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Consider pleasures as they depart, not as they come.
Aristotle
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More quotes by Aristotle
A goal gets us motivated,while a good habit keeps us stay motivated.
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One has no friend who has many friends.
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Tyrants preserve themselves by sowing fear and mistrust among the citizens by means of spies, by distracting them with foreign wars, by eliminating men of spirit who might lead a revolution, by humbling the people, and making them incapable of decisive action.
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It is the active exercise of our faculties in conformity with virtue that causes happiness, and the opposite activities its opposite.
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Tragedy is an imitation not of men but of a life, an action
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Everything that depends on the action of nature is by nature as good as it can be, and similarly everything that depends on art or any rational cause, and especially if it depends on the best of all causes.
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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
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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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So the good has been well explained as that at which all things aim.
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If every tool, when ordered, or even of its own accord, could do the work that befits it... then there would be no need either of apprentices for the master workers or of slaves for the lords.
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Equity is that idea of justice which contravenes the written law.
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For though we love both the truth and our friends, piety requires us to honor the truth first.
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All paid jobs absorb and degrade the mind.
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But then in what way are things called good? They do not seem to be like the things that only chance to have the same name. Are goods one then by being derived from one good or by all contributing to one good, or are they rather one by analogy? Certainly as sight is in the body, so is reason in the soul, and so on in other cases.
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He who can be, and therefore is, another's, and he who participates in reason enough to apprehend, but not to have, is a slave by nature.
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[Prudence] is the virtue of that part of the intellect [the calculative] to which it belongs and . . . our choice of actions will not be right without Prudence any more than without Moral Virtue, since, while Moral Virtue enables us to achieve the end, Prudence makes us adopt the right means to the end.
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Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.
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Justice is that virtue of the soul which is distributive according to desert.
Aristotle
The greatest virtues are those which are most useful to other persons.
Aristotle
95% of everything you do is the result of habit.
Aristotle