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. . . the man is free, we say, who exists for his own sake and not for another's.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Now that practical skills have developed enough to provide adequately for material needs, one of these sciences which are not devoted to utilitarian ends [mathematics] has been able to arise in Egypt, the priestly caste there having the leisure necessary for disinterested research.
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When the storytelling goes bad in a society, the result is decadence.
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Teachers, who educate children, deserve more honour than parents, who merely gave them birth for the latter provided mere life, while the former ensure a good life.
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Adoration is made out of a solitary soul occupying two bodies.
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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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That rule is the better which is exercised over better subjects.
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It is a part of probability that many improbable things will happen.
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The unfortunate need people who will be kind to them the prosperous need people to be kind to.
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The soul is characterized by these capacities self-nutrition, sensation, thinking, and movement.
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Why is it that all those who have become eminent in philosophy, politics, poetry, or the arts are clearly of an atrabilious temperament and some of them to such an extent as to be affected by diseases caused by black bile?
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For what is the best choice for each individual is the highest it is possible for him to achieve.
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Those whose days are consumed in the low pursuits of avarice, or the gaudy frivolties of fashion, unobservant of nature's lovelinessof demarcation, nor on which side thereof an intermediate form should lie.
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We are the sum of our actions, and therefore our habits make all the difference.
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And this activity alone would seem to be loved for its own sake for nothing arises from it apart from the contemplating, while from practical activities we gain more or less apart from the action. And happiness is thought to depend on leisure for we are busy that we may have leisure, and make war that we may live in peace.
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When their adventures do not succeed, however, they run away but it was the mark of a brave man to face things that are, and seem, terrible for a man, because it is noble to do so and disgraceful not to do so.
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Something is infinite if, taking it quantity by quantity, we can always take something outside.
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The man who confers a favour would rather not be repaid in the same coin.
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Men are swayed more by fear than by reverence.
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The beginning, as the proverb says, is half the whole.
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Where the laws are not supreme, there demagogues spring up.
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