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Cruel is the strife of brothers.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
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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Both oligarch and tyrant mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of their arms.
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Everything that depends on the action of nature is by nature as good as it can be, and similarly everything that depends on art or any rational cause, and especially if it depends on the best of all causes.
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Democracy arises out of the notion that those who are equal in any respect are equal in all respects because men are equally free, they claim to be absolutely equal.
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Happiness is a quality of the soul...not a function of one's material circumstances.
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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 is prosperity combined with virtue.
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The body is at its best between the ages of thirty and thirty-five.
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It is possible to fail in many ways . . . while to succeed is possible only in one way (for which reason also one is easy and the other difficult - to miss the mark easy, to hit it difficult).
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Men become richer not only by increasing their existing wealth but also by decreasing their expenditure.
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Just as a royal rule, if not a mere name, must exist by virtue of some great personal superiority in the king, so tyranny, which is the worst of governments, is necessarily the farthest removed from a well-constituted form oligarchy is little better, for it is a long way from aristocracy, and democracy is the most tolerable of the three.
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The self-indulgent man craves for all pleasant things... and is led by his appetite to choose these at the cost of everything else.
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Every formed disposition of the soul realizes its full nature in relation to and dealing with that class of objects by which it is its nature to be corrupted or improved.
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If the art of ship-building were in the wood, ships would exist by nature.
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All communication must lead to change
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The law is reason unaffected by desire.
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Find the good. Seek the Unity. Ignore the divisions among us.
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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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Some believe it to be just friends wanting, as if to be healthy enough to wish health.
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The moral virtues, then, are produced in us neither by nature nor against nature. Nature, indeed, prepares in us the ground for their reception, but their complete formation is the product of habit.
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