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Educating the mind without educating the heart is no education at all.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Happiness, whether consisting in pleasure or virtue, or both, is more often found with those who are highly cultivated in their minds and in their character, and have only a moderate share of external goods, than among those who possess external goods to a useless extent but are deficient in higher qualities.
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There are some jobs in which it is impossible for a man to be virtuous.
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The soul suffers when the body is diseased or traumatized, while the body suffers when the soul is ailing.
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Meanness is incurable it cannot be cured by old age, or by anything else.
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The self-indulgent man craves for all pleasant things... and is led by his appetite to choose these at the cost of everything else.
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The moral virtues, then, are produced in us neither by nature nor against nature. Nature, indeed, prepares in us the ground for their reception, but their complete formation is the product of habit.
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To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true.
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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 body is most fully developed from thirty to thirty-five years of age, the mind at about forty-nine.
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The ridiculous is produced by any defect that is unattended by pain, or fatal consequences thus, an ugly and deformed countenance does not fail to cause laughter, if it is not occasioned by pain.
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He overcomes a stout enemy who overcomes his own anger.
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Melancholy men, of all others, are the most witty.
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Music directly imitates the passions or states of the soul...when one listens to music that imitates a certain passion, he becomes imbued withthe same passion and if over a long time he habitually listens to music that rouses ignoble passions, his whole character will be shaped to an ignoble form.
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In the first place, then, men should guard against the beginning of change, and in the second place they should not rely upon the political devices of which I have already spoken invented only to deceive the people, for they are proved by experience to be useless.
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Law is mind without reason.
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All persons ought to endeavor to follow what is right, and not what is established.
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If things do not turn out as we wish, we should wish for them as they turn out.
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Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.
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Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action and pursuit, is thought to aim at some good and for this reason the good has rightly been declared to be that at which all things aim.
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Let us first understand the facts and then we may seek the cause.
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