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He overcomes a stout enemy who overcomes his own anger.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Equity is that idea of justice which contravenes the written law.
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The hand is the tool of tools.
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The democrats think that as they are equal they ought to be equal in all things.
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The aim of education is to make the pupil like and dislike what he ought....The little human animal will not at first have the right responses. It must be trained to feel pleasure, liking, disgust, and hatred at those things which really are pleasant, likable, disgusting, and hateful.
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But since there is but one aim for the entire state, it follows that education must be one and the same for all, and that the responsibility for it must be a public one, not the private affair which it now is, each man looking after his own children and teaching them privately whatever private curriculum he thinks they ought to study.
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We assume therefore that moral virtue is the quality of acting in the best way in relation to pleasures and pains, and that vice is the opposite.
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Being a father is the most rewarding thing a man whose career has plateaued can do.
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Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they come.
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They who are to be judges must also be performers.
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...happiness is an activity and a complete utilization of virtue, not conditionally but absolutely.
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The true end of tragedy is to purify the passions.
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All men by nature desire knowledge.
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The most beautiful colors laid on at random, give less pleasure than a black-and-white drawing.
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We become just by performing just action, temperate by performing temperate actions, brave by performing brave action.
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If the consequences are the same it is always better to assume the more limited antecedent, since in things of nature the limited, as being better, is sure to be found, wherever possible, rather than the unlimited.
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Equality consists in the same treatment of similar persons.
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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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Every man should be responsible to others, nor should any one be allowed to do just as he pleases for where absolute freedom is allowed, there is nothing to restrain the evil which is inherent in every man.
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If every tool, when ordered, or even of its own accord, could do the work that befits it... then there would be no need either of apprentices for the master workers or of slaves for the lords.
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...The entire preoccupation of the physicist is with things that contain within themselves a principle of movement and rest.
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