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When Pleasure is at the bar the jury is not impartial.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
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 aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.
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No one would choose a friendless existence on condition of having all the other things in the world.
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Boundaries don't protect rivers, people do.
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So we must lay it down that the association which is a state exists not for the purpose of living together but for the sake of noble actions.
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A great city is not to be confounded with a populous one.
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The man who is truly good and wise will bear with dignity whatever fortune sends, and will always make the best of his circumstances.
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Some vices miss what is right because they are deficient, others because they are excessive, in feelings or in actions, while virtue finds and chooses the mean.
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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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All proofs rest on premises.
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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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Friendship is a thing most necessary to life, since without friends no one would choose to live, though possessed of all other advantages.
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A true friend is one soul in two bodies.
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In a word, acts of any kind produce habits or characters of the same kind. Hence we ought to make sure that our acts are of a certain kind for the resulting character varies as they vary. It makes no small difference, therefore, whether a man be trained in his youth up in this way or that, but a great difference, or rather all the difference.
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Hence both women and children must be educated with an eye to the constitution, if indeed it makes any difference to the virtue of a city-state that its children be virtuous, and its women too. And it must make a difference, since half the free population are women, and from children come those who participate in the constitution.
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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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It is not the possessions but the desires of mankind which require to be equalized.
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Of old, the demagogue was also a general, and then democracies changed into tyrannies. Most of the ancient tyrants were originally demagogues. They are not so now, but they were then and the reason is that they were generals and not orators, for oratory had not yet come into fashion.
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Whether we call it sacrifice, or poetry, or adventure, it is always the same voice that calls.
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The whole is more than the sum of its parts.
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