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Excellence is an art won by training and habituation.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
The blood of a goat will shatter a diamond.
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Personal beauty is a greater recommendation than any letter of reference.
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Happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim and end of human existence.
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There is a foolish corner in the brain of the wisest man.
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The weak are always anxious for justice and equality. The strong pay no heed to either.
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The activity of happiness must occupy an entire lifetime for one swallow does not a summer make.
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The science that studies the supreme good for man is politics.
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Every virtue is a mean between two extremes, each of which is a vice.
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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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Happiness depends upon ourselves.
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But also philosophy is not about perceptible substances they, you see, are prone to destruction.
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He who cannot see the truth for himself, nor, hearing it from others, store it away in his mind, that man is utterly worthless.
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But the whole vital process of the earth takes place so gradually and in periods of time which are so immense compared with the length of our life, that these changes are not observed, and before their course can be recorded from beginning to end whole nations perish and are destroyed.
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Every rascal is not a thief, but every thief is a rascal.
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It [Justice] is complete virtue in the fullest sense, because it is the active exercise of complete virtue and it is complete because its possessor can exercise it in relation to another person, and not only by himself.
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If there is some end of the things we do, which we desire for its own sake, clearly this must be the good. Will not knowledge of it, then, have a great influence on life? Shall we not, like archers who have a mark to aim at, be more likely to hit upon what we should? If so, we must try, in outline at least, to determine what it is.
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No excellent soul is exempt from a mixture of madness.
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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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The same things are best both for individuals and for states, and these are the things which the legislator ought to implant in the minds of his citizens.
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Of the modes of persuasion furnished by the spoken word there are three kinds. The first kind depends on the personal character ofthe speaker the second on putting the audience into a certain frame of mind the third on the proof, provided by the words of the speech itself.
Aristotle