the guilty man (Seneca Medea - Legal Term - Usually asked in court as Cui prodest?)
- Debet semper plus esse virium in vectores quam in onere - The one that carries the burden, must always be stronger than the burden (Seneca)
- Divitae bonum non sunt - Material wealth is not the one good (Seneca)
- Dulce maerenti, populus dolentum - It is sweet for one in grief to know that other people suffer (Seneca - Troades)
- Errare humanum est, Perseverare diabolicum - To err is human, to persist in it, is diabolical (Seneca)
- Facilius per partes in cognitionem totius adducimur - It is easier to understand parts, than to understand the whole (Seneca Epistulae Morales LXXXIX)
- Fallaces sunt rerum species - The appearances of things are deceptive (Seneca, De Beneficiis IV, 34)
- Fata volentem ducunt, nolentem trahunt - Destiny carries the willing man; and drags the unwilling (Seneca - Epistulae morales, XVIII)
- Ferae pericula quae vident fugiunt - The beasts flee the dangers they see (Seneca)
- Gladiator in arena consilium capit - The gladiator is formulating his plan in the arena (Too late - Seneca)
- Homines, dum docent, discunt - Men learn while they teach (Seneca)
- Homo sit naturaliter animal socialis - Man is by nature a social animal (Seneca)
Total: 34 -- o -- >> Next
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