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Of all the varieties of virtues, liberalism is the most beloved.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Great men are always of a nature originally melancholy.
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Opinion involves belief (for without belief in what we opine we cannot have an opinion), and in the brutes though we often find imagination we never find belief.
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Excellence is not an art. It is the habit of practice.
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Now that practical skills have developed enough to provide adequately for material needs, one of these sciences which are not devoted to utilitarian ends [mathematics] has been able to arise in Egypt, the priestly caste there having the leisure necessary for disinterested research.
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Those who act receive the prizes.
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The souls ability to nourish itself lies in the heart.
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for we are inquiring not in order to know what virtue is, but in order to become good, since otherwise our inquiry would have been of no use
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The only stable state is the one in which all men are equal before the law.
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We are the sum of our actions, and therefore our habits make all the difference.
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A good style must, first of all, be clear. It must not be mean or above the dignity of the subject. It must be appropriate.
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Human good turns out to be activity of soul exhibiting excellence, and if there is more than one sort of excellence, in accordance with the best and most complete.Foroneswallowdoesnot makea summer, nor does one day and so too one day, or a short time, does not make a man blessed and happy.
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Imagination is a sort of faint perception.
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Any change of government which has to be introduced should be one which men, starting from their existing constitutions, will be both willing and able to adopt, since there is quite as much trouble in the reformation of an old constitution as in the establishment of a new one, just as to unlearn is as hard as to learn.
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Every rascal is not a thief, but every thief is a rascal.
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Those that deem politics beneath their dignity are doomed to be governed by those of lesser talents.
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Every wicked man is in ignorance as to what he ought to do, and from what to abstain, and it is because of error such as this that men become unjust and, in a word, wicked.
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Time is the measurable unit of movement concerning a before and an after.
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He who is by nature not his own but another's man is by nature a slave.
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Happiness is a state of activity.
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