Chapter 9
9. Now, no one is so egregiously silly as to ask, "How do you know that a
life of unchangeable wisdom is preferable to one of change?" For that very
truth about which he asks, how I know it? is unchangeably fixed in the minds
of all men, and presented to their common contemplation. And the man who does
not see it is like a blind man in the sun, whom it profits nothing that the
splendour of its light, so clear and so near, is poured into his very
eyeballs. The man, on the other hand, who sees, but shrinks from this truth,
is weak in his mental vision from dwelling long among the shadows of the
flesh. And thus men are driven back from their native land by the contrary
blasts of evil habits, and pursue lower and less valuable objects in
preference to that which they own to be more excellent and more worthy.