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Daily Inspiration Quote by Diogenes of Sinope

"Stand a little less between me and the sun"

About this Quote

Diogenes doesn’t ask for power, money, or even respect. He asks for something embarrassingly basic: get out of my light. That’s the genius of the line. It’s a refusal disguised as a request, a social slap delivered with the calm economy of someone who has already opted out of the game.

The context matters: Alexander the Great (in the most famous version) approaches the ragged Cynic and offers to grant him a wish. Most people would seize the moment, barter for security, attach themselves to the world’s strongest patron. Diogenes punctures the fantasy at the center of authority: that proximity to greatness is inherently valuable. If the king’s body blocks the sun, then the king is literally less than nothing. He’s an inconvenience.

The subtext is a full Cynic manifesto in one sentence. Diogenes is staging a moral experiment in public. He reduces life to what is necessary - warmth, daylight, freedom from interference - and then treats everything else as noise. That includes the performative kindness of rulers, which often comes with strings, obligations, and the soft tyranny of gratitude. By asking only for unblocked sunlight, he exposes the hidden cost of gifts: they place the giver between you and what sustains you.

It’s also a weaponized minimalism. The line makes domination look needy and independence look effortless. Alexander can command armies; Diogenes can still deny him the one thing emperors crave most: significance.

Quote Details

TopicTruth
Source
Verified source: Lives: Alexander (Parallel Lives) (Diogenes of Sinope, 1919)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
"Yes," said Diogenes, "stand a little out of my sun." (Chapter 14 (section 4) / Loeb vol. VII (Perrin tr.)). This is the primary ancient-source locus for the 'sun' version of the anecdote: Plutarch, *Life of Alexander* 14.4 (Bernadotte Perrin’s Loeb translation as hosted at the University of Chicago site). The wording you supplied ('Stand a little less between me and the sun') is a modern paraphrase; Plutarch’s standard English rendering is closer to 'stand a little out of my sun.' Plutarch wrote in Greek in the late 1st/early 2nd century CE; the encounter is also attested in Diogenes Laertius (6.38) with a different phrasing ('Stand out of my light').
Other candidates (1)
Immortal Last Words (Terry Breverton, 2012) compilation95.0%
History's Most Memorable Quotations and the Stories Behind Them Terry Breverton. DIOGENES OF SINOPE , ' THE CYNIC ......
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Sinope, Diogenes of. (2026, February 12). Stand a little less between me and the sun. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/stand-a-little-less-between-me-and-the-sun-27248/

Chicago Style
Sinope, Diogenes of. "Stand a little less between me and the sun." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/stand-a-little-less-between-me-and-the-sun-27248/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Stand a little less between me and the sun." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/stand-a-little-less-between-me-and-the-sun-27248/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Stand a Little Less Between Me and the Sun
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About the Author

Diogenes of Sinope

Diogenes of Sinope (412 BC - 323 BC) was a Philosopher from Greece.

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