Anonymous User, a couple of things to say here.
For one thing I’m not confident every quote you’re discussing is actually from the Socratic corpus. You’re going to want to find them in the actual works of Plato before taking them too seriously. Many, many, many contemporary inventions are spuriously attributed to famous figures–in particular, Einstein and Socrates are two very common victims of this.
With that said, even if every quote you’re discussing is genuine, you’re approaching things the wrong way. You can’t treat Socrates’s words as aphorisms. Every word we have from him is part of a more or less extensive dialogue with all kinds of complex background informing the meaning of what he said at any particular moment in the text. You need to at least read large passages, if not (for whatever reason) the works as a whole. Socrates simply wasn’t an aphorist. He didn’t deliver one-liners. He engaged in dialogue, and he has to be read that way.