Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
The blood of a goat will shatter a diamond.
Aristotle
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Aristotle
Astronomer
Biologist
Cosmologist
Epistemologist
Ethicist
Geographer
Literary Critic
Logician
Mathematician
Philosopher
Stageira
Aristoteles
Aristotelis
Goat
Shatter
Goats
Diamond
Blood
More quotes by Aristotle
The whole is more than the sum of its parts.
Aristotle
Philosophy is the science which considers truth.
Aristotle
Art is identical with a state of capacity to make, involving a true course of reasoning.
Aristotle
The weak are always anxious for justice and equality. The strong pay no heed to either.
Aristotle
Selfishness doesn't consist in a love to yourself, but in a big degree of such love.
Aristotle
The man who confers a favour would rather not be repaid in the same coin.
Aristotle
The body is at its best between the ages of thirty and thirty-five.
Aristotle
Politicians also have no leisure, because they are always aiming at something beyond political life itself, power and glory, or happiness.
Aristotle
He who can be, and therefore is, another's, and he who participates in reason enough to apprehend, but not to have, is a slave by nature.
Aristotle
In making a speech one must study three points: first, the means of producing persuasion second, the language third the proper arrangement of the various parts of the speech.
Aristotle
In all well-attempered governments there is nothing which should be more jealously maintained than the spirit of obedience to law, more especially in small matters for transgression creeps in unperceived and at last ruins the state, just as the constant recurrence of small expenses in time eats up a fortune.
Aristotle
When several villages are united in a single complete community, large enough to be nearly or quite self-sufficing, the state comes into existence, originating in the bare needs of life, and continuing in existence for the sake of a good life.
Aristotle
Men pay most attention to what is their own: they care less for what is common or, at any rate, they care for it only to the extent to which each is individually concerned.
Aristotle
Man perfected by society is the best of all animals he is the most terrible of all when he lives without law, and without justice.
Aristotle
Excellence is not an art. It is the habit of practice.
Aristotle
Worthless persons appointed to have supreme control of weighty affairs do a lot of damage.
Aristotle
We, on the other hand, must take for granted that the things that exist by nature are, either all or some of them, in motion.
Aristotle
In all things which have a plurality of parts, and which are not a total aggregate but a whole of some sort distinct from the parts, there is some cause.
Aristotle
We are what we repeatedly do.
Aristotle
The democrats think that as they are equal they ought to be equal in all things.
Aristotle