The unexfoliated skin is not worth shaving: Difference between revisions

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File:Forbidden_Manicure_-_poster.jpg|link=Forbidden Manicure|'''[[Forbidden Manicure]]''' is a beauty school and safe house for criminal nail technicians on the run.
File:If you sniff long into laundry, the laundry also sniffs you.jpg|link=If you sniff long into laundry, the laundry also sniffs you|"[[If you sniff long into laundry, the laundry also sniffs you]]." —Friedrich Nietzsche
File:If you sniff long into laundry, the laundry also sniffs you.jpg|link=If you sniff long into laundry, the laundry also sniffs you|"[[If you sniff long into laundry, the laundry also sniffs you]]." —Friedrich Nietzsche



Revision as of 11:56, 18 May 2021

The unexfoliated skin is not worth shaving.

"The unexfoliated skin is not worth shaving" (Greek: Το μη απολεπισμένο δέρμα δεν αξίζει το ξύρισμα) is a famous dictum apparently uttered by Socrates.

History

Socrates spoke the phrase at his trial for hirsuteness and corrupting beards, for which he was subsequently sentenced to death by hemlock shaving cream, as described in Plato's Barbology (38a5–6).

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links