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Happiness is prosperity combined with virtue.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
If you see a man approaching with the obvious intent of doing you good, run for your life. Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they come.
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The probable is what usually happens.
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Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age.
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The senses are gateways to the intelligence. There is nothing in the intelligence which did not first pass through the senses.
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It is possible to fail in many ways...while to succeed is possible only in one way.
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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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When...we, as individuals, obey laws that direct us to behave for the welfare of the community as a whole, we are indirectly helping to promote the pursuit of happiness by our fellow human beings.
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One kind of justice is that which is manifested in distributions of honour or money or the other things that fall to be divided among those who have a share in the constitution ... and another kind is that which plays a rectifying part in transactions.
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In the case of some people, not even if we had the most accurate scientific knowledge, would it be easy to persuade them were we to address them through the medium of that knowledge for a scientific discourse, it is the privilege of education to appreciate, and it is impossible that this should extend to the multitude.
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Also, that which is desirable in itself is more desirable than what is desirable per accidens.
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The pleasures arising from thinking and learning will make us think and learn all the more. 1153a 23
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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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It is no part of a physician's business to use either persuasion or compulsion upon the patients.
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... There must then be a principle of such a kind that its substance is activity.
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There are, then, three states of mind ... two vices--that of excess, and that of defect and one virtue--the mean and all these are in a certain sense opposed to one another for the extremes are not only opposed to the mean, but also to one another and the mean is opposed to the extremes.
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The good lawgiver should inquire how states and races of men and communities may participate in a good life, and in the happiness which is attainable by them.
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Dissimilarity of habit tends more than anything to destroy affection.
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You will never do anything in this world without courage. It is the greatest quality of the mind next to honor.
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Happiness is a state of activity.
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Opinion involves belief (for without belief in what we opine we cannot have an opinion), and in the brutes though we often find imagination we never find belief.
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