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When we deliberate it is about means and not ends.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
The appropriate age for marrige is around eighteen and thirty-seven for man
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It is our actions and the soul's active exercise of its functions that we posit (as being Happiness).
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It is no part of a physician's business to use either persuasion or compulsion upon the patients.
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There's many a slip between the cup and the lip.
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When couples have children in excess, let abortion be procured before sense and life have begun what may or may not be lawfully done in these cases depends on the question of life and sensation.
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Politicians also have no leisure, because they are always aiming at something beyond political life itself, power and glory, or happiness.
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The man who confers a favour would rather not be repaid in the same coin.
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Let us first understand the facts and then we may seek the cause.
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Some believe it to be just friends wanting, as if to be healthy enough to wish health.
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The more you know, the more you know you don't know.
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People become house builders through building houses, harp players through playing the harp. We grow to be just by doing things which are just.
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Where the laws are not supreme, there demagogues spring up.
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It is possible to fail in many ways...while to succeed is possible only in one way.
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The arousing of prejudice, pity, anger, and similar emotions has nothing to do with the essential facts, but is merely a personal appeal to the man who is judging the case.
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A proper wife should be as obedient as a slave... The female is a female by virtue of a certain lack of qualities - a natural defectiveness.
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It concerns us to know the purposes we seek in life, for then, like archers aiming at a definite mark, we shall be more likely to attain what we want.
Aristotle
Young people are in a condition like permanent intoxication, because life is sweet and they are growing.
Aristotle
Prudence as well as Moral Virtue determines the complete performance of a man's proper function: Virtue ensures the rightness of the end we aim at, Prudence ensures the rightness of the means we adopt to gain that end.
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Our virtues are voluntary (and in fact we are in a sense ourselves partly the cause of our moral dispositions, and it is our having a certain character that makes us set up an end of a certain kind), it follows that our vices are voluntary also they are voluntary in the same manner as our virtues.
Aristotle
A courageous person is one who faces fearful things as he ought and as reason directs for the sake of what is noble.
Aristotle