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All that one gains by falsehood is, not to be believed when he speaks the truth.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Justice therefore demands that no one should do more ruling than being ruled, but that all should have their turn.
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All human happiness and misery take the form of action.
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If you string together a set of speeches expressive of character, and well finished in point and diction and thought, you will not produce the essential tragic effect nearly so well as with a play which, however deficient in these respects, yet has a plot and artistically constructed incidents.
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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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Melancholy men, of all others, are the most witty.
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Every virtue is a mean between two extremes, each of which is a vice.
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Prayers and sacrifices are of no avail.
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The body is most fully developed from thirty to thirty-five years of age, the mind at about forty-nine.
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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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The ultimate end...is not knowledge, but action. To be half right on time may be more important than to obtain the whole truth too late.
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Thus then a single harmony orders the composition of the whole...by the mingling of the most contrary principles.
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Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or a god.
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People do not naturally become morally excellent or practically wise. They become so, if at all, only as the result of lifelong personal and community effort.
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He is courageous who endures and fears the right thing, for the right motive, in the right way and at the right times.
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The life of money-making is one undertaken under compulsion, and wealth is evidently not the good we are seeking for it is merely useful and for the sake of something else.
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The duty of rhetoric is to deal with such matters as we deliberate upon without arts or systems to guide us, in the hearing of persons who cannot take in at a glance a complicated argument or follow a long chain of reasoning.
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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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For one swallow does not make a summer, nor does one day and so too one day, or a short time, does not make a man blessed and happy.
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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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A good man may make the best even of poverty and disease, and the other ills of life but he can only attain happiness under the opposite conditions
Aristotle