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The true end of tragedy is to purify the passions.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
In practical matters the end is not mere speculative knowledge of what is to be done, but rather the doing of it. It is not enough to know about Virtue, then, but we must endeavor to possess it, and to use it, or to take any other steps that may make.
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Happiness is the highest good
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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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A state is an association of similar persons whose aim is the best life possible. What is best is happiness, and to be happy is an active exercise of virtue and a complete employment of it.
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In a polity, each citizen is to possess his own arms, which are not supplied or owned by the state.
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One thing alone not even God can do,To make undone whatever hath been done.
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It is the active exercise of our faculties in conformity with virtue that causes happiness, and the opposite activities its opposite.
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Educating the mind without educating the heart is no education at all.
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The chief forms of beauty are order and symmetry and definiteness, which the mathematical sciences demonstrate in a special degree.
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Great men are always of a nature originally melancholy.
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To leave the number of births unrestricted, as is done in most states, inevitably causes poverty among the citizens, and poverty produces crime and faction.
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For pleasure is a state of soul, and to each man that which he is said to be a lover of is pleasant.
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Temperance and bravery, then, are ruined by excess and deficiency, but preserved by the mean.
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It is the repeated performance of just and temperate actions that produces virtue.
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In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous.
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It has been well said that 'he who has never learned to obey cannot be a good commander.' The two are not the same, but the good citizen ought to be capable of both he should know how to govern like a freeman, and how to obey like a freeman - these are the virtues of a citizen.
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Aristocracy is that form of government in which education and discipline are qualifications for suffrage and office holding.
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Happiness comes from theperfect practice of virtue.
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For well-being and health, again, the homestead should be airy in summer, and sunny in winter. A homestead possessing these qualities would be longer than it is deep and its main front would face the south.
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