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What is the essence of life? To serve others and to do good.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Choice not chance determines your destiny [my family motto...credited to Aristotle]
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Justice is the loveliest and health is the best. but the sweetest to obtain is the heart's desire.
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...happiness is an activity and a complete utilization of virtue, not conditionally but absolutely.
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Not to know of what things one should demand demonstration, and of what one should not, argues want of education.
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So it is clear that the search for what is just is a search for the mean for the law is the mean.
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There is no such thing as committing adultery with the right woman, at the right time, and in the right way, for it is simply WRONG.
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Not to get what you have set your heart on is almost as bad as getting nothing at all.
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Happiness involves engagement in activities that promote one's highest potentials.
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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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We have next to consider the formal definition of virtue.
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The state or political community, which is the highest of all, and which embraces all the rest, aims at good in a greater degree than any other, and at the highest good.
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There are, then, three states of mind ... two vices--that of excess, and that of defect and one virtue--the mean and all these are in a certain sense opposed to one another for the extremes are not only opposed to the mean, but also to one another and the mean is opposed to the extremes.
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Anaximenes and Anaxagoras and Democritus say that its [the earth's] flatness is responsible for it staying still: for it does not cut the air beneath but covers it like a lid, which flat bodies evidently do: for they are hard to move even for the winds, on account of their resistance.
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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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Dignity does not consist in possessing honors, but in deserving them.
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It makes no difference whether a good man has defrauded a bad man, or a bad man defrauded a good man, or whether a good or bad man has committed adultery: the law can look only to the amount of damage done.
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It is clear that those constitutions which aim at the common good are right, as being in accord with absolute justice while those which aim only at the good of the rulers are wrong.
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As to adultery, let it be held disgraceful, in general, for any man or woman to be found in any way unfaithful when they are married, and called husband and wife. If during the time of bearing children anything of the sort occur, let the guilty person be punished with a loss of privileges in proportion to the offense.
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We are what we repeatedly do.
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The high-minded man is fond of conferring benefits, but it shames him to receive them.
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