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Plato is my friend, but truth is a better friend.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
Well begun is half done.
Aristotle
It is our actions and the soul's active exercise of its functions that we posit (as being Happiness).
Aristotle
Excellence is an art won by training and habituation. We do not act rightly because we have virtue or excellence, but we rather have those because we have acted rightly. We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.
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One cannot say of something that it is and that it is not in the same respect at the same time.
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People never know each other until they have eaten a certain amount of salt together.
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Poverty is the parent of revolution and crime.
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Quid quid movetur ab alio movetur(nothing moves without having been moved).
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No one chooses what does not rest with himself, but only what he thinks can be attained by his own act.
Aristotle
The self-indulgent man craves for all pleasant things... and is led by his appetite to choose these at the cost of everything else.
Aristotle
That body is heavier than another which, in an equal bulk, moves downward quicker.
Aristotle
In practical matters the end is not mere speculative knowledge of what is to be done, but rather the doing of it. It is not enough to know about Virtue, then, but we must endeavor to possess it, and to use it, or to take any other steps that may make.
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So it is clear that the search for what is just is a search for the mean for the law is the mean.
Aristotle
Without virtue it is difficult to bear gracefully the honors of fortune.
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Of means of persuading by speaking there are three species: some consist in the character of the speaker others in the disposing the hearer a certain way others in the thing itself which is said, by reason of its proving, or appearing to prove the point.
Aristotle
When the citizens at large administer the state for the common interest, the government is called by the generic name - a constitution.
Aristotle
... There must then be a principle of such a kind that its substance is activity.
Aristotle
1 is not prime, by definition. 2 is an unnatural prime, 4 is an unnatural prime, and 6 is an unnatural prime. All other natural primes cannot be unnatural primes.
Aristotle
By 'life,' we mean a thing that can nourish itself and grow and decay.
Aristotle
Goodness is to do good to the deserving and love the good and hate the wicked, and not to be eager to inflict punishment or take vengeance, but to be gracious and kindly and forgiving.
Aristotle
The right constitutions, three in number- kingship, aristocracy, and polity- and the deviations from these, likewise three in number - tyranny from kingship, oligarchy from aristocracy, democracy from polity.
Aristotle