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And yet the true creator is necessity, which is the mother of invention.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
It is our choice of good or evil that determines our character, not our opinion about good or evil.
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The hardest victory is the victory over self.
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Purpose ... is held to be most closely connected with virtue, and to be a better token of our character than are even our acts.
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Youth is easily deceived because it is quick to hope.
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For as the interposition of a rivulet, however small, will occasion the line of the phalanx to fluctuate, so any trifling disagreement will be the cause of seditions but they will not so soon flow from anything else as from the disagreement between virtue and vice, and next to that between poverty and riches.
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He who can be, and therefore is, another's, and he who participates in reason enough to apprehend, but not to have, is a slave by nature.
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The structural unity of the parts is such that, if any one of them is displaced or removed, the whole will be disjointed and disĀturbed. For a thing whose presence or absence makes no visible difference is not an organic part of the whole.
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Philosophy can make people sick.
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The law is reason unaffected by desire.
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No one chooses what does not rest with himself, but only what he thinks can be attained by his own act.
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Men are marked from the moment of birth to rule or be ruled.
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...for all men do their acts with a view to achieving something which is, in their view, a good.
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Neither old people nor sour people seem to make friends easily for there is little that is pleasant in them.
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Nature makes nothing incomplete, and nothing in vain.
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Poetry is finer and more philosophical than history for poetry expresses the universal, and history only the particular.
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No state will be well administered unless the middle class holds sway.
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A very populous city can rarely, if ever, be well governed.
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The trade of the petty usurer is hated with most reason: it makes a profit from currency itself, instead of making it from the process which currency was meant to serve. Their common characteristic is obviously their sordid avarice.
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A state of the soul is either (1) an emotion, (2) a capacity, or (3) a disposition virtue therefore must be one of these three things.
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The goodness or badness, justice or injustice, of laws varies of necessity with the constitution of states. This, however, is clear, that the laws must be adapted to the constitutions. But if so, true forms of government will of necessity have just laws, and perverted forms of government will have unjust laws.
Aristotle