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For that which has become habitual, becomes as it were natural.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
For contemplation is both the highest form of activity (since the intellect is the highest thing in us, and the objects that it apprehends are the highest things that can be known), and also it is the most continuous, because we are more capable of continuous contemplation than we are of any practical activity.
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All that one gains by falsehood is, not to be believed when he speaks the truth.
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And so long as they were at war, their power was preserved, but when they had attained empire they fell, for of the arts of peace they knew nothing, and had never engaged in any employment higher than war.
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Even the best of men in authority are liable to be corrupted by passion. We may conclude then that the law is reason without passion, and it is therefore preferable to any individual.
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Excellence or virtue in a man will be the disposition which renders him a good man and also which will cause him to perform his function well.
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Our actions determine our dispositions.
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He who cannot see the truth for himself, nor, hearing it from others, store it away in his mind, that man is utterly worthless.
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. . . the man is free, we say, who exists for his own sake and not for another's.
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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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Well begun is half done.
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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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If the hammer and the shuttle could move themselves, slavery would be unnecessary.
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It is the repeated performance of just and temperate actions that produces virtue.
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A constitution is the arrangement of magistracies in a state.
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Prudence as well as Moral Virtue determines the complete performance of a man's proper function: Virtue ensures the rightness of the end we aim at, Prudence ensures the rightness of the means we adopt to gain that end.
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Let us first understand the facts and then we may seek the cause.
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Justice is Equality...but equality of what?
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The virtue as the art consecrates itself constantly to what's difficult to do, and the harder the task, the shinier the success.
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Irrational passions would seem to be as much a part of human nature as is reason.
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Happiness does not lie in amusement it would be strange if one were to take trouble and suffer hardship all one's life in order to amuse oneself.
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