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Plato is dear to me, but dearer still is truth.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Friends are much better tried in bad fortune than in good.
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A city is composed of different kinds of men similar people cannot bring a city into existence.
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It is more difficult to organize a peace than to win a war but the fruits of victory will be lost if the peace is not organized.
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The complete man must work, study and wrestle.
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It is also in the interests of a tyrant to make his subjects poo...the people are so occupied with their daily tasks that they have no time for plotting.
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Nothing is what rocks dream about
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. . . Political society exists for the sake of noble actions, and not of mere companionship.
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It is Homer who has chiefly taught other poets the art of telling lies skillfully.
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Education and morals will be found almost the whole that goes to make a good man.
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Those whose days are consumed in the low pursuits of avarice, or the gaudy frivolties of fashion, unobservant of nature's lovelinessof demarcation, nor on which side thereof an intermediate form should lie.
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What is common to many is least taken care of, for all men have greater regard for what is their own than what they possess in common with others.
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Education and morals make the good man, the good statesman, the good ruler.
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Happiness is the highest good
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One cannot say of something that it is and that it is not in the same respect at the same time.
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Some vices miss what is right because they are deficient, others because they are excessive, in feelings or in actions, while virtue finds and chooses the mean.
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If the art of ship-building were in the wood, ships would exist by nature.
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Neither old people nor sour people seem to make friends easily for there is little that is pleasant in them.
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All flatterers are mercenary, and all low-minded men are flatterers.
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Where the laws are not supreme, there demagogues spring up.
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The knowledge of the soul admittedly contributes greatly to the advance of truth in general, and, above all, to our understanding of Nature, for the soul is in some sense the principle of animal life.
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