You are a simpleton, Hegesias;

GoldfishLord

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Like Socrates, Diogenes favoured the spoken over the written word. When a man called Hegesias asked to be lent one of his writing tablets, he replied, "You are a simpleton, Hegesias; you do not choose painted figs, but real ones; and yet you pass over the true training and would apply yourself to written rules."

Source: Psychology Today | Are You a Cynic? Really?

I'm not sure what they are saying in the bold part.
Would you explain the bold part?
 
See it as an expansion or explanation or example of "Diogenes favored the spoken over the written word".
 
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What does "his writing tablets" refer to?
What's the meaning of "tablets"?
 
Nowadays we use paper to write on. They didn't have paper then. They used clay tablets.
 
Would you elaborate on "you do not choose painted figs, but real ones; and yet you pass over the true training and would apply yourself to written rules"?
 
Diogenes favored speech (true figs) over writing (painted ones).

Somebody saw a reason to write that or we wouldn't know that, would we?
 
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