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There is a foolish corner in the brain of the wisest man.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
For well-being and health, again, the homestead should be airy in summer, and sunny in winter. A homestead possessing these qualities would be longer than it is deep and its main front would face the south.
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Irrational passions would seem to be as much a part of human nature as is reason.
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The society that loses its grip on the past is in danger, for it produces men who know nothing but the present, and who are not aware that life had been, and could be, different from what it is.
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The greatest crimes are caused by surfeit, not by want.
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Men cling to life even at the cost of enduring great misfortune.
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Equality consists in the same treatment of similar persons.
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In general, what is written must be easy to read and easy to speak which is the same.
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The happy life is regarded as a life in conformity with virtue. It is a life which involves effort and is not spent in amusement.
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He is courageous who endures and fears the right thing, for the right motive, in the right way and at the right times.
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To leave the number of births unrestricted, as is done in most states, inevitably causes poverty among the citizens, and poverty produces crime and faction.
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A good man may make the best even of poverty and disease, and the other ills of life but he can only attain happiness under the opposite conditions
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Education and morals make the good man, the good statesman, the good ruler.
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Man by Nature desires to know.
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If you string together a set of speeches expressive of character, and well finished in point and diction and thought, you will not produce the essential tragic effect nearly so well as with a play which, however deficient in these respects, yet has a plot and artistically constructed incidents.
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So we must lay it down that the association which is a state exists not for the purpose of living together but for the sake of noble actions.
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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.
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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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In justice is all virtues found in sum.
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The so-called Pythagoreans, who were the first to take up mathematics, not only advanced this subject, but saturated with it, they fancied that the principles of mathematics were the principles of all things.
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Moral qualities are so constituted as to be destroyed by excess and by deficiency . . .
Aristotle