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When we deliberate it is about means and not ends.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
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.
Aristotle
There is a cropping-time in the races of men, as in the fruits of the field and sometimes, if the stock be good, there springs up for a time a succession of splendid men and then comes a period of barrenness.
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Why do men seek honour? Surely in order to confirm the favorable opinion they have formed of themselves.
Aristotle
Every formed disposition of the soul realizes its full nature in relation to and dealing with that class of objects by which it is its nature to be corrupted or improved.
Aristotle
We cannot ... prove geometrical truths by arithmetic.
Aristotle
The state comes into existence for the sake of life and continues to exist for the sake of good life.
Aristotle
Masculine republics give way to feminine democracies, and feminine democracies give way to tyranny.
Aristotle
Temperance and bravery, then, are ruined by excess and deficiency, but preserved by the mean.
Aristotle
It is not sufficient to know what one ought to say, but one must also know how to say it.
Aristotle
Man by Nature desires to know.
Aristotle
The continuum is that which is divisible into indivisibles that are infinitely divisible.
Aristotle
For good is simple, evil manifold.
Aristotle
And it is characteristic of man that he alone has any sense of good and evil, of just and unjust, and the like, and the association of living beings who have this sense makes family and a state.
Aristotle
Aristocracy is that form of government in which education and discipline are qualifications for suffrage and office holding.
Aristotle
Those whose days are consumed in the low pursuits of avarice, or the gaudy frivolties of fashion, unobservant of nature's lovelinessof demarcation, nor on which side thereof an intermediate form should lie.
Aristotle
The ultimate end...is not knowledge, but action. To be half right on time may be more important than to obtain the whole truth too late.
Aristotle
One kind of justice is that which is manifested in distributions of honour or money or the other things that fall to be divided among those who have a share in the constitution ... and another kind is that which plays a rectifying part in transactions.
Aristotle
For just as for a flute-player, a sculptor, or an artist, and, in general, for all things that have a function or activity, the good and the well is thought to reside in the function, so would it seem to be for man, if he has a function.
Aristotle
...for all men do their acts with a view to achieving something which is, in their view, a good.
Aristotle
Evil draws men together.
Aristotle